Oxford University Press, 162 pp., $21.95
Viking, 346 pp., $25.00
Thames and Hudson, 320 pp., $40.00
Overlook, 175 pp., $50.00
Yale University Press, 288 pp., $30.00
Do we need yet more books about Vienna in the early twentieth century? Publishers clearly think we do, for we now have two new biographies of Alma Mahler (although a perfectly adequate one was published as recently as 1983)[1] as well as a selection in English from the letters of Oskar Kokoschka (four volumes of which were published in German between 1984 and 1988), and an interesting study of the Viennese couturière Emilie Flöge and her relations with the painter Gustav Klimt, to say nothing of a book on the fin-de-siècle culture of adolescence in Vienna and elsewhere which the author himself describes as a 'large but inhomogeneous corpus spanning a variety of ideologies, discourses, and national cultures.'
Review, 4336 words
To read the full text of this piece, please choose one of the following options:
|
If you are already a subscriber to the Review's electronic edition, please sign in: |
To subscribe to the electronic edition, please press the button below. |
To purchase access to this article for $3, please press the button below. |