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Full Description
Allegories of Format examines the significance of format to the literary oeuvre of the nineteenth-century Swiss author, Gottfried Keller (1819-1890), best known for his 1855 novel, Green Henry (Der Grüne Heinrich). Malika Maskarinec understands format as the organization of a media object's relationship to a world of objects and persons; format orders a text's contents or, in the case of literature, what it represents. Maskarinec focuses on three formats of growing prominence in nineteenth-century media culture: the collected-works edition, the document, and the periodical.
The analysis demonstrates that different fictional worlds, characters, and plots in Keller's literary output allegorize the problems that specific print and paper formats pose to literary ideals of literature as an art form and to ideals of creative authorship. As Allegories of Format shows, attending to format allows for false antitheses inherited from the nineteenth century to be dismantled—between high and trivial literature, between the singular artwork and mass media products, and between creative literary works and the supposedly uncreative writing practices of office work.
This book is available as an Open Access volume thanks to funding from the University of Bern/Universität Bern.
Contents
Introduction
1. Life and Work in Der grüne Heinrich
2. The Death of the Author: Premature Burial in Keller's Poetry
3. On the Uses and Abuses of Writing in "Die mißbrauchten Liebesbriefe"
4. From the Office: Doodling while Documenting
5. The Male Gaze, Serialized: Das Sinngedicht
6. Allegorical Closure in the Zricher Novellen
Epilogue: Epigonal Dwarfs