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Else Lasker-Schuler: The Broken World (Anglica Germanica Series 2)

Else Lasker-Schuler: The Broken World (Anglica Germanica Series 2)

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Hans W. Cohn
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Reissue, 8/1/2011
EAN 9780521168366, ISBN10: 0521168368

Paperback, 176 pages, 21.6 x 14 x 1 cm
Language: English

Else Lasker-Schüler (1869–1945) was a German-Jewish poet who died in exile in Jerusalem. This 1974 book was the first full-length treatment of her poetry in English. The aim of the author, a practising psychologist at the time of this book's original publication, in this study of the poet's life, was to see poetry as an expression of the deeper urges of the psyche. The book takes as a point of departure Peter Hille's remark that Lasker-Schüler was a 'Sappho whose world had broken apart'. Her world of experience was a constant swing between extremes: an intense longing for communication which, thwarted, led back to isolation and despair. The wish for contact and withdrawal from reality often coexist in irreconcilable conflict, only resolved by the poet's own acceptance of things as they are. She came closest to such acceptance in her search for God, which led to her religious poetry.

Prefatory note
Abbreviations
Part I. Introduction
Part II. A Biographical Outline
1. Myth and reality
2. Childhood
3. Marriage
4. Friends
5. Paul
6. Emigration
7. Jerusalem
Part III. The Swing of the Pendulum
1. The backward movement
withdrawal
i. Disappointment and resentment
ii. Despair and isolation
iii. Escape into fantasy
iv. Preoccupation with death
2. The forward movement
outgoing
i. Longing for contact
ii. The erotic encounter
iii. The search for God
Biographical data
Select bibliography
Index
Diagram
the swing of the pendulum.