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$124.99
41. Friedrich Holderlin: Patmos: Das
$36.63
42. Centaurengesange: Friedrich Holderlins
 
43. Friedrich Holderlin: an Early
$18.83
44. Friedrich Hölderlin.
45. Friedrich Holderlin (Die Grossen
$88.46
46. Die Briefe, Briefe an Holderlin,
 
47. Das Leben Friedrich Holderlins
48. Friedrich Hölderlin. Neue Wege
$22.43
49. Die Jugenddichtung Friedrich Holderlins
 
$28.49
50. Dichtungen Von Friedrich Holderlin
51. Friedrich Holderlin: Eine Psychobiographie
 
52. Friedrich Holderlin (Twayne's
 
53. Die asthetische Rettung der Seinsgewissheit:
$25.00
54. Holderlin: The Poetics of Being
$202.02
55. Sämtliche Werke. Frankfurter
 
56. Poemes de Holderlin (French Edition)
$99.79
57. Hölderlin : Oeuvres
$40.46
58. Readings in Interpretation: Holderlin,
$14.95
59. Selected Poems
 
$108.92
60. Hyperion and Selected Poems: Friedrich

41. Friedrich Holderlin: Patmos: Das scheidende Erscheinen des Gedichts (German Edition)
by Charles de Roche
 Paperback: 239 Pages (1999)
-- used & new: US$124.99
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Asin: 3770533925
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42. Centaurengesange: Friedrich Holderlins Pindarfragmente (Epistemata) (German Edition)
by Heike Bartel
Perfect Paperback: 200 Pages (2000)
-- used & new: US$36.63
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Asin: 3826018265
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43. Friedrich Holderlin: an Early Modern
by Emery, E. (Ed. ) George
 Paperback: Pages (1987-01-01)

Asin: B003X5YTW4
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44. Friedrich Hölderlin.
by Stephan Wackwitz, Lioba. Waleczek
Paperback: 205 Pages (1997-01-01)
-- used & new: US$18.83
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Asin: 3476122158
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45. Friedrich Holderlin (Die Grossen Klassiker) (German Edition)
by Gebhard Kramer
Hardcover: 304 Pages (1981)

Isbn: 3850121054
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46. Die Briefe, Briefe an Holderlin, Dokumente (Samtliche Werke und Briefe / Friedrich Holderlin) (German Edition)
by Friedrich Holderlin
Hardcover: 1050 Pages (1992)
-- used & new: US$88.46
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Asin: 3618608306
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47. Das Leben Friedrich Holderlins
by Wilhelm Michel
 Paperback: Pages (1963)

Asin: B003RQU5B8
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48. Friedrich Hölderlin. Neue Wege der Forschung.
by Thomas Roberg
Paperback: 328 Pages (2003-01-01)

Isbn: 3534158148
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49. Die Jugenddichtung Friedrich Holderlins (1899) (German Edition)
by Rudolf Grosch
Hardcover: 48 Pages (2010-05-23)
list price: US$30.95 -- used & new: US$22.43
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Asin: 1162498870
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Editorial Review

Product Description
This Book Is In German. ... Read more


50. Dichtungen Von Friedrich Holderlin (1884) (German Edition)
by K. Kostlin
 Paperback: 452 Pages (2010-09-10)
list price: US$30.36 -- used & new: US$28.49
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Asin: 1167680855
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Editorial Review

Product Description
This Book Is In German. ... Read more


51. Friedrich Holderlin: Eine Psychobiographie (German Edition)
by Ingeborg Joppien
Hardcover: 230 Pages (1998)

Isbn: 3170129597
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52. Friedrich Holderlin (Twayne's World Authors Series)
by Richard Unger
 Hardcover: 155 Pages (1984-06)
list price: US$20.95
Isbn: 0805765859
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (1)

5-0 out of 5 stars Unger's book is an important work about a major poet.
Holderlin is a German poet who is unfortunately not well in in the United States.Richard Unger, however, provides an excellent study of this major figure in European literature.Unger's own command of German is superb, and he is thoroughly familiar with both the poet's work and the period in which he wrote.While not for the casual reader, this book is essential for the serious student of German literature. ... Read more


53. Die asthetische Rettung der Seinsgewissheit: Untersuchungen zum Geltungsanspruch der 'Mimesis' im Ausgang von Friedrich Holderlins theoretischen Schriften ... Jahre (Epistemata) (German Edition)
by Katharina Razumovsky-Fasbender
 Perfect Paperback: 186 Pages (1992)

Isbn: 3884796720
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54. Holderlin: The Poetics of Being
by Adrian Del Caro
Hardcover: 145 Pages (1990-12)
list price: US$31.95 -- used & new: US$25.00
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Asin: 0814323219
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (1)

5-0 out of 5 stars Brilliant study of ecstatic-visionary poetry of Holderlin
Enormously impressed.Many of the secrets for producing great poetry are in this book, at least implicitly.The book is also a treat for those who simply appreciate good writing. ... Read more


55. Sämtliche Werke. Frankfurter Ausgabe. Faksimile-Supplement 01.: Frankfurter und Homburger Entwurfsfaszikel. Historisch-Kritische Ausgabe.
by Friedrich Hölderlin
Turtleback: 236 Pages (1999)
-- used & new: US$202.02
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Asin: 387877415X
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56. Poemes de Holderlin (French Edition)
by Friedrich Holderlin
 Paperback: 53 Pages (1963)

Isbn: 2715214197
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57. Hölderlin : Oeuvres
by Friedrich Holderlin
Hardcover: 1266 Pages (1982-01-01)
-- used & new: US$99.79
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Asin: 2070102602
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58. Readings in Interpretation: Holderlin, Hegel, Heidegger (Theory and History of Literature)
by Andrzej Warminski
Paperback: 288 Pages (1987-05-18)
list price: US$50.00 -- used & new: US$40.46
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Asin: 0816612404
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Product Description

Readings in Interpretation was first published in 1987. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions.

Readings in Interpretation — a volume primarily on the texts of Holderlin, Hegel, and their interpreter Heidegger—locates itself strategically between literature and philosophy. In keeping with this juxtaposition, it treats the question of self-consciousness and reflection on the levels of "theme" and "text." For both Hegel and Holderlin, selfconsciousness and its relation to knowing are explicit themes, but Waminski's readings show that a more disruptive reflection is operative on the level of text.

In an argument that centers on the textual aspects of Hegel's Phenomenology of the Spirit,Warminski demonstrates that the negative moment—which is often interpreted as a prelude to a unified self-consciousness—cannot be accounted for by interpretive models drawn from outside the text—by concepts like the self, consciousness, or the subject. Instead, a completely different practice and theory is necessary. The author's "Prefatory Postscript" at the beginning of the book therefore serves as an introduction to sketch the theoretical basis of the readings that follow and as a "postscript" that explains the difference between "reading" and "interpretation" which those readings make necessary.

... Read more

59. Selected Poems
by Friedrich Holderlin
Paperback: 112 Pages (1996-12-31)
list price: US$17.95 -- used & new: US$14.95
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Asin: 1852243783
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
The strange and beautiful language of his late poems is re-created in these remarkable verse translations. Friedrich Hölderlin (1770-1843) was one of Europe's greatest poets. Constantine's translations make him accessible, even informal. This is a stimulating introduction to the work of a poet who addresses us ever more urgently as the millennium ends. This edition contains several new translations, including one of the great elegy- Bread and Wine."" The odes and hymns are more fully represented, and there are further extracts, in an equivalent English, from Hölderlin's extraordinary German versions of Sophocles. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (2)

5-0 out of 5 stars Gorgeous
David Constantine has achieved the near-impossible.His translations take us to the core of Holderlin's psyche, with all it's passion and grief and mystery.Earlier translations of Holderlin aimed for accuracy and lost the deep compassion in this poet's work.If you've never read Holderlin before, or gave up because of the ridgidity and obfuscation of the translation, get this book.The beauty of Constantine's work truly reflects the poet's great heart.

5-0 out of 5 stars Hölderlin, bigger than the world
If you want to read the world from the hands of a mad man. Hölderlin, a mad man, a heart full of love and patience, is writing to truth about it. You can feel the air of darkness, the blindness of humanbeings. Thetraditional loneliness comes after him, but pure and without the pain. Theonly pain in Hölderlin is to live. The room full of all kinds of flowers,dust, rain and purity. If you are looking the meaning of poetry, you canfind it where it once belong to. ... Read more


60. Hyperion and Selected Poems: Friedrich Hlderlin (German Library)
by Eric Santner
 Hardcover: 320 Pages (1990-08-01)
list price: US$29.95 -- used & new: US$108.92
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Asin: 0826403336
Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (6)

5-0 out of 5 stars Comments on the Trask Hyperion in this edition
Eric L. Santner has collected a varitable who's who of Hölderlin translators in this wonderful edition. The centerpiece is Willard R. Trask's 1965 complete translation of Hyperion, though the version presented here calls for some comment.

Santner writes (Intro, xxxvi), Trask's translation "has been adapted by David Schwarz with an eye toward preserving the jarring strangeness of Hölderlin's diction so that it strikes the American reader precisely as strange rather than merely foreign or archaic." Santner makes no more mention about this so-called "adaptation," nor are there notes in the text indicating what, if anything has been changed. A comparison with the original Trask work (sadly out of print) shows that in places the translation does indeed change radically, though the overall impression is that Schwarz worked more on adapting and smoothing the English than on re-translating the German. This is a good thing, on the whole, and does almost no real damage to the strength of Trask's original translation. In fact, the general tenor of the German is preserved and even enhanced by Schwarz's adaptation of Trask. One could wish for more comment on the adaptation, but leave that lie.

The matter of translations, of course, always comes down to the ability to work through the text in its original German, and since any translation isat best an interpretation of the original text, the difference between a translation and an adaptation of a translation may matter little. The Schwarz/Trask edition which Santner presents is truly a magnificent piece of literature in its own right. Pity that the preeminent Hölderlin translator, Michael Hamburger, never got around to a full English version of Hyperion.

As it is, this translation preserves the beautiful surreality of so much of the text, particularly the letters between Hyperion and Diotima: "Schade, schade, daß es jetzt nicht besser zugeht unter den Menschen, sonst blieb' ich gern auf diesem guten Stern. Aber ich kann dies Erdenrund entbehren, das ist mehr, denn alles, was es geben kann," or "Alas, alas, that things are not now better among mankind! were it otherwise, I would gladly remain upon this goodly star. But I can forego this globe of the earth, and that is more than all that it can give." A truly magnificent work of literature, and a masterful translation (or adaption, please yourself).

3-0 out of 5 stars Without freedom all is dead
This book is an exemplary romantic text, rebellious, reactionary, naïve and full of misunderstandings.

Attack on reason
For Hölderlin, reason (the Enlightenment) should be replaced by `spontaneous enthusiasm'. This is not less than asking that the evolution be screwed back: `When I was still a child, knowing nothing of all that is about us, was I not then more than now I am?'
`Man is a beggar when he thinks.' `When these men saw a spark of reason, they turned their backs like thieves.'

Attack on all that limits individual freedom (power, state)
`It is better to become as the bee and build one's house in innocence, than to rule with the masters of the world and howl with them as with wolves, than to dominate people.'
`You accord the state far too much power ... we will take its laws and whip them in the pillory. The state has always been made a hell by man's wanting to make it his heaven.'

Attack on science, industry, wealth accumulation
`Knowledge has corrupted everything.' `Barbarians whom industry and science and even religion made yet more barbarous.' `Men of necessity insensitive to all comely living.'

Illusions
This book is full of ecstatic childish cries about `endless love' (but his love dies), `the magical land of the Greek gods', `the terrifying splendor of Antiquity', `proud Rome' (Hölderlin quotes Plutarch, but the world described in Plutarch's books was indeed `terrifying' for the populations who lived in it), `the Eternal Beauty that is Nature' (but man is part of nature).

Freedom and peace
His highest goods are individual freedom and peace (`the golden age of innocence, the time of peace and freedom'). When one has enough means, one should `flee to some blessed valley to buy a pleasant house'.
Hyperion's trust in mankind is completely shattered when the Greek troops whom he leads against the Turks to give them a nation (also a very romantic goal), 'plundered, murdered, indiscriminately, even our brothers were killed.' Hyperion's reaction: `Be your own consolation'.

This book is a key text for the understanding of the Romantic Movement in Europe. Therefore, it is not to be missed. However, it doesn't attain the high standard of such romantic masterpieces as `Elective Affinities' by Goethe.

4-0 out of 5 stars Poetic Language without a Plot
My Professor advised us to read this book without looking for a plot...because we wouldn't find one. He was right: Hyperion is a beautifully written account of one man's reflection on his life; it deals with love, friendship, and man's relationship with Nature. Holderlin's personal love for the Ancient Greeks also resonates throughout the poem. It should be read to enjoy and to be used as personal reflection on one's own life as well; but if you're looking for a plot, don't bother. There really isn't one. Pay close attention to the selection of poems included in the back: some of his better works have been included, and they are printed alongside the original German version as well. German scholars may find some discrepencies in the translations.

5-0 out of 5 stars Deserves as many stars as there are stars in the sky...
I read this in a state of intoxicated bliss.No, I wasn't intoxicated when I read it; the singing prose itself made me drunk with the very CONCEPT of life itself, the illimitable potential that humanity can manifest when it is on the highest road of spiritual and artistic discovery. HYPERION is the literary equivalent of something like Beethoven's "Ode to Joy;" among the very highest and most transcendent monuments of world culture, if imbibed in the proper mood, it can change your life altogether.(And this was onlyby way of the superb old translation in the Signet Classic, whoever did it was one of the greatest of all English translators...)

5-0 out of 5 stars One of the giants of ALL literature
Hölderlin today deserves to enjoy a much wider readership than ever before given the veneration afforded to him by none other than Martin Heidegger for whom he was the greatest of the great. Sadly,Hölderlin was to leave us only one completed novel before his final descent into madness and obscurity but, my goodness, it is a gem of the greatest philosophic and poetic depth. This is without doubt one of the truly greatest novels to have ever been written. Certainly there is the typically German influence of music on this contemporary of Beethoven, hence the idea of applying the structural principles of sonata-allegro form to the novel. Anyone familiar with the musicological musings of Nikolaus Harnoncourt will know that the principles of sonata form structure in music were originally grounded on the classical principles of rhetoric - the art of presenting arguments - with all of its origins in Aristotle and which was a corner stone of education at this time. At the same time Hölderlin was to enjoy friendship with none other the great Hegel himself, thus lending this novel a philosophical profundity perhaps unrivalled by any in history - even by Camus or Satre.

The novel is set on the backdrop of a classical Greece of ancient ruins but occupied by the Ottoman Empire. Hyperion yearns to reawaken the glories of Classical Greece but kindles Romantic dreams of fighting for the liberation of his homeland, and leaves his idyllic Mediterranean world and the love of his life to fight in the name of freedom. The story unfolds in masterly fashion, enriched with its perfect balance of a nostalgic dreaming after a lost Classical world, matched with a Romatic passion for freedom and is told in the form of letters exchanged between Hyperion and friends in his idyllic homeland, all of which provide grippingly intense reading from start to finish.

The final lengthy epilog is some of the most profound philosophical meditations to ever appear in a novel. You can see why he won Heidegger's veneration when you read them. In this age where in central Europe at least, Hölderlin's star only gets brighter, Hyperion is absolutey essential reading. This is without doubt my favourite novel of all time, a work of rare profundity akin to Beethoven's late string quartets - so esoteric yet utterly divine in the profundity of its utterance. ... Read more


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