Frontier and Utopia in the Fiction of Charles Sealsfield: A Study of the Lebensbilder Aus Der Westlichen Hemisphäre, Volume 14; Volume 150

Front Cover
P. Lang, 1986 - Literary Criticism - 337 pages
This study examines the work of Charles Sealsfield (1793-1864), the Moravian-American writer, whose fiction marked the first serious literary treatment of America in the German language. More specifically, Sealsfield's work is discussed in the light of his experience in America and, above all, in the light of his change of identity from Karl Anton Postl - Moravian monk to Charles Sealsfield - American writer. It employs two concepts - frontier and utopia - to show how Sealsfield was influenced by the antebellum tradition in America, and how he, in turn, used the governing myths and symbols of his time to create an important statement about the relationship between ideology and power in the Age of Jackson.

From inside the book

Contents

Chapter Page
1
Der große Unbekannte
73
George Howards Esq Brautfahrt 1834
99
Copyright

6 other sections not shown

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases