Heinrich Mann's Small town tyrant : the Grammar School Novel as a German prototype of academic fiction
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.4312/an.49.1-2.63-71Keywords:
German literature / Anglo-American campus novel / German Grammar School Novel / Heinrich Mann / The Blue Angel / Marlene DietrichAbstract
This article considers the German Grammar School Novel from the first half of the twentieth century an all but forgotten Germanophone prototype of campus fiction. Whereas the Anglo-American campus novel of the 1970s, 80s and 90s features university professors as future-related agents of Western counterculture and free thought, the Grammar School Novel satirizes the German grammar school teacher known as Gymnasialprofessor as a representative of the past-related order of the autocratic German state apparatus from the beginning of the twentieth century. As Heinrich Mann's 1905 novel Professor Unrat / Small Town Tyrant (the source text of Marlene Dietrich's debut movie The Blue Angel) may be considered a foundational work of the German Grammar School Novel corpus, the main part of the article offers a sample analysis of this text.Metrics
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Published
15. 12. 2016
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Copyright (c) 2016 Dieter Fuchs

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
How to Cite
Fuchs, D. (2016). Heinrich Mann’s Small town tyrant : the Grammar School Novel as a German prototype of academic fiction. Acta Neophilologica, 49(1-2), 63-71. https://doi.org/10.4312/an.49.1-2.63-71