Marriage in Philippsburg explained

Marriage in Philippsburg
Author:Martin Walser
Title Orig:Ehen in Philippsburg
Orig Lang Code:de
Country:Germany
Language:German
Publisher:Suhrkamp Verlag
Pub Date:1957
English Pub Date:1960
Pages:419

Marriage in Philippsburg (German: Ehen in Philippsburg), also published in English as The Gadarene Club, is the debut novel of the German writer Martin Walser, published in 1957.[1] [2]

Plot

The young man Hans Beumann leaves the countryside to try his luck in the city of Philippsburg (a fictionalized version of Stuttgart).

Reception

Der Spiegel said Walser describes the phrases and power struggles of contemporary careerists "with sincere astonishment, but without reformatory zeal", exhibiting a "fair, albeit resigned disaffection".[3]

The novel was awarded the Hermann-Hesse-Literaturpreis.

Adaptation

Stephan Kimmig wrote a play based on the novel that premiered at the Schauspiel Stuttgart in 2017.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Agazzi, Elena . 2013 . Martin Walser: Ehen in Phillipsburg (1957) . Agazzi . Elena . Schütz . Erhard . Handbuch Nachkriegskultur. Literatur, Sachbuch und Film in Deutschland (1945–1962) . de . Berlin, Boston . De Gruyter . 494–496 . 10.1515/9783110221404.494 . 9783110221398 .
  2. Westphal . Bärbel . 2015 . Affären und Karrieren – Familienbildung im Wirtschaftswunderjahrzehnt in der Bundesrepublik: Martin Walsers Roman Ehen in Philippsburg . Moderna språk . de . 109 . 1 . 19 May 2023 .
  3. News: S . 26 November 1957 . Martin Walser: »Ehen in Philippsburg« . . de . 19 May 2023 .
  4. News: Spiegel . Hubert . 23 March 2017 . Feierbiester im Wirtschaftswunderland . . de . 19 May 2023 .