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New essays examining the complex period of rich artistic ferment
that was German literary Expressionism. More than any other
avant-garde movement, German Expressionism captures the aesthetic
revolution of 20th-century modernity in all its contrasts and
conflicts. In continuous eruptions from 1905 to 1925, Expressionism
upset reigningpractices in the arts, most vividly in painting and
the visual arts. In the literature, a heady intellectualism
combined with dramatic gesture, graphic visions, exuberant emotions
and urgent proclamations to forge forceful stylesof verbal
expression. Expressionism introduced into art both visual and
verbal a shockingly new intensity with many facets and many faces.
This volume presents the literature of German Expressionism, which
is far less known in the English-speaking world, with essays by
leading scholars on Expressionism's philosophical origins, its
thematic preoccupations, and its divergent stylistic manifestations
by writers whose common bond is intensity and whose lineson the
page read like the gouges of a woodcut: Georg Kaiser, Walter
Hasenclever, and Ernst Toller in drama; Gottfried Benn, Georg Heym,
Else Lasker-Schuler, and Georg Trakl in poetry; Alfred Doeblin,
Carl Einstein, and Carl Sternheim in prose, to name just a few.
Against the background of the journals, exhibitions, and
anthologies, the cafe meeting places and public life of
Expressionism, the volume's highly focused, intrinsic analyses of
texts and comprehensive overviews of extrinsic contexts (and of the
most up-to-date research) shows the fervor and complexity of the
period and its effulgent literary formations. Neil H. Donahue is
Professor of German and Comparative Literature at Hofstra
University.
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