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Thomas Mann and Shakespeare: Something Rich and Strange

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Thomas Mann and Shakespeare: Something Rich and Strange
Authors and Contributors      Edited by Tobias Doering
Edited by Ewan Fernie
SeriesNew Directions in German Studies
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:280
Category/GenreLiterary theory
Literary studies - plays and playwrights
ISBN/Barcode 9781501336089
ClassificationsDewey:833.912
Audience
Tertiary Education (US: College)
Illustrations 4 b/w illustrations

Publishing Details

Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic USA
Publication Date 24 August 2017
Publication Country United States

Description

Bringing together scholars from diverse disciplines and countries, Thomas Mann and Shakespeare is the first book-length study to explore the always fascinating, if sometimes disturbing, connections between Shakespeare and Mann. It establishes startling resonances between the central works of these two authors, pairing, for instance, Der Zauberberg with The Tempest, Der Tod in Venedig with The Merchant of Venice, Tonio Kroeger with Othello and Love's Labour's Lost with Doktor Faustus. Showing how the conjunction of Shakespeare and Mann affords new, alternative perspectives on fundamental issues such as modernity, irony, art, desire, authorship and religion, Thomas Mann and Shakespeare challenges the increasingly walled-in specialism of literary topics and periodization and demonstrates the scope for new ways of reading in literary studies.

Author Biography

Tobias Doering is Chair of English Literature, LMU Munchen, Germany, and past President of the German Shakespeare Society. His latest books are (ed. with Virginia Mason Vaughan) Critical and Cultural Transformations: Shakespeare's The Tempest - 1611 to the Present and (ed. with Mark Stein) Edward Said's Translocations: Essays in Secular Criticism. Ewan Fernie is Chair, Professor and Fellow at the Shakespeare Institute, University of Birmingham, UK. His latest book, The Demonic: Literature and Experience, gives considerable attention to Shakespeare and Mann.

Reviews

When Thomas Mann speaks of 'the most tremendous case of poetic genius the world has ever seen', he is referring not to Homer, nor to Goethe - but to Shakespeare. It is strange that this important identification has been so little heeded or seriously examined for so long. At last the present book makes up for such neglect, opening our eyes to the truly 'tremendous case' of one of the great dialogues of world literature. [Wenn Thomas Mann uber den 'den ungeheuersten Fall von Dichtertum' spricht, 'den die Erde sah', dann spricht er weder von Homer noch von Goethe, sondern von Shakespeare. Es ist eigenartig, wie lange dieses Diktum kaum gehoert und wie selten es ernst genommen wurde. Dass das Versaumte mit diesem Buch endlich nachgeholt wird, oeffnet den Blick auf den wahrhaft 'ungeheuren Fall' eines Dialogs von weltliterarischem Ausmass.] * Heinrich Detering, President of the German Academy for Language and Literature, and chief editor of the Great Annotated Frankfurter Edition of the works of Thomas Mann * Literature is never harmless. Thomas Mann and William Shakespeare reflect on the abysses that form part of Western history as well as their political and aesthetic implications. This unique collection of essays, the first of its kind, renders the works of both authors transparent to one another and offers a fresh angle from which to look at literary modernity. This volume makes for inspiring re-reading of both Shakespeare and Mann. [Literatur ist niemals harmlos. Thomas Mann und William Shakespeare reflektieren die Abgrunde der abendlandischen Geschichte, deren politische und asthetische Implikationen. Diese Sammlung von Aufsatzen, die erste ihrer Art, macht die Werke beider Autoren fureinander transparent und bietet eine neue Sicht auf die literarische Moderne. Dieser Band inspiriert zur Relekture von Shakespeare und Mann.] * Claudia Olk, President of the German Shakespeare Society, and Chair of Comparative Literature, Freie Universitat Berlin, Germany * The modern appreciation of Shakespeare is in great part the legacy of the profound scholarship, criticism, and artistic imagination of Germany. This adventurous, wide-ranging, and highly experimental volume asks how the most complex and dialectical of German novelists apprehended Shakespeare-and, in turn, how our vision of Shakespeare might be made larger and more subtle by reading him side-by-side with Mann. What keeps coming into view in this intriguing book is how the kinship of these two authors lies in a bold commitment to irony and the ambivalent: sexual, aesthetic, moral, political, and philosophic. * Peter Holbrook, Chair of the International Shakespeare Association, and Professor of Shakespeare and Renaissance Literature, The University of Queensland, Australia * The work of 12 noted scholars from the UK, the US, and Germany, these essays analyze the literary/philosophical affinities of Shakespeare and Mann. Like his contemporaries, Mann knew Shakespeare well. The first German translations of Shakespeare's plays appeared in the late 18th century, and these were followed by the excellent Schlegel-Tieck renderings; scholarly studies of Shakespeare helped to establish his reputation, and Shakespeare's plays were staged more frequently than those of Goethe or Schiller. Mann, as his diary reveals, drank in Shakespeare from his early youth. In Mann's novel Dr. Faustus the comedy Love's Labors Lost serves as Leverkuhn's basis for a decidedly uncomic opera (on Leverkuhn's desk lie the sonnets and editions of Twelfth Night, Much Ado about Nothing, and Two Gentlemen of Verona), and there are many traces of Othello in Mann's work. Shakespeare is in Tonio Kroeger, Der Tod in Venedig, Der Zauberberg, and numerous critical essays. Aside from philological evidence, some essays argue, in a more theoretical manner, that Mann and Shakespeare had striking similarities in outlook: e.g., Jonathan Dollimore claims that the two men are most intimately linked by their deep pessimism, their underlying fear that knowledge is illusory, that, as in Hamlet, it can kill action. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students, researchers, faculty. -- J. Hardin, University of South Carolina * CHOICE * The volume offers just what the authors wanted: an unconventional, sometimes provocative, often highly original series of insights into Shakespeare and Thomas Mann. * The German Quarterly * [A] very fine collection of essays. * Memoria di Shakespeare *