The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 10 by Francke
Let's be clear from the start: this isn't a book you read cover-to-cover in one sitting like a thriller. The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 10, edited by Kuno Francke, is more of a literary sampler platter from a specific, explosive period. Think of it as a carefully assembled playlist of Germany's greatest hits from the late 1800s.
The Story
There's no single narrative. Instead, the book presents selected works from giants like the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, the playwright Gerhart Hauptmann, and the poet Detlev von Liliencron, among others. You might jump from Nietzsche's provocative, aphoristic thoughts on morality and the 'will to power' to Hauptmann's naturalist play The Weavers, which vividly portrays the desperation of Silesian textile workers. Then, you could be swept into the rhythmic, often melancholic beauty of von Liliencron's poetry. The 'story' is the collective journey of German thought and art as it moves away from pure Romanticism, grapples with scientific discovery, social inequality, and questions the very foundations of belief and society.
Why You Should Read It
I loved the direct access it provides. Reading Nietzsche in his own words, not just a summary of his ideas, is a different experience entirely—it's challenging and electric. Hauptmann's play isn't a dry history lesson; it's a heartbreakingly human drama that makes the past feel immediate. This volume removes the middleman. You get to see the raw material of cultural change. It's also fascinating to see the contrasts side-by-side: the lofty, abstract philosophical arguments right next to gritty, ground-level depictions of human struggle. It shows a nation thinking out loud, in all its brilliant and contradictory glory.
Final Verdict
This is perfect for the curious reader who loves history, philosophy, or literature and wants to go beyond textbooks. It's for someone who enjoys dipping into different styles and doesn't mind a challenging, thought-provoking read. If you're a fan of writers like Tolstoy or Ibsen and want to understand their German contemporaries, this is your book. It’s not a light beach read, but for anyone interested in the ideas that shaped the modern world, it's an incredibly rewarding and rich resource. Keep it on your nightstand and explore one thinker at a time.
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Emma Walker
6 months agoFinally found time to read this!