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The Intersection of Material and Poetic Economy

Gustav Freytag’s "Soll und Haben</I> and Adalbert Stifter’s "Der Nachsommer</I>

by Anna Helm (Author)
©2009 Monographs 181 Pages

Summary

This work explores the intersection of the material and poetic economies in Soll und Haben and Der Nachsommer. It demonstrates how the main poetical strategies of the two novels, dichotomization (Soll und Haben) and total economization (Der Nachsommer), are defined by economic themes, structures, and forms. The «economopoetics» of the novels, i.e. the multitude of connections between economics and aesthetics, pervades the texts on three different levels: as content, as representational model, and as literary strategy. Although very different in their treatment of topics relating to business and economics, both novels are driven by narratives parsed with economic expression. The diverging patterns of economopoetics support central commentaries on their underlying realist aesthetics. One important finding is that, in spite of money’s apparent absence from the core content of some literary texts, economic relations are inherent in the narrative structure of those texts. The book shows that economopoetics is relevant not only to any extant literature which attempts explicitly to thematize business and economics (such as Soll und Haben), but also to that which does not (such as Der Nachsommer). Economic organizing principles are pervasive signatures of the novel’s aesthetic.

Details

Pages
181
Year
2009
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039110841
Language
English
Keywords
Finance Life and Death Realism Femininity
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2009. 181 pp.

Biographical notes

Anna Helm (Author)

The Author: Anna H. Helm is Visiting Assistant Professor of International Business at the George Washington University in Washington, DC. She also holds the position of GW-CIBER (Center for International Business Education and Research) Business Language Coordinator. Dr Helm received her Ph.D. in German Studies from Georgetown University in 2002. Her research interests include literary representations of business and economics, business language pedagogy, and cultural applications in international business.

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Title: The Intersection of Material and Poetic Economy