home page

home pageview contents of your baskethelp with ordering

   Search


Goethe's Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship
A Reader's Commentary
Jane V. Curran

Goethe's Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre is commonly acknowledged to have played a pivotal role in founding the genre known as the Bildungsroman. Although a wealth of critical material has accumulated since its publication in 1795-96, a detailed commentary in English on this novel of `apprenticeship' has been lacking from the corpus. Jane V. Curran's full-length commentary fills this gap. In her analysis, Curran presents the standard material familiar from traditional commentaries, but includes passages hitherto neglected, presenting new insights in a new form. Curran stresses the importance of narrative techniques, traces the development of the characters, and draws the reader's attention to the intertextual echoes, the use of symbols, and the many instances of irony. Curran also points out parallels between Wilhelm Meister's experiences and Goethe's life, and illuminates contemporary issues that are touched on in the novel, particularly the development of the German theater. The book provides notes with additional information for the interpretation of Goethe's work, including factual details of general interest, scholarly sources, and background information. This is a vade mecum not only for students of Goethe and of German literature, but also for all those interested in the development of the Bildungsroman.
Jane V. Curran is chair of the German Department, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia.

 

DETAILS

340 pages
Size: 9 x 6 in
13 digit ISBN: 9781571131188
Binding: Hardback
First published: 01/Dec/2001
Last printed: 15/Mar/2002
Price: 75.00 USD / 40.00 GBP
Imprint: Camden House
Series: Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture
Subject: German Literature

BIC class: AVH

STATUS: Available
Details updated on 18/11/2008

Contents
   Introduction
1   Book One
2   Book Two
3   Book Three
4   Book Four
5   Book Five
6   Book Six
7   Book Seven
8   Book Eight
9   Conclusion: Realism and Reading
10   Works Cited
11   Index

Reviews
Curran handles scholarship deftly, integrating the contributions of others (many available only in German) into the body of her text.... The result is a reader-friendly commentary, simultaneously informative and enjoyable to read. GOETHE YEARBOOK

[A] concert of micro-thoughts. Curran is well-informed, and generous with her information.... All eighteenth-century human life is there, including the clamour of contemporary religious, aesthetic, and social debates: Genie, Bildung, the origin of language, the importance of Shakespeare and so on, as they echo in Goethe's compendious text, are all explained without fuss.... This commentary, then, exhibits the kind of qualities that we have come to expect from Camden House, and as a work of reference, is more useful than half a dozen essays of critical virtuosity. BRITISH JOURNAL OF EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY STUDIES

Curran deftly identifies the essential elements of the often lengthy debates and conversations, and she grasps the subtleties of non-verbal interactions and emotions. A great deal of sensitivity, erudition, and diligence went into the design and execution of this commentary...a superb tool for teachers of advanced students. SEMINAR




 

To order this book, use the shopping cart that refers to your destination.* If the title is not yet published, your order will be recorded until the volume becomes available.

    US or Canada, enter quantity here >

    Europe and Rest of World, enter quantity here >

Please note that our shopping carts use cookies. If you have cookies disabled on your browser please click here for a secure blank order form, or click here for a printable form.

* Orders from the US and Canada are sent to our US office for processing and despatch. All other orders are processed and despatched from the UK.