Search results for ""author theodor fontane""
Outlook Verlag Frau Jenny Treibel
£40.41
Cornelsen Verlag GmbH & Co Unterm Birnbaum
£8.70
Kiepenheuer & Witsch GmbH Nur in Freiheit wird man frei
£14.00
Insel Verlag GmbH Herr von Ribbeck auf Ribbeck Gedichte und Balladen
£8.09
Aufbau Verlage GmbH Das erzhlerische Werk 06 Schach von Wuthenow Erzhlung aus der Zeit des Regiments Gensdarmes
£25.20
Aufbau Verlage GmbH Wanderungen durch die Mark Brandenburg 8 Personenregister Geographisches Register
£34.20
Creative Media Partners, LLC Der Krieg Gegen Frankreich 18701871 Volume 1
£48.13
Persephone Books Ltd Effi Briest
£16.75
S Fischer Verlag GmbH Effi Briest
£11.95
Boydell & Brewer Ltd The Stechlin
First English translation of the final work of Theodor Fontane, one of Germany's most significant novelists. Theodor Fontane (1819-98), widely regarded as Germany's most significant novelist between Goethe and Thomas Mann, pioneered the German novel of manners and upper-class society, following a trend in European fiction of the period.The Stechlin is Fontane's last book and his political testament. Like Effi Briest, his great work on the place of women in Bismarck's empire, it is set at the apex of the Wilhelmine era, both in Berlin and on the estate of a Prussian Junker on the shores of Lake Stechlin. It is a significant historical and cultural document, probably the finest chronicle of the lifestyle of the German upper classes in the late nineteenth century; Fontane portrays the best in the life and ways of the passing Prussian aristocracy, while describing his hopes for the future of Germany and its nobility, which were never to be fully realized. Although this novel has been translated into many languages, it has never before been available in English; this edition thus fills an important gap in the significant works of European literature accessible to English readers.
£32.99
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Mathilde Möhring
The first English translation of Fontane's late, posthumously published novel, featuring the eponymous, complex heroine and confronting issues regarding gender roles and marriage that still resonate today. Theodor Fontane hesitated to publish his late novel Mathilde Möhring because he believed it was too subtle and spare for the popular taste of the day. Published posthumously in 1906, its themes - corrosive economic precarity, the ambivalence of marriage for women, and the burden of work expectations for men - resonate uncannily with readers today. The heroine Mathilde and her mother cling to the underside of the lower middle class by renting out a room in their small Berlin apartment. Their new tenant seems to offer a path to middle-class security, so although marriage is not her first choice, Mathilde applies her shrewd understanding of class mores to pursue it - with results both triumphant and catastrophic. The last among Fontane's powerfully drawn female protagonists, Mathilde is unlike any previous heroine of a German novel: intelligent and energetic but plain and deeply pragmatic. We follow the fearless but flawed Mathilde from the bustling metropolis of Berlin to Woldenstein, a sleepy backwater town she single-handedly transforms, and back. Unknown in the English-speaking world, this compact work has the humor and pathos familiar to readers of Fontane, and is powerfully evocative of the politics of class, gender, and religion in late 19th-century Germany. An introduction, afterword, and extensive endnotes richly contextualize the work for both general readers and students of literature, history, gender studies, and German studies.
£62.00