Künstlerroman

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A Künstlerroman (de; plural -ane), meaning "artist's novel" in English, is a narrative about an artist's growth to maturity.[1][2] It could be classified as a sub-category of Bildungsroman: a coming-of-age novel.[3] At its most basic, the Künstlerroman can be said to offer an account of "the protagonist's development into an artist,"[4] charting the course of an artist's early awakening to them fully realizing their potential.[5] The Künstlerroman focuses on the artistic person specifically, meaning its protagonists must not only achieve the individual and social growth demanded of regular Bildung plots, but also arrive at a complete understanding of themselves as artists.[6] According to Encyclopaedia Britannica, one way a Künstlerroman may differ from a Bildungsroman is its ending, where a Künstlerroman hero rejects the everyday life, but a Bildungsroman hero settles for being an ordinary citizen.[7] According to Oxford Reference, the difference may lie in a longer view across the Künstlerroman hero's whole life, not just their childhood years.[8]

The Künstlerroman is most closely related to the Bildungsroman, of which it is generally considered a subgenre.[5][9] Both trace a protagonist's development, but where the Bildungsroman leads its hero toward civic life and social integration, the Künstlerroman follows an artist toward a creative vocation.[9] Related forms include the Bildungsfilm, a cinematic equivalent;[9] the postmodernist short story collections like John Barth's Lost in the Funhouse[5] and the comics Künstlerroman, which extends the genre's conventions into graphic narrative.[10]

Historical origins

Rooted in a rebellion against the Enlightenment era, eighteenth century Germanic Romantic authors gave rise to what became the foundation of the Künstlerroman genre. [5] These writers were drawn to the appeal of artistic expression in Romanticism and its most prominent author was Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.[5] Goethe's Bildung philosophy was meant to establish "the full development of a person's possibilities," and from that foundation the Künstlerroman expanded to track the transformation of a protagonist from child to artist.[5]

Looking outside Goethe, this period in European culture saw tremendous activity in the translation of ideas and theories, as writers began to cross borders with increasing frequency.[5] The movement eventually spread to the English language in the nineteenth century, where it was embraced by leading novelists such as Charles Dickens.[5] The style is considered to have reached its peak in English with Stephen Dedalus' personal progression into writerhood in James Joyce's A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916), generally considered the peak example of the genre in English.[5] The genre is also considered an example of literary autobiography, as the writer of a Künstlerroman proves his or her mastery through the very text that tells his or her story.[11]

Defining characteristics

The Künstlerroman can be about any type of artist, including a writer, dancer, painter, or musician.[5] Usually, the protagonist begins in a state of confinement, and through their strong will, they escape to another location. This location is known to be far away from their starting point, but coincidentally enough more hospitable to their future dreams and career.[5] As the protagonist moves through the story, they encounter teachers that have opposite influences; there are mentors who foster growth while others work actively against it. [5] In some cases, the protagonist reaches a standard of success, but only after experiencing a toll to either their moral or physical wellbeing. [5]

Critic Maurice Beebe identified two competing modes in the genre: the "Ivory tower" artist, who withdraws from life to pursue great art, and the "The Sacred Fount" artist, who sees lived experience as the very source of art.[4] This tension drives many Künstlerromane, where the protagonist often mirrors the author working through their own conflicts as an artist.[4]

Examples by language

German

English

Notes

French

Italian

Icelandic

Russian

Croatian

Malayalam

Norwegian

Danish

Portuguese

Turkish

Bengali

Critical interpretations

Scholars have examined the Künstlerroman through the lens of economics, arguing that the genre could not have emerged before modern capitalist markets.[18] By the nineteenth century, no professional writer could claim independence from the market, a tension intensified by the rise of mass readership and cheap serial publishing in the 1830s and 1840s.[18] This led authorship to become entangled with the metaphor of prostitution, as writers sold not a commodity but themselves.[18] This economic framework has been applied to works like David Copperfield and Aurora Leigh, which explore how writers constructed their identities differently along gender lines.[18]

Gender has also been a significant lens through which critics have approached the genre. Feminist scholars have examined the obstacles women face in establishing artistic careers and the ways female creativity can disrupt conventional narratives.[6] Definitions of the genre have expanded considerably over time to include novels by women as readily as classic male-authored texts such as Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship.[4] However, there are still critiques about the genre's exclusivity. Susan Gubar argued in 1983 that the form remains stubbornly centered on male experiences, showcasing only male protagonists, and ignoring works by female authors.[4]

Modern adaptations

The Künstlerroman has continued to evolve in the twenty-first century. In Young adult literature, scholars have examined how the female artist figure navigates the familiar pressures of creative identity and apprenticeship while also grappling with the rise of digital technology.[6] Du argues that Web 2.0 has complicated the traditional arc from amateur to professional, blurring the boundaries of what it means to be a recognized author when online platforms give anyone a creative voice.[6] Du further questions whether the genre can retain its distinctiveness as a separate form from the broader Bildungsroman.[6]

The genre has also expanded into new forms. King argues that since the turn of the millennium, a distinct "comics Künstlerroman" has emerged in prose fiction.[10] King points to Michael Chabon's The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay (2000) and Emily St. John Mandel's Station Eleven (2014) as prominent examples of this trend, arguing that their critical success reflects a growing willingness among literary scholars to recognize comics as a legitimate mode of artistic expression.[10] The framework has also appeared in films such as American Splendor (2003).[10]

Global reception

Although the Künstlerroman began in Germany, it quickly spread across national literatures such as English, French, Italian, Russian, Norwegian, Turkish, Bengali, and Malayalam.[5] Its core concerns of artistic formation, the struggle for creative identity, and the tension between art and society proved transferable across vastly different cultural contexts, with individual works reshaping it to local traditions.[18] For example, the form has also been adapted by minority authors such as Junot Díaz and Umberto Eco.[10] Critics have noted, however, that this global diffusion has not been uniform, as minority writers remain underrepresented both as practitioners of the form and as subjects of scholarship.[4]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Werlock, James P. (2010) The Facts on File companion to the American short story, Volume 2, p.387
  2. A Studio of One's Own: Fictional Women Painters and the Art of Fiction by Roberta White (page 13) published 2005 by Rosemont Publishing & Printing Crops. Accessed Via Google Books August 13, 2013.
  3. Germaine de Staël in Germany: Gender and Literary Authority by Judith E. Martin (page 128) 2001 Fairleigh & Dickinson University Press
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 Jensen, Graham H. "Ursula K. Le Guin's the Dispossessed and the Künstlerroman Tradition." English Studies in Canada 44.4 (2018): 87–113. ProQuest Central, Research Library. Web.
  5. 5.00 5.01 5.02 5.03 5.04 5.05 5.06 5.07 5.08 5.09 5.10 5.11 5.12 5.13 KünstlerromanTwentieth-Century Literary Criticism. Ed. Linda Pavlovski. 150 Vol. Detroit, MI: Gale, 2004. Gale Literature Resource Center; Gale. Web.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 Du, Yan. "Authoring Online: Fangirl , Eliza and Her Monsters and the Complexities of the Young Adult Künstlerroman in the Digital Age." Nordic journal of childLit aesthetics 12.1 (2021): 1–10. Web.
  7. "Künstlerroman | literary genre". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2021-04-12.
  8. "Künstlerroman". Oxford Reference. Retrieved 21 Nov. 2021, from https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/oi/authority.20110803100045770.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Curthoys, Ned. "The Counterfeiters as Bildungsfilm: A Genre Study." College Literature 48.4 (2021)Education Database. Web.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 King, Daniel. The Rise of the Comics Künstlerroman, Or, the Limits of Comics Acceptance: The Depiction of Comics Creators in the Work of Michael Chabon and Emily St. John Mandel. 4 Vol. Open Library of Humanities, 2018. Web.
  11. Gunzenhauser, Bonnie. "Literary Autobiography." Encyclopedia of Life Writing: Autobiographical and Biographical Forms. Ed. Margaretta Jolly. 1st ed.Routledge, 2001. Symphony; Infobase. Web.
  12. Calonne, David Stephen. Charles Bukowski. Reaktion Books, London, 2012. p. 146. ISBN 978-1-78023-023-8
  13. 'True stories', John Mullan, The Guardian, 27 October 2007.
  14. Miriam de Paiva Vieira, "From Canvas to Paper: The Novel by Tracy Chevalier", Art and New Media: Vermeer’s Work under Different Semiotic Systems p.19
  15. John Neary Something and nothingness: the fiction of John Updike & John Fowles p.54
  16. Gilles Deleuze. Marcel Proust et les signes. Paris: PUF, 1964]
  17. Rodríguez, Ileana; Szurmuk, Mónica (2015), The Cambridge History of Latin American Women's Literature (ebook), New York: Cambridge University Press, p. 212, ISBN 9781316419106
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 18.3 18.4 Houston, Gail Turley. "Gender Construction and the Kunstlerroman: David Copperfield and Aurora Leigh." Philological Quarterly 72 (1993): 213+. Gale Literature Resource Center; Gale. Web.