Melancholy in Wilhelm Genazino’s Novels and Its Construction as Other

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksContributions to collected editions/anthologiesResearch

Standard

Melancholy in Wilhelm Genazino’s Novels and Its Construction as Other. / Frank, Svenja.
Sadness and Melancholy in German-Language Literature and Culture. ed. / Mary Crosgrove; Anna Richards. Rochester: Camden House, 2012. p. 151-172 (Edinburgh German Yearbook; Vol. 6).

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksContributions to collected editions/anthologiesResearch

Harvard

Frank, S 2012, Melancholy in Wilhelm Genazino’s Novels and Its Construction as Other. in M Crosgrove & A Richards (eds), Sadness and Melancholy in German-Language Literature and Culture. Edinburgh German Yearbook, vol. 6, Camden House, Rochester, pp. 151-172.

APA

Frank, S. (2012). Melancholy in Wilhelm Genazino’s Novels and Its Construction as Other. In M. Crosgrove, & A. Richards (Eds.), Sadness and Melancholy in German-Language Literature and Culture (pp. 151-172). (Edinburgh German Yearbook; Vol. 6). Camden House.

Vancouver

Frank S. Melancholy in Wilhelm Genazino’s Novels and Its Construction as Other. In Crosgrove M, Richards A, editors, Sadness and Melancholy in German-Language Literature and Culture. Rochester: Camden House. 2012. p. 151-172. (Edinburgh German Yearbook).

Bibtex

@inbook{4435bc4274734d96ac11285d74fa37af,
title = "Melancholy in Wilhelm Genazino{\textquoteright}s Novels and Its Construction as Other",
abstract = "ONE OF THE MOST PROFOUND explorations of sadness, melancholy, and boredom in the landscape of contemporary German literature is evident in the works of Wilhelm Genazino (1943–), a prolific writer based in Frankfurt am Main who won the Georg B{\"u}chner Prize in 2004. Genazino's breakthrough work was the trilogy Abschaffel (1977), which tells the story of the eponymous protagonist, Abschaffel, a bored and melancholy man who despises his job as a bureaucrat in a transportation company, cannot forge lasting relationships with women, has hypochondriac tendencies, and ends up in the final part of the trilogy being treated in a clinic for his various physical and mental ills. Most of Genazino's novels since then follow a similar pattern. They feature a normally middle-aged — and with one exception — male protagonist who works in a job well below his qualifications and education. This figure entertains relationships with different women, and his accounts often focus on the emotional and sexual aspects of these relationships. Genazino's protagonist would thus seem to be manifestation of the prototypical everyman if it were not for his compulsive reflections and long walks, as epigonal flaneur, through the city. The protagonist's internal focalization is the common thread uniting these uneventful novels; except in some of the earlier works, he usually also functions as the narrator. His observations constantly shift between aesthetic stylization of the meaningful minutiae of everyday life that acquire the appearance of still lifes, and contemplation of his inner self.",
keywords = "Literature studies",
author = "Svenja Frank",
year = "2012",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-1-57113-528-5",
series = "Edinburgh German Yearbook",
publisher = "Camden House",
pages = "151--172",
editor = "Mary Crosgrove and Anna Richards",
booktitle = "Sadness and Melancholy in German-Language Literature and Culture",
address = "United States",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Melancholy in Wilhelm Genazino’s Novels and Its Construction as Other

AU - Frank, Svenja

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - ONE OF THE MOST PROFOUND explorations of sadness, melancholy, and boredom in the landscape of contemporary German literature is evident in the works of Wilhelm Genazino (1943–), a prolific writer based in Frankfurt am Main who won the Georg Büchner Prize in 2004. Genazino's breakthrough work was the trilogy Abschaffel (1977), which tells the story of the eponymous protagonist, Abschaffel, a bored and melancholy man who despises his job as a bureaucrat in a transportation company, cannot forge lasting relationships with women, has hypochondriac tendencies, and ends up in the final part of the trilogy being treated in a clinic for his various physical and mental ills. Most of Genazino's novels since then follow a similar pattern. They feature a normally middle-aged — and with one exception — male protagonist who works in a job well below his qualifications and education. This figure entertains relationships with different women, and his accounts often focus on the emotional and sexual aspects of these relationships. Genazino's protagonist would thus seem to be manifestation of the prototypical everyman if it were not for his compulsive reflections and long walks, as epigonal flaneur, through the city. The protagonist's internal focalization is the common thread uniting these uneventful novels; except in some of the earlier works, he usually also functions as the narrator. His observations constantly shift between aesthetic stylization of the meaningful minutiae of everyday life that acquire the appearance of still lifes, and contemplation of his inner self.

AB - ONE OF THE MOST PROFOUND explorations of sadness, melancholy, and boredom in the landscape of contemporary German literature is evident in the works of Wilhelm Genazino (1943–), a prolific writer based in Frankfurt am Main who won the Georg Büchner Prize in 2004. Genazino's breakthrough work was the trilogy Abschaffel (1977), which tells the story of the eponymous protagonist, Abschaffel, a bored and melancholy man who despises his job as a bureaucrat in a transportation company, cannot forge lasting relationships with women, has hypochondriac tendencies, and ends up in the final part of the trilogy being treated in a clinic for his various physical and mental ills. Most of Genazino's novels since then follow a similar pattern. They feature a normally middle-aged — and with one exception — male protagonist who works in a job well below his qualifications and education. This figure entertains relationships with different women, and his accounts often focus on the emotional and sexual aspects of these relationships. Genazino's protagonist would thus seem to be manifestation of the prototypical everyman if it were not for his compulsive reflections and long walks, as epigonal flaneur, through the city. The protagonist's internal focalization is the common thread uniting these uneventful novels; except in some of the earlier works, he usually also functions as the narrator. His observations constantly shift between aesthetic stylization of the meaningful minutiae of everyday life that acquire the appearance of still lifes, and contemplation of his inner self.

KW - Literature studies

UR - https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/abs/sadness-and-melancholy-in-germanlanguage-literature-and-culture/melancholy-in-wilhelm-genazinos-novels-and-its-construction-as-other/E154E082DE4FC99C6A098C6BAAABC31C

M3 - Contributions to collected editions/anthologies

SN - 978-1-57113-528-5

T3 - Edinburgh German Yearbook

SP - 151

EP - 172

BT - Sadness and Melancholy in German-Language Literature and Culture

A2 - Crosgrove, Mary

A2 - Richards, Anna

PB - Camden House

CY - Rochester

ER -