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Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship

 
Wikipedia: Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship
Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship  
Author Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Original title Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre
Language German
Genre(s) Bildungsroman
Publisher Johann Friedrich Unger (Berlin)
Publication date 1795-1796
Preceded by Wilhelm Meister's Theatrical Calling (Wilhelm Meisters theatralische Sendung) (1777-1785)
Followed by Wilhelm Meister's Journeyman Years (Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre) (1821/1829)

Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship (German: Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre) is the second novel by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, published in 1795-96. While his first novel, The Sorrows of Young Werther, featured a hero driven to suicide by despair, the eponymous hero of this novel undergoes a journey of self-realization. The story centers upon Wilhelm's attempt to escape what he views as the empty life of a bourgeois businessman. After a failed romance with the theater, Wilhelm commits himself to the mysterious Tower Society composed of enlightened aristocrats.

Further books patterned after this novel have been called Bildungsromane ("novels of formation"), despite the fact that Wilhelm's "Bildung" ("education", or "formation of character") is ironized by the narrator at many points.[1]

The impact of Apprenticeship on European literature is great. Romantic critic and theorist Friedrich Schlegel judged this novel to be of comparable importance for its age as the French Revolution and the philosophy of Johann Gottlieb Fichte.

This novel represents one of the important moments in the eighteenth-century German reception of the dramas of William Shakespeare: the protagonist is introduced to these by the character Jarno, and extensive discussion of Shakespeare's work occurs within the novel's dialogues. Wilhelm and his theater group give a production of Hamlet, in which Wilhelm plays the lead role. Shakespeare's work had begun to be translated into German in the 1740s, and had attained tremendous popularity and influence in Germany by the end of the century.

Goethe's work on the novel begins in the 1770s. An early version of the work, unpublished during Goethe's lifetime, was discovered in the early twentieth century, and published under the title Wilhelm Meister's Theatrical Calling (Wilhelm Meisters theatralische Sendung). When the Apprenticeship was completed in the mid-1790s, it was to a great extent through the encouragement and criticism of Goethe's close friend and collaborator Friedrich Schiller that it took its final shape. Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre ("Wilhelm Meister's Journeyman Years"), the sequel to the Apprenticeship, was planned already in the 1790s, but did not appear in its first edition until 1821, and in its final form until 1829.

Contents

Characters of the novel

Barbara

Mariane

Norberg

Wilhelm Meister

the lieutenant

Werner

Mr. Melina

Mme. Melina

Serlo

the stranger

Laertes

Philine

Mignon

Friedrich

the harp player

Jarno

the count

the countess

the baron

Aurelie

Felix

the beautiful soul

Natalie

the Abbé

Lothario

Lydie

Therese

the marquis


See also

The opera Mignon by Ambroise Thomas is based on Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship.

The film The Wrong Move by Wim Wenders is a free adaptation of Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship.

Footnotes

  1. ^ See: Sammons, Jeffrey L. "The Mystery of the Missing Bildungsroman; or, What Happened to Wilhelm Meister's Legacy?" Genre 14 (1981): 229-46.

External links


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