Londoner Trakl-Symposion


Book Description







The Gentle Apocalypse


Book Description

Like much German-language poetry of the years preceding the First World War, the poems of Georg Trakl (1887-1914) are imbued with a sense of historical crisis, but what sets his work apart is the mildness and restraint of his images of universal disintegration. Trakl typically couched his vision of the end of days in images of migrating birds, abandoned houses, and closing eyelids, making his poetry at once apocalyptic, rustic, and intimate. The argument made in this study is that this vision amounts to a unitary worldview with tightly interwoven affective, ethical, social, historical, and cosmological dimensions. Often termed hermetic and obscure, Trakl's poems become more accessible when viewed in relation to the evolution of his methods and concerns across different phases, and the idiosyncrasies of his strangely beautiful later works make sense as elements of a sophisticated system of expression committed to "truth" as a transcendental order. Through close readings of poems covering the span of his lyric output, this study traces the evolution of Trakl's distinctive style and themes while attending closely to biographical and cultural contexts. Richard Millington is Senior Lecturer in German at Victoria University of Wellington (Aotearoa New Zealand). He is the author of Snow from Broken Eyes: Cocaine in the Lives and Works of Three Expressionist Poets (2012).




An Inch or Two of Time


Book Description

In literary modernism, time and space are sometimes transformed from organizational categories into aesthetic objects, a transformation that can open dramatic metaphorical and creative possibilities. In An Inch or Two of Time, Jordan Finkin shows how Jewish modernists of the early twentieth century had a distinct perspective on this innovative metaphorical vocabulary. As members of a national-ethnic-religious community long denied the rights and privileges of self-determination, with a dramatically internalized sense of exile and landlessness, the Jewish writers at the core of this investigation reimagined their spatial and temporal orientation and embeddedness. They set as the fulcrum of their imagery the metaphorical power of time and space. Where non-Jewish writers might tend to view space as a given—an element of their own sense of belonging to a nation at home in a given territory—the Jewish writers discussed here spatialized time: they created an as-if space out of time, out of history. They understood their writing to function as a kind of organ of perception on its own. Jewish literature thus presents a particularly dynamic system for working out the implications of that understanding, and as such, this book argues, it is an indispensable part of the modern library.




Bibliographic Guide to Conference Publications


Book Description

Vols. for 1975- include publications cataloged by the Research Libraries of the New York Public Library with additional entries from the Library of Congress MARC tapes.




Comparative Criticism: Volume 7, Boundaries of Literature


Book Description

Comparative Criticism is an annual journal of comparative literature and cultural studies that has gained an international reputation since its inception in 1979. It contains major articles on literary theory and criticism; on a wide range of comparative topics; and on interdisciplinary debates. It includes translations of literary, scholarly and critical works; substantial reviews of important books in the field; and bibliographies on specialist themes for the year, on individual writers, and on comparative literary studies in Britain and Ireland.




The Mirror and the Word


Book Description

"Williams has found an ingeniously indirect method for dealing with powerful and conservative voices in Trakl criticism, a method that unburdens the debate of its weighty pomposity and elicits delight from readers familiar with the critical context."_Francis Michael Sharp, author of The Poet's Madness: A Reading of Georg Trakl 1993. x, 350 pages.




Complex Pleasure


Book Description

Complex Pleasure deals with questions of literary feeling in eight major German writers—Lessing, Kant, Hölderlin, Nietzsche, Musil, Kafka, Trakl, and Benjamin. On the basis of close readings of these authors Stanley Corngold makes vivid the following ideas: that where there is literature there is complex pleasure; that this pleasure is complex because it involves the impression of a disclosure; that this thought is foremost in the minds of a number of canonical writers; that important literary works in the German tradition—fiction, poetry, critique—can be illuminated through their treatment of literary feeling; and, finally, that the conceptual terms for these forms of feeling continually vary. The types of feeling treated in Complex Pleasure include wit (the startling perception of likeness) and the disinterested pleasure of aesthetic judgment; Hölderlin’s “swift conceptual grasp,” in which “the tempo of the process of thought is stressed”; “artistic imagination,” mood, sadistic enjoyment, rapturous distraction, homonymic dissonance, and courage as a mode of literary experience. At the same time, through the deftness, range, and surprise of its execution, the book itself conveys complex pleasure. The reader will also find fascinating, hitherto untranslated material by Nietzsche (“On Moods”) and Kafka (important sections from his journals and from his unfinished novel The Boy Who Sank Out of Sight).




European Culture in the Great War


Book Description

A comparative study of European cultural and social history during the First World War.




Internationales Georg Trakl-Symposium, Albany, N.Y.


Book Description

Am 18. und 19. März 1983 fand an der Staatsuniversität von New York zu Albany ein internationales Trakl-Symposium statt. Wenn man bedenkt, wie schmal das Werk des so früh verstorbenen Lyrikers Georg Trakl einerseits ist, und wenn man andererseits berücksichtigt, welche Flut von Arbeiten über dieses Werk bereits geschrieben wurde, dann mochte das Vorhaben eines vergleichsweise so umfassenden Trakl-Symposiums auf den ersten Blick als Risiko erscheinen. Insofern nämlich als zu befürchten war, dass kaum viel mehr als längst Bekanntes wiederholt werden würde. Umso erfreulicher ist es, dass dieses Symposium als Ganzes so positiv ausfiel. Wichtige Gründe dafür dürften sein, dass alle Beiträge nicht von Trakls Werk weg- sondern zu diesem selbst und seiner Verständnisvertiefung hinführten und dass die einzelnen Beiträge nicht nur sich ergänzten, sondern auf solche Art einander gleichsam bestätigten und eine gewisse Ganzheit konstituierten. Grundstein dieses Erfolges bildeten die in diesem Band abgedruckten Beiträge von Russell E. Brown, Maria Enrica D'Agostini, Richard Detsch, Christoph Eykman, Ulrich Fülleborn, Winfried Kudszus, James K. Lyon, Peter Horst Neumann, Ulrike Rainer, Francis Michael Sharp, Jacob Steiner, Walter A. Strauss, Karl E. Webb, Klaus Weissenberger, Heinz Wetzel und Harry Zohn.