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Fresh essays on the works of the most significant -- and readable
-- German Baroque author. Hans Jacob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen
(ca. 1621-1676) is the most significant (and still readable) author
of seventeenth-century German novels. His Abenteuerlicher
Simplicius Simplicissimus remains the one German novelof its time
that has attained the stature of "world literature": its unique mix
of violent action and solitary reflection, its superlative humor,
its realistic portrayal of a peasant turned soldier turned hermit
has made it the longest-running bestseller in German literature.
Read by students and scholars in comparative literature, history,
and German, and by those interested in the development of the
picaresque novel in Europe, the work and its "Continuations" have
increasingly occupied scholars around the world, who have in recent
years shown it to be a work of subtle structure and
characterization, bearing the imprint of the most advanced
political thinking of the time, and showing the influences of some
of the most significant works of world literature, including
Cervantes' Don Quixote and Barclay's Argenis. This volume of essays
by leading Grimmelshausen scholars from Germany, the UnitedStates,
and England provides analyses of significant topics in his life and
works, including questions of genre, structure, satire, allegory,
narratology, political thought, religion, morality, humor, realism,
and mortality. Contributors: Christoph E. Schweitzer, Italo Michele
Battafarano, Klaus Haberkamm, Rosmarie Zeller, Andreas Solbach,
Dieter Breuer, Lynne Tatlock, Peter Hess, Shannon Keenan Greene,
and Alan Menhennet. Karl F. Otto is Professor of German at the
University of Pennsylvania and has written extensively on German
Baroque literature.
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