Nolten The Painter: A Novella In Two Parts (studies In German Literature Linguistics And Culture) (studies In German Literature Linguistics And Culture)

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When students and critics of the novel speak of German artist-novels and Bildungsromane, they mention works long available in translation: by Goethe, Novalis, Hoffmann, Stifter, Keller, or more recently by Mann, Kafka, Musil, Grass, and others. Yet Eduard M?rike's provocatively subtitled Maler Nolten: Novelle in Zwei Teilen (Nolten the Painter: A Novella in Two Parts, 1832) has remained neglected and misunderstood, and has never been translated into English until now. This despite its obvious ties to other artist-novels and its striking modernity in playing with conventions of narrative authority and heroic identity, features that have recently begun to be realized by scholarship. Witness the subtle irony of the opening sequence, in which M?rike's narrator is subverted by hints at his own clumsiness and intimations about the dire truths that lurk behind the protagonist's relationships to his male friends and to the seductive yet somehow frightening women in his life. Or the interplay between the narrator's attempts to make sense of Nolten's complex inner motivations in his loves and art and the ludicrously pompous pathos with which Noltenpersists in speaking and thinking, as he concocts a heroic persona caught up in passion, intrigue, and tragedy. Fascinating, finally, is the mysterious trail of the "Grenzg?nger," or border-line characters, such as the Gypsy Elisabeth, the queer Wispel, the duplicitous actor Larkens, and the mysterious old Hofrat, with their hints at the dimension of "Gypsies, Tramps, and Thieves" that seems to threaten and at the same time to foster the complex unfolding of the realities of life and art that defy Nolten's all-too-artful "mastery."

E-Book Content

When students and critics of the novel speak of German artist-novels and Bildungsromane, they mention works long available in translation: by Goethe, Novalis, Hoffmann, Stifter, Keller, or more recently by Mann, Kafka, Musil, Grass, and others. Yet Eduard Mörike’s provocatively subtitled Maler Nolten: Ein Novelle in zwei Teilen (Nolten the Painter: A Novella in Two Parts, 1832) has remained neglected and misunderstood, and has never been translated into English until now. This despite its obvious ties to other artist-novels and its striking modernity in playing with conventions of narrative authority and heroic identity, features that have recently begun to be realized by scholarship. Witness the subtle irony of the opening sequence, in which Mörike’s narrator is subverted by hints at his own clumsiness and intimations about the dire truths that lurk behind the protagonist’s relationships to his male friends and to the seductive yet somehow frightening women in his life. Or the interplay between the narrator’s attempts to make sense of Nolten’s complex inner motivations in his loves and art and the ludicrously pompous pathos with which Nolten persists in speaking and thinking, as he concocts a heroic persona caught up in passion, intrigue, and tragedy. Fascinating, finally, is the mysterious trail of the “Grenzgänger,” or border-line characters, such as the Gypsy Elisabeth, the queer Wispel, the duplicitous actor Larkens, and the mysterious old Hofrat, with their hints at the dimension of “Gypsies, Tramps, and Thieves” that seems to threaten and at the same time to foster the complex unfolding of the realities of life and art that defy Nolten’s all-too-artful “mastery.” Mörike Nolten the Painter A Novella in Two Parts Raleigh Whitinger has been teaching German at the University of Alberta since the early 1970s, specializing in language courses at all levels, modern German literature from the Age of Goethe to the twentieth century, translation, and translation theory. He has published numerous articles on German drama from Goethe to naturalism, on narrative works of German Romanticism and Poetic Realism, and on twentieth-century