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Chargement... Lieutenant Gustl (1900)par Arthur Schnitzler
German Literature (55) » 5 plus Chargement...
Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. 3.8 stars AKA: None But the Brave A very short story written in stream of consciousness. Apparently this is the first book in German to be written in such a way. I am tempted to give it 4 stars because I enjoyed the story and the style, and it was just the right length to be impactful. Yet it was missing some unnameable spark that would make it a 4 star book. Gustl is rather impatient and short-tempered after suffering through an evening concert. He exchanges impolite words during the post-concert crowd and receives an insult to his honor. An insult that can only be assuaged by death -- either kill the insulter or commit suicide. The reader listens to Gustl thoughts through it all and through the sleepless night as he worries over the impending crisis and through it's conclusion in the early hours of the next day. It is a fascinating use of interior monologue, almost a precursor of stream of consciousness. Schnitzler touches upon large themes and questions as well as the inconsequential minutia that comprise consciousness in a charmingly realistic manner. (Come inizia:) " Quanto durerà ancora? Guardiamo l'orologio... probabilmente non sta bene in un concerto così serio. Ma chi se n'accorge? Se qualcuno mi vede, vuol dire che è distratto quanto me, e di lui non ho bisogno di aver soggezione... Appena le dieci meno un quarto?... Mi sembra di star seduto qui da tre ore..." Lieutenant Gustl (published in English as None but the Brave) is a novella by the Austrian novelist Arthur Schnitzler. With this novella, which appeared in 1900, he was one of the first authors to experiment with, and write a story conceived entirely in monologue interieur. The novella has very little to offer in the sense of plot or action. The story consists entirely is the ruminations of Lieutenant Gustl. The difficulty in reading and appreciating the novella lie in the ability to put up with Gustl's stream of thoughts, and understanding his thoughts and conclusions in the setting and time frame of nineteenth century Austria. The novella opens with Gustl being bored, sitting through a performance in a Viennese concert. While collecting his coat from the cloakroom he is offended by the local baker. Unable to settle this affront there and then, he comes away feeling utterly humiliated, and spends the night ruminating on what he should have done, and how to rid himself of this blemish, seeing no other way out than to commit suicide. He decides to postpone this gruesome act until after his morning coffee in his regular cafe, where he is informed that the baker died unexpectedly the previous night from a heart attack. Utterly relieved, Gustl abandons his suicide plans. When it appeared, in 1900, the novella caused a scandal, as it purported to show the cowardice of an officer of the Austrian Imperial and Royal Guard. Gustl's decision to commit suicide must be seen within the context of the then current military code, which prescribed suicide in such a situation, where the officer was prevented from settling the matter there-and-then, not by a duel, which would suit offenders belonging to the same aristocratic class, but by immediate action. Readers who can put up with Gustl's depressing ruminations, may find Lieutenant Gustl an exemplary early example of a novella entirely based on interior monologue. aucune critique | ajouter une critique
Est contenu dansHamburger Lesehefte : Arthur Schnitzler : Leutnant Gustl + Fräulein Else par Arthur Schnitzler (indirect) Contient un commentaire de texte deContient un guide de lecture pour étudiant
Originally translated as None But the Brave in 1926, Lieutenant Gustl is one of the great Austrian writer Arthur Schnitzler's most accomplished novels. Written entirely in the form of an interior monologue--the book highly influenced James Joyce in Ulysses--the novel recounts the moment-to-moment experiences of a swaggering Austrian military man. In a cloakroom argument after a comment, a baker, reacting to Gustl's rudeness, grabs the soldier's sword and orders him to have patience. Convinced he has been completely dishonored, Gustl ponders suicide and wanders through Vienna wishing for the baker's death. When he learns that the baker has, in fact, died that evening from a stroke, he immediately returns to his aggressive and hateful nature, and relishes a duel he had entered into days before. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)833.8Literature German literature and literatures of related languages German fiction Later 19th century 1856–1900Classification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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I enjoyed the ending of the story, because I feel pretty certain that I could predict what would likely come directly after. Of course, we only know what we are told in the story, but I couldn’t help having some ideas of my own.
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