Wilhelm Meister Apprenticeship Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Books
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This book was originally published prior to 1923, and represents a reproduction of an important historical work, maintaining the same format as the original work. While some publishers have opted to apply OCR (optical character recognition) technology to the process, we believe this leads to sub-optimal results (frequent typographical errors, strange characters and confusing formatting) and does not adequately preserve the historical character of the original artifact. We believe this work is culturally important in its original archival form. While we strive to adequately clean and digitally enhance the original work, there are occasionally instances where imperfections such as blurred or missing pages, poor pictures or errant marks may have been introduced due to either the quality of the original work or the scanning process itself. Despite these occasional imperfections, we have brought it back into print as part of our ongoing global book preservation commitment, providing customers with access to the best possible historical reprints. We appreciate your understanding of these occasional imperfections, and sincerely hope you enjoy seeing the book in a format as close as possible to that intended by the original publisher.
Wilhelm Meister Apprenticeship Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Books
If you're looking to read Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship in English, this is it. It's the most recent English version I could find and decent. Having said that the typography and design of this book are atrocious. It has small cramped black text against large odd sized pages. One chapter can be only 1.5 pages. This book was made to sit in a library next to other Goethe books so people can say 'look at the complete collection of Goethe we have.' The fact that Goethe's writing can get out of this typographic straight jacket is a testament to his prose. The translation is a little stilted too. Sometimes I had to reread things to see which 'he' was which. Also there's a weird thing of translating 'ways' as 'wise' throughout the book. The story is great though, and if your into German Romanticism this book is for you! We need to get John E. Woods and Penguins Classics together so they can make a new version of this book! Also if you just looking for a bildungsroman to read (and not THE bildungsroman) check out Magic Mountain (translated of course by John E. Woods). It's great. (This review is for the Eric A. Blackall translation.)Product details
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Wilhelm Meister Apprenticeship Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Books Reviews
This is one of the greatest novels I've ever read. Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship is in the league of novels such as War and Peace and Ulysses. This novel is full of great characters, old world adventures, strange charms, and some of the most beautiful moments in literature. Somehow this novel manages to be rather contrived and yet so natural. While Faust is generally considered Goethe's magnum opus, I found Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship an overall more powerful and memorable work.
When it comes to translations, this translation by Eric A. Blackall is the best. Whatever you do, do not get Thomas Carlyle's translation, which is more of a rewrite than a translation. Waidson's translation (published by Alma Classics) is probably second best, but when comparing the translations I noticed that in Book Eight, Chapter Two the Waidson's translation is missing a line of dialogue. So I recommend using Princeton's publication of Blackall's translation.
Unfortunately, this text font in the edition is rather ugly, which is a shame since it should have been easy to pick a more appealing font. For this reason, I actually recommend buying The Essential Goethe, which a condensation of Princeton's twelve volume complete Goethe into a one volume selected works. The Essential Goethe contains the complete Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship (translated by Blackall), and is a much better looking book, both for reading and display on your bookshelf.
Got a little lost because of how the book was put together from the original book.Not what I expected but was pleased when I finally got to the end. It was a learning experience.
I've never seen a book printed like this before. It's not good! Spacing often random, words misspelled (or with random symbols instead of letters), punctuation strange. Looks like a job done by a flawed computer program and never reviewed by a human being.
The translation is also strange. Done by Thomas Carlye, apparently in the 1820's, so one might expect the English to be a little old-fashioned, but this is extreme to the point of absurdity. Translation is a challenge, it's not surprising that translators such as Constance Garnett are criticized. But she at least produced English that didn't jar with every sentence. Was Goethe's German so stilted, formal, archaic? I can't say, but this book is impossible to read.
This book is reputed to be the original bildungsroman. I was looking forward to meeting Goethe in prose. Perhaps there's another option.
At last I've got round to reading it - in Carlyle's translation. I've had little to do with German literature, and felt myself quite adrift, not knowing whether it was because of Goethe or because of an alien culture. I persevered because I knew there was something to persevere for. A remarkable book with a sense of utter authority in its apparent digressive, accumulative style. A book of affinities. I'm very pleased I read it.
Thanks for the help with my thesis ;)
Whenever I read Goethe's poems, plays or prose, I'm reminded of his genius. But I have a particularly warm spot in my heart for Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship, Goethe's philosophical novel. The story is gripping, the characters majestic and the ideas compelling.
The novel's cornerstone is its chapter entitled "Confessions of a Beautiful Soul." That chapter provides the thread that ties together the book's plot and characters to its philosophy. In that chapter and what follows -- no less than in his Faust -- Goethe provides a glimpse of lives that he views to be truly worth living.
My advice is to read the Sorrows of Young Werther, in which Goethe shows what it means to be an immature, impetuous post-adolescent, and then read Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship, and learn what it means to evolve into a wise, contended adult. On the surface, Werther was Goethe's great tragedy, but if you ask me, the real tragedy is that Meister is rarely read in modern America. Hopefully, the book will soon have a renaissance. Lord knows it deserves one.
No, this isn't the latest da Vinci code. But it isn't half as bad as some of the reviews make it out to be. Yes, this is a very philosophical novel. It was written a couple of centuries ago and thus reflects the conditions of the time. Yet it capture in universal terms the uncertainties faced by an adolescent as he takes his place in society. This is the reason it was taken as a template for such novels over a period of a hundred years in Germany. For contemporary literature treating the same topic there are obviously better alternative, but for an understanding of how individuality shaped the modern world, this is an excellent place to being your investigations.
If you're looking to read Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship in English, this is it. It's the most recent English version I could find and decent. Having said that the typography and design of this book are atrocious. It has small cramped black text against large odd sized pages. One chapter can be only 1.5 pages. This book was made to sit in a library next to other Goethe books so people can say 'look at the complete collection of Goethe we have.' The fact that Goethe's writing can get out of this typographic straight jacket is a testament to his prose. The translation is a little stilted too. Sometimes I had to reread things to see which 'he' was which. Also there's a weird thing of translating 'ways' as 'wise' throughout the book. The story is great though, and if your into German Romanticism this book is for you! We need to get John E. Woods and Penguins Classics together so they can make a new version of this book! Also if you just looking for a bildungsroman to read (and not THE bildungsroman) check out Magic Mountain (translated of course by John E. Woods). It's great. (This review is for the Eric A. Blackall translation.)
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