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Traumnovelle
Traumnovelle
Traumnovelle
eBook109 Seiten

Traumnovelle

Bewertung: 3.5 von 5 Sternen

3.5/5

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Über dieses E-Book

Die scheinbar harmonische Ehe des Arztes Fridolin und seiner Frau Albertine kränkelt.
In einer von sexuellen Fantasien und Geschehnissen aufgeladenen sonderbaren Nacht und dem darauffolgenden Tag werden die unter der Oberfläche liegenden erotischen Begierden beider bloßgelegt. Dies scheint die Kluft zwischen den Ehepartnern aber nur noch mehr zu vergrößern.
"Traumnovelle" wurde von 1925 bis 1926 in der Berliner Zeitschrift "die Dame" als Fortsetzungsroman veröffentlicht. Die hier zugrunde liegende Buchausgabe erschien 1926 im S. Fischer Verlag.
1999 verarbeitete der bekannte Regisseur Stanley Kubrick den Stoff der Traumnovelle in seinem Letzten Film "Eyes wide Shut". Den Ort der Handlung verlegte er in das New York der Gegenwart. Die Hauptrollen spielten Tom Cruise und seine damalige Ehefrau, Nicole Kidman.

1. Auflage
Null Papier Verlag
SpracheDeutsch
Erscheinungsdatum24. Juli 2013
ISBN9783954183166
Autor

Arthur Schnitzler

Arthur Schnitzler (* 15. Mai 1862 in Wien, Kaisertum Österreich; † 21. Oktober 1931 ebenda, Republik Österreich) war ein österreichischer Arzt, Erzähler und Dramatiker. Er gilt als Schriftsteller als einer der bedeutendsten Vertreter der Wiener Moderne. (Wikipedia)

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Rezensionen für Traumnovelle

Bewertung: 3.704109536986301 von 5 Sternen
3.5/5

365 Bewertungen9 Rezensionen

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  • Bewertung: 4 von 5 Sternen
    4/5
    Vienna, a long time ago. A respectable doctor has a series of talks with his wife about their dreams, past likes/loves and what ifs. This brings about disquiet and mistrust between them and the doctor then goes about sabotaging the relationship in retaliation. That he is tempted by the flesh is a side-issue for the good doctor. He still manages to in fact blame his wife and her wayward and callous dream for his actions. Interesting. I wonder what Freud would have to say about all this- he was friend to the author. Fortunately for me, while reading the book, I was able to see it in the context of its ancient and unenlightened times so could forgive the sexist attitudes and just go with the story. I read it as an interesting slice of time and place.
  • Bewertung: 4 von 5 Sternen
    4/5
    Vienna, a long time ago. A respectable doctor has a series of talks with his wife about their dreams, past likes/loves and what ifs. This brings about disquiet and mistrust between them and the doctor then goes about sabotaging the relationship in retaliation. That he is tempted by the flesh is a side-issue for the good doctor. He still manages to in fact blame his wife and her wayward and callous dream for his actions. Interesting. I wonder what Freud would have to say about all this- he was friend to the author. Fortunately for me, while reading the book, I was able to see it in the context of its ancient and unenlightened times so could forgive the sexist attitudes and just go with the story. I read it as an interesting slice of time and place.
  • Bewertung: 4 von 5 Sternen
    4/5
    Freud meets Chekhov in decadent Vienna. Dreams, repression, love, lust, marriage, all that good stuff. Kubrick made a movie out of it. If this doesn't grab your attention, I'm not sure if I know you anymore.
  • Bewertung: 3 von 5 Sternen
    3/5
    This is the portuguese translation of the german original Traumnovelle. The story was the basis of the last film by Stanley Kubrick, Eyes wide shut, and the book, forbidden in Nazi Germany, like the remaining works by Schnitzler, is a classic of 20th Century literature in spite of its tiny size. A poignant psycological novel about the non-consumated (real or imagined) infidelities of a Viennese middle class young couple.
  • Bewertung: 2 von 5 Sternen
    2/5
    This novella is what Eyes Wide Shut is loosely based on. In preparation for Kubrick's movie, given I was a in a huge Kubrick phase and could not wait for it, I decided to seek out this book. Good and enjoyable, I would recommend it and found it to be a nice companion to the movie.
  • Bewertung: 4 von 5 Sternen
    4/5
    Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut made a real impression on me as a wee sprout--I remember coming out of it with a pile of tortuous metaphors concerning what my recently-become-ex-girlfriend Erin and I could have done to manage our feelings and fears, the most salient as well as the most embarrassing of which had to do with surfboards and just riding the wave, bra. What I didn't realize, watching crazy, WASPy old Tom Cruise mug his way through what should have been a haunting role, was that the source material--Arthur Schnitzler's Dream Story--wasn't really for people like me at all--young, well-adjusted, healthy members of the suburban dominant culture. No, this is a book about outsiderness; more specifically Jewishness; more specifically still, bourgeois Viennese trying-to-pass Jewishness in the overcultivated, brutal, imperial-headbirth era of decline presided over by filthy, genial mayor Karl Lueger, some of whose best friends were Jews, as you may have heard. This is a story about relationships, jealousy, recognizing the humanity of the other and what you do with that, and it has a surprisingly sweet ending; but it is also a story of exclusion, fear, colliding inferiority complexes on every street corner, and Schnitzler signals strongly that that sweet ending will turn out to be false or at least temporary--and yikes, you think, Jews of Vienna? Temporary any implied happy ending certainly was.
  • Bewertung: 5 von 5 Sternen
    5/5
    Amazing, enveloping book! The book on which the Kubrick film Eyes Wide Shut was based.
  • Bewertung: 3 von 5 Sternen
    3/5
    While reading St Theresa's Interior Castle, I needed a diversion to bring some interest back to my reading. A simple way to ensure I have a steady supply of novels to read is to buy all of the Penguin Classics series. This international series brings to the reader authors and stories that would otherwise be neglected by we Antipodean Anglophones of little news from the Otherphones. Unless the story was the plot of a movie. I knew nothing of Austrian author Arthur Schnitzler, nor of his novella Dream Story. As I read it, I couldn't help but think of Stanley Kubrick's final movie, Eyes Wide Shut. When I looked up Arthur Schnitzler just now, I discovered that the movie was indeed an adaptation of this very novella. Such discoveries are pleasing and bring an undeserved sense of achievement, much like becoming a grandfather. But I recall hating the movie when it first came out. Bearing in mind, of course, that at that time I thought Starship Troopers was the greatest movie ever made. But long since my late 20s, I have revisited many of Kubrick's movies (as I have done with Woody Allen), and there is certainly something of the genius there. (I still struggle with Clockwork Orange, but will read the book and see if that helps. After reading this novella, I intend to watch Eyes Wide Shut again and see if my opinion changes.) But as for this novella, I read the lofty dream-like scenes before sleeping rather late, and then awoke to finish off the last few pages where reality hits Fridolin, our protagonist. My state of being suited the plot rather well. One scene in the Kubrick movie had Tom and Nicole smoking a joint, and this must have been where Fridolin's wife, Albertine, tells him of her desire to have an affair with a young naval officer. I recall being annoyed by that scene - Kidman didn't have the innocence that Albertine portrays in the novella. The innocence brings out the stupidity of Fridolin's jealousy in sharp relief, whereas Kidman's character, I recall, was really trying to stir things up. This means some of the key themes of courage and class-based morality are lost in the movie. The movie, too, seems to direct the audience too much, whereas the novella doesn't answer all reader's questions; it is left to the imagination. A very quick read, and of course, the book is better than the movie.
  • Bewertung: 4 von 5 Sternen
    4/5
    "Of course, one remembers some dreams, but there must be others one completely forgets, of which nothing remains but a mysterious mood, a curious numbness."Atmospheric and haunting! Schnitzler's novella is a perfect Dream (or dream-like) Story. He doesn't create the kind of dream world that is engineered by hanging two moons from the ceiling. His world only consists of realistic things and events and yet it is shadowed by something intangible and unsettling. He simply colors the world his characters inhabit with a hypnotic quality that seduces the reader into the dream-scape. And how subtly he does that! Little details - one elusive gesture, one innocent-looking piece of the setting, one fleeting thought - all come together beautifully to create the atmosphere.

    The novella explores the intimate life of a married couple. Schnitzler digs into the psyche of his characters by gently leading them to a space where their hidden thoughts, desires and anxieties find the freedom to manifest themselves. He lets the characters assess what constitutes truth and reality for them. And once the spell breaks, they can go back to continue living the illusion of real life they create for themselves.
    "I have gained the impression that you have learned through intuition — though actually as a result of sensitive introspection — everything that I have had to unearth by laborious work on other persons." - Freud in a letter to Schnitzler (Wikipedia).Whether the events in the novella happen for real or was Schnitzler only staging an illusion - I will leave that for you to decide through your own reading. Perhaps it won't even matter.
    "Just as sure as I am that the reality of one night, let alone that of a whole lifetime, is not the whole truth."
    "And no dream," he said with a slight sigh, "is entirely a dream." Best read in a sitting or two.

Buchvorschau

Traumnovelle - Arthur Schnitzler

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