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Drama and "Ideenschmuggel" : Inserted Performance as Communicative Strategy in Karl Gutzkow's Plays 1839-1849

Part of the North American Studies in Nineteenth-century German Literature and Culture series
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This monograph details Gutzkow's recurring use of performance-within-the-play as a means of encouraging an active, political response by the audience.

He incorporates an internal audience viewing a performance on stage in order to model an ideal of dramatic reception for the audiences of his own play.

Gutzkow structures the narrative contextualization of these performances as reflections of specific issues in the German states of the Vormarz.

Beginning with an overview of theoretical and literary texts from the 1830s, this study traces Gutzkow's transferral of self-reflexive structures from his novels of this decade into his first staged play, Richard Savage (1839), and on through Das Urbild des Tartuffe (1844) and Uriel Acosta (1845).

It concludes by portraying Der Koenigsleutnant (1849) as a transitional work that shows Gutzkow's decision to return to the novel as a consequence of the failure of his plays to attain the reception he intended.

By using the coherency of the communicated message instead of fealty to aesthetic norms as the evaluative criteria for discussing Gutzkow's plays, the book exposes an innovative mode of specifically literary social criticism in these works that complements their traditional assessment as documentation of the cultural history of Liberalism in this period.

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Product Details
Verlag Peter Lang
3039110950 / 9783039110957
Paperback / softback
832.7
15/02/2008
Switzerland
English
187 p.
23 cm
Professional & Vocational Learn More