Black devil and iron angel the railway in nineteenth-century German realism /

Youngman, Paul A.

Black devil and iron angel the railway in nineteenth-century German realism / Paul A. Youngman. - Washington, D.C. : Catholic University of America Press, (c)2005. - 1 online resource (xiii, 173 pages)

Includes bibliographies and index.

History of the German railway -- Purveyor culture or culture killer? -- Survey of current research -- Realism and the railway -- Overview of the primary literature -- Berthold Auerbach -- 'Auf einem Acker an der Eisenbahn" -- Auerbach and realism -- Sträflinge -- Das Nest an der Bahn -- Peter Rosegger -- Rosegger, Auerbach, and realism -- Essays on progress -- "Der Dorfbahnhof" -- Die neue Bahn -- Das ewige Licht -- Theodor Fontane -- Fontane's realism -- Cécile -- Effi Briest -- Gerhart Hauptmann -- Hauptmann, realism, and mythology -- "Im Nachtzug" -- Bahnwärter Thiel -- Max Eyth -- "Poesie und Technik -- Die Brück' am Tay" -- Berufstragik -- Conclusion -- Appendix A. "Im Nachtzug" -- Appendix B. "Die Brück' am Tay."

"Black Devil and Iron Angel examines how the railway was received and represented by a variety of nineteenth-century German and Austrian realist authors including Berthold Auerbach, Theodor Fontane, and Gerhart Hauptmann. This book is a compelling, focused analysis of the point at which mythology and technology merge, signifying the composition of a larger narrative desired by human beings to gain some sense of control over a world in which they have little power - a problem not by any means confined to German-speaking lands.". "Using Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer's seminal work on the dialectical nature of the Enlightenment as a framework, Youngman makes the original claim that realist authors are a particularly rich source in which to study the intersection of technology and mythology.". "In his emphasis on the legitimacy of both scientific and non-scientific approaches to understanding, Youngman follows the lead of Charles Percy Snow, who, in the mid-twentieth century, identified what he considered a dangerous rift between literary intellectuals on the one hand and scientists on the other. In order to prevent the establishment of two distinct cultures incapable of communicating with one another, he admonished intellectuals to establish a "third culture," a culture bridging the gap between the techno-scientific realm and the mytho-literary realm. Youngman's work is intended as a contribution to what has become known as Third-Culture Studies."--BOOK JACKET.



9780813216683


German literature--History and criticism.--19th century
Railroads in literature.


Electronic Books.

PT345 / .B533 2005