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Goethe's Wilhelm Meister's Travels

Part of the Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture series
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Goethe's Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre was the most influential German novel ever written. However, its so-called sequel, Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre oder die Entsagenden (Wilhelm Meister's Travels) has never been a popular work and has received much less critical attention than the Lehrjahre. A Recent upsurge of interest among literary critics in Goethe's late novel has much to do with the fact that some "idiosyncrasies" of the book -its unconventional structure, its mixture of genres, its irony, its disdain for verisimilitude, its philosophical-analytical passages - mark it precisely as a fore-runner of the modern novel, or, better put, show undeniable affinities with the structure and modes of modern literature and thus mark it as a work particularly worthy of our interest. Professor James Hardin (South Carolina) provides a new introduction to the work that analyzes its relationship to its more famous predecessor, and the role of Goethe's works in Carlyle's creative career.

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Product Details
Camden House Inc
0938100882 / 9780938100881
Hardback
833.6
04/03/1991
United States
352 pages
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More