William Lovell
Title page of the first volume | |
| Author | Ludwig Tieck |
|---|---|
| Language | German |
| Publisher | Carl August Nicolai |
Publication date | 1795–1796 |
| Publication place | Holy Roman Empire |
| Pages | 1276 |
William Lovell[1] is a novel by the German writer Ludwig Tieck, published anonymously in three volumes in 1795–1796. It is an epistolary novel that follows the self-destructive intellectual development of a young Englishman who travels in Europe.[2][3][4][5]
Tieck conceived William Lovell while he was a student of English literature. He was initially inspired to write the story by The New Inn by Ben Jonson and was greatly influenced by the narrative technique and several episodes in The Perverted Peasant by Nicolas Restif de la Bretonne. The story is not autobiographical, but Lovell's ideas and worldview are close to Tieck's and inspired by Enlightenment thinking.[6]
References
- ^ The first edition also includes the title Die Geschichte des Herrn William Lovell (lit. 'The Story of Mr. William Lovell').
- ^ Tucker, Brian (2010). Reading Riddles: Rhetorics of Obscurity from Romanticism to Freud. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9781611480290.
- ^ Götze, Martin (2011). "Philosophie". Ludwig Tieck. Leben - Werk - Wirkung (in German). Walter de Gruyter. pp. 304–306. ISBN 9783110217476.
- ^ Corkhill, Alan (1985). "Perspectives on Language in Ludwig Tieck's Epistolary Novel William Lovell". The German Quarterly. 58 (2): 173–183. doi:10.2307/406985.
- ^ Knopper, Françoise (1974). "L'image et le rôle de l'Italie dans William Lovell (1795) de Ludwig Tieck". Recherches germaniques (in French) (4): 3–15. doi:10.3406/reger.1974.922.
- ^ Jost, François (1973). "Ludwig Tieck: English and French Sources of His William Lovell (1795/96)". Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture. 2: 181–193. doi:10.1353/sec.1973.0009.
External links
- Projekt Gutenberg-DE
- Deutsches Textarchiv: volume 1, volume 2 and volume 3