Goethe, Volume 9: Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship
By (Author) Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Edited by Eric A. Blackall
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
3rd July 1995
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Fiction
Literary essays
838.609
Paperback
396
Width 197mm, Height 254mm
680g
Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship, a novel of self-realization greatly admired by the Romantics, has been called the first Bildungsroman and has had a tremendous influence on the history of the German novel. The story centers on Wilhelm, a young man living in the mid-1700s who strives to break free from the restrictive world of economics and seeks fulfillment as an actor and playwright. Along with Eric Blackall's fresh translation of the work, this edition contains notes and an afterword by the translator that aims to put this novel into historical and artistic perspective for twentieth-century readers while showing how it defies categorization.