Ideology, Mimesis, Fantasy :Charles Sealsfield, Friedrich Gerstäcker, Karl May, and Other German Novelists of America - University of North Carolina Studies in Germanic Languages and Literature

Ideology, Mimesis, Fantasy

Ideology, Mimesis, Fantasy :Charles Sealsfield, Friedrich Gerstäcker, Karl May, and Other German Novelists of America - University of North Carolina Studies in Germanic Languages and Literature

paperback
Published: 30 May, 2020
Standard worldwide delivery by Wed, July 22 - Mon, July 27
Order within 0
Condition: NEW
$39.57
Price includes shipping
Available 20 in stock
- +
FREE Returns within 30 days

Description

This study of German fiction about America in the nineteenth century concentrates in detail on three writers: Charles Sealsfield (Carl Postl, 1793-1864), an escaped Moravian monk who came to New Orleans in 1823 and wrote the first major German novels about the United States; Friedrich Gerstacker (1816-1872), who, among his many experiences in America as a young man, lived as a backwoodsman in Arkansas and who later produced a large body of fiction, travel reportage, and emigration advice; and Karl May (1842-1912), who, though he knew nothing about America beyond what he could read in books, wrote famous adventure stories set in an imaginary West and became the best-selling writer in the German language.

Sammons provides biographies of the authors and discusses how each differs in their mimetic and ideological approach. He pays particular attention to how the authors address issues of race, gender and politics in the United States. Sammons interweaves his discussion of these three writers with excurses into the emergence of the German Western and anti-Americanism in German fiction.
See more

More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9781469656700
ISBN10 1469656701
Number Of Pages 360
Item Weight 500 g
Product Dimensions 152 x 228 x 20 mm
Publisher / Reseller The University of North Carolina Press
Format paperback
See More +

Media Reviews

Reading this text, written in Sammons' distinctive voice, is like listening to the reflections of a mind informed by deep and heartfelt convictions about the American democratic experiment--with all its failures--about justice and equality. It reminds us why literature is relevant to this experiment." - Monatshefte

Show more