Space in Theodor Fontane's Works. Theme and Poetic Function
- Author(s)
- Michael James White
- Series
- Bithell Series of Dissertations
Description
The novels of Theodor Fontane (1819-1898), Germany's most important Realist, have long been appreciated for the symbolism of their represented worlds. In this study, Michael White examines the significance of space and spatial experience across Fontane’s oeuvre, providing analyses of non-fiction prose and less well-known novels, alongside major works and poetry. The study reveals not only a complex and varied spatial symbolism, but also that space itself is a thematic concern in Fontane’s writing. His texts portray human beings’ relationships with their worlds, and how and to what end they invest their environment with meaning. Fontane's novels and travel writings emerge as profoundly reflexive discourses on art and its function for the individual.
Bithell Series of Dissertations, 38/MHRA Texts and Dissertations, 82
ISBN 978-1-907322-29-7; 198 pp.; 30 May 2012