Spaces for Happiness in the Twentieth-Century German Novel: Mann, Kafka, Hesse, Juenger
This book offers an in-depth study of the rich tapestry of happiness discourses in well-known philosophical novels by Thomas Mann, Franz Kafka, Hermann Hesse and Ernst Jünger, published between 1922 and 1949. The study is prompted, in part, by an awareness that despite the interdisciplinarity of happiness research, Western literary scholarship has paid scant attention to fictionalized constructs of happiness. Each of the four chapters uses extended textual analysis to explore the sites in which happiness (Glück) and serenity (Heiterkeit) are sought, experienced, narrated, reflected upon and enacted. The author theorizes, with particular reference to Bachelard and Foucault, the interfaces between interior and exterior spaces and states of well-being. In addition to providing new interpretive perspectives on the canonical novels themselves, the book makes a significant contribution to a broader history of the idea of happiness through the appraisal of key intellectual cross-currents and traditions, both Western and Eastern, underpinning the novelists' varied and nuanced conceptualizations and aesthetic representations of happiness.
1122140486
Spaces for Happiness in the Twentieth-Century German Novel: Mann, Kafka, Hesse, Juenger
This book offers an in-depth study of the rich tapestry of happiness discourses in well-known philosophical novels by Thomas Mann, Franz Kafka, Hermann Hesse and Ernst Jünger, published between 1922 and 1949. The study is prompted, in part, by an awareness that despite the interdisciplinarity of happiness research, Western literary scholarship has paid scant attention to fictionalized constructs of happiness. Each of the four chapters uses extended textual analysis to explore the sites in which happiness (Glück) and serenity (Heiterkeit) are sought, experienced, narrated, reflected upon and enacted. The author theorizes, with particular reference to Bachelard and Foucault, the interfaces between interior and exterior spaces and states of well-being. In addition to providing new interpretive perspectives on the canonical novels themselves, the book makes a significant contribution to a broader history of the idea of happiness through the appraisal of key intellectual cross-currents and traditions, both Western and Eastern, underpinning the novelists' varied and nuanced conceptualizations and aesthetic representations of happiness.
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Spaces for Happiness in the Twentieth-Century German Novel: Mann, Kafka, Hesse, Juenger

Spaces for Happiness in the Twentieth-Century German Novel: Mann, Kafka, Hesse, Juenger

by Alan Corkhill
Spaces for Happiness in the Twentieth-Century German Novel: Mann, Kafka, Hesse, Juenger

Spaces for Happiness in the Twentieth-Century German Novel: Mann, Kafka, Hesse, Juenger

by Alan Corkhill

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$73.70 
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Overview

This book offers an in-depth study of the rich tapestry of happiness discourses in well-known philosophical novels by Thomas Mann, Franz Kafka, Hermann Hesse and Ernst Jünger, published between 1922 and 1949. The study is prompted, in part, by an awareness that despite the interdisciplinarity of happiness research, Western literary scholarship has paid scant attention to fictionalized constructs of happiness. Each of the four chapters uses extended textual analysis to explore the sites in which happiness (Glück) and serenity (Heiterkeit) are sought, experienced, narrated, reflected upon and enacted. The author theorizes, with particular reference to Bachelard and Foucault, the interfaces between interior and exterior spaces and states of well-being. In addition to providing new interpretive perspectives on the canonical novels themselves, the book makes a significant contribution to a broader history of the idea of happiness through the appraisal of key intellectual cross-currents and traditions, both Western and Eastern, underpinning the novelists' varied and nuanced conceptualizations and aesthetic representations of happiness.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783034307970
Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
Publication date: 12/20/2011
Series: German Life and Civilization , #57
Pages: 203
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.70(h) x 0.30(d)

About the Author

Alan Corkhill is Reader/Associate Professor of German Studies at the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia. He is the author of four monographs and numerous book chapters and articles, chiefly on aspects of German literature from the Enlightenment to the present. His monographs include Australia and the German Literary Imagination 1754-1918 and Glückskonzeptionen im deutschen Roman von Wielands «Agathon» bis Goethes «Wahlverwandtschaften». He is also the Associate Editor of Seminar. A Journal of Germanic Studies.

Table of Contents

Contents: The Twentieth-Century German Novel – Happiness (Glück) and Serenity (Heiterkeit) as a Literary Trope – Happiness and Spatiality – Happiness in Western and Eastern Traditions – Happiness and Flow Theory – Collective Promises of Happiness and Well-being – The Technologization of Happiness – Serenity as a Heightened State of Well-being.
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