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Germany, a literary anthology : beyond the enchanted forest / edited by Brian Melican.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Northampton MA : Interlink Books, 2014Edition: First American editionDescription: xx, 240 pages : illustrations ; 22 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 1566569680
  • 9781566569682
Other title:
  • Germany, beyond the enchanted forest
Subject(s):
Contents:
Triple Dutch: Teutons, Alemans, and Germans 1589-1700 -- From Berlin to Coswig: new pomp and old squalor 1700-1800 -- The call of the Kulturnation: Germany and the Romantics 1787-1817 -- Echoes of Goethe: on the eve of Bismarck 1820-1860 -- The "German" replaces Germans: the rise of jingoism 1860-1900 -- Close connections and opposing policies: 1900-1920 -- From 1920s Bohemia to 1930s Germania 1925-1935 -- Writing through the Nazi stronghold 1935-1939 -- From the darkest hour to Stunde Null 1940-1950 -- Spy fiction and the state of the nation 1950-1983 -- A dying dictatorship and instant "ostalgia" 1982-1999 -- Berlin hype, globalization, and the role of history 2000-.
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Adult Book Dr. James Carlson Library NonFiction 830.8 G373 Available 33111007654359
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

A literary antholog of over 80 visitors to Germany... ?By following over eighty North American and British literary travellers, starting in the sixteenth century with some of the earliest travel accounts in English, Brian Melican presents a wide range of writing about, or set in, Germany. Letters from Boswell and Garrick, Coleridge and Wordsworth; the journals of Herman Melville and Henry James; fiction by D. H. Lawrence and Ford Madox Ford reveal an oft-forgotten richness in encounters with Germany before the horrors of the twentieth century. Post-war writing ranges from the spy fiction of Len Deighton, to travel writing by Leigh Fermor, and the writers who dissected post-Nazi Germany. The diversity of writing about Germany today encompasses light-hearted accounts and more searching passages taken from an eclectic selection of authors. Recorded and imagined images of Germany have changed dramatically across the centuries. Yet views on many of its features especially its cities and rivers, customs and cuisine have often remained constant. This anthology invites readers to venture beyond the usual discussion about this country at the very heart of Europe.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Triple Dutch: Teutons, Alemans, and Germans 1589-1700 -- From Berlin to Coswig: new pomp and old squalor 1700-1800 -- The call of the Kulturnation: Germany and the Romantics 1787-1817 -- Echoes of Goethe: on the eve of Bismarck 1820-1860 -- The "German" replaces Germans: the rise of jingoism 1860-1900 -- Close connections and opposing policies: 1900-1920 -- From 1920s Bohemia to 1930s Germania 1925-1935 -- Writing through the Nazi stronghold 1935-1939 -- From the darkest hour to Stunde Null 1940-1950 -- Spy fiction and the state of the nation 1950-1983 -- A dying dictatorship and instant "ostalgia" 1982-1999 -- Berlin hype, globalization, and the role of history 2000-.

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