Young Rilke and His Time
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Published:1st Dec '08
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
A look at neglected aspects of the early career of one of the premier poets of the German language. Although Rainer Maria Rilke and his work have been much studied and written about over the past century -- as befits the perhaps most important German-language poet of modern times -- certain aspects of his early life and career have been neglected or are in need of a fresh look. Accordingly, this book investigates Rilke's life and career from adolescence until the verge of thirty. Here the reader finds the hysterical, harried tutee clinging to Valerie vonRhonfeld; the clever, supercilious, and anxious stroller through Prague of Larenopfer; the narcissistic diarist preening for Lou Andreas-Salomé in Italy and elsewhere; the priggishly high-minded but lethal reviewer of German-language literature; the devoted but delusional presenter of Nordic letters. A final section focuses on thirteen poems or poem clusters composed between 1892 and 1900 and mostly left untouched by Rilke scholarship. While depending heavily on the evidence of the texts themselves, the present author allows himself to conjecture about, for instance, the traces left by the boy's hasty training in Latin; his knowledge -- or ignorance -- of Czech national opera and popular literature; the genesis of some willfully "decadent" poems; his odd literary likes and dislikes; and so on. From this "Wirrnis" (confusion, muddle; one of his favorite words), the young Rilke emerges as a dogged self-educator, and, for all his laments and insecurities and languorous poses, a figure of distinction, gifted with an almost preternatural verbal inventiveness and recondite energy. George C. Schoolfield is Emeritus Professor of German and Scandinavian Literature at Yale.
The first service Young Rilke and His Time provides is that it develops a new interest on that phase of Rilke's work and life that lies before Rilke's acquaintance with Rodin in Paris . . . . A further service is that it embeds the young Rilke and a variety of his texts in an impressively broad culture-historical panorama . . . . Overall, [Schoolfield] offers multifaceted information about an important segment of Rilke's life and work in the fin de siècle. * GERMAN QUARTERLY *
An absorbing book, a work of exemplary scholarship, cleverly arranged, well written, and readable. * AUSTRIAN HISTORY YEARBOOK *
Schoolfield's forte, here as elsewhere, is his ability to provide background information in encyclopaedic detail to explain references to people, texts, places and events.. By combining paraphrase with explanatory contextual information, Schoolfield's commentaries provide a detailed account of Rilke's life, experiences and reading in these years. * JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN STUDIES *
Schoolfield does an excellent job of chronicling Rilke's quirky relationships and extensive travels, notably with Lou Andreas-Salomé in Italy and Russia. [T]his is a treasure trove of scholarship, well written, and full of compelling details. * CHOICE *
Schoolfield's monograph is dedicated, in meticulously exact detail, to the approximately twelve years between Rilke's matriculation in Prague in 1892 and his visit to Scandinavia in 1904. . . . [It] contributes to the cultural transfer of Rilke to the English-speaking world . . . as an extensive reference work on a phase [of Rilke's] work and life that has been . . . underrepresented in the scholarship. * ARBITRIUM *
ISBN: 9781571131881
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 778g
463 pages