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New essays by leading scholars re-examining major aspects of the
work of Hugo von Hofmannsthal, the great Austrian poet and
dramatist. The Viennese poet, dramatist, and prose writer Hugo von
Hofmannsthal (1874-1929) was among the most celebrated men of
letters in the German language at the turn of the 19th to the 20th
century. His early poems established his reputation as the `child
prodigy' of German letters, and a few remain among the most
anthologized in the German language. His early lyric dramas
prompted no less a judge than T. S. Eliot to pronounce him, along
with Yeats and Claudel,one of the three European writers who had
done the most to revive verse drama in modern times. His critical
essays attest to the subtle powers of discrimination that marked
him as one of the most discerning literary critics of the day. And
yet he underwent a crisis of cognition and language around 1900,
and from then on turned away from poetry and lyric drama almost
entirely, concentrating instead on more public forms of drama such
as the libretti for Richard Strauss's operas, the plays written for
the Salzburg Festival (of which he was a co-founder), and on
discursive and narrative prose. The body of work that Hofmannsthal
left behind at his premature death is matched in its variety,
breadth, and quality by that of only a handful of German writers.
And yet posterity has not been kind to his reputation: those who
admired the early work for its aesthetic refinement disdained his
turn to more popular forms,whereas many of those who might have
been receptive to the more committed and public stance of his later
work were put off by his conservative politics. This volume of new
essays by top Hofmannsthal scholars re-examines his extraordinarily
rich and complex body of work, assessing his stature in German and
world literature in the new century. Contributors: Katherine Arens,
Judith Beniston, Benjamin Bennett, Nina Berman, Joanna Bottenberg,
DouglasA. Joyce, Thomas A. Kovach, Ellen Ritter, Hinrich C. Seeba,
Andreas Thomasberger, W. Edgar Yates. Professor Thomas Kovach is
Head of the Department of German Studies at the University of
Arizona.
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