|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
|
Briefe, Band 2, 1804-Juni 1807 (German, Hardcover, Reprint 2015 ed.)
Diane Coleman Brandt, Jessica Kewitz, Magdalene Heuser, Andrea Kiszio, Petra Wulbusch
|
R7,524
R6,531
Discovery Miles 65 310
Save R993 (13%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
In the years 1804 to late 1807, the concerns expressed in the
letters of Therese Huber centre around incisive changes in her
private life. The most notable of these are the death of Ludwig
Ferdinand Huber, the move to rural surroundings, the arrival of
Emil von Herder in her immediate family circle and the departure of
Victor Aime Huber for the Fellenberg Educational Institute in
Hofwil (Switzerland). In addition, the letters provide insights
into Huber's engagement with a variety of issues: anonymous
authorship, the collection of letters written by Huber and Georg
Forster for use in their biographies, new professional and private
contacts, and, on a broader plane, the major political
restructurings in Europe as a result of the Napoleonic wars."
In the planned nine-volume edition of the letters of Therese Huber
(1764-1829), Volume 1 contains those penned by her up to her 40th
year, thus documenting the development from late adolescence,
through her two marriages (first to Georg Forster, then to Ludwig
Ferdinand Huber) and the beginnings of her activity as writer and
translator, up to the imminent move of the Huber family to Ulm. The
letters are testimonies both of Huber's personal biography and of
the times she lived in, and reflect the career of a successful and
famous woman in the period around 1800, combining the duties of
housewife, wife, and mother with professional activity as a writer
and later as an editor. Alongside the development of an individual
code of morality, the letters document the progress in Therese
Huber's reading behaviour and critical judgment as well as the
interests and motivation behind her own literary output. They also
provide insights into the social life of the age, notably in
GAttingen and Vilnius, but also in Mainz at the time of the French
Revolution and the foundation of the first German Republic.
|
|