Description
The Tale of Bluebeard in German Literature
From the Eighteenth Century to the Present
Oxford Modern Languages and Literature Monographs Series
Author: Davies Mererid Puw
Language: English
Publication date: 03-2001
296 p. · 14.6x22.4 cm · Hardback
296 p. · 14.6x22.4 cm · Hardback
Description
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Bluebeard', in which women are slaughtered by a monstrous husband and their bodies hidden in a horrible chamber, is the most hair-raising of tales; yet with its happy ending, it also has a utopian force. Using the idiom of literary criticism, the study considers Bluebeard texts as a seismograph of gender politics and of the process of civilization from seventeenth-century France to 1990s Germany, in a broad range of canonical and non-canonical, often forgotten texts. The study discusses Charles Perrault's French version of 1697, through Ludwig Tieck's versions of 1797 and classic versions by the Grimms and Ludwig Bechstein, to nineteenth-century romantic fiction, the savagery of High Modernism, and twentieth-century versions such as that of the Surrealist Unica Zürn. While the focus is on literature in German, this is the first full-length study published in any language of the history of Bluebeard, and it redefines the canon and our interpretations of this key tale.
1: Unendliche Geschichte? Reading Marchen, 2: Bluebeard - A Subversive Narrative. Some Theoretical Ideas, 3: Narratives of Origin, 4: The Moral(s) of the Story: Early Versions of 'Blaubart', 5: The Collector: E. Marlitt, 'Blaubart', 6: 'Der gute Blaubart': Bluebeard at the Turn of the Century, 7: 'Ich . . . verleiss das Haus in Morgengrauen': Bluebeard in the Later Twentieth Century, 8: Blaubarts Schatten: Some Conclusions, Bibliography, Index
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