Death in Venice Death in Venice discussion


110 views
Was he in his right mind?

Comments Showing 1-5 of 5 (5 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

Rachel After reading this it was obvious this guy has an extreme infatuation with a little boy that he not only had never spoken to, but had only just become aware of. At the same time there was a severe sickness going around that was killing people. Do you think that Aschenbach's obsession with the boy is solely because of a deep down pedophilia issue, or could part of it be due to the malady making him senile?


Aiden Xiang No, this book is not a treatment of pedophilia tendencies of Aschenbach, rather it's about his intense life-long pursuit of beauty which for him , the boy is the finest epitome.


Greg Rachel wrote: "After reading this it was obvious this guy has an extreme infatuation with a little boy that he not only had never spoken to, but had only just become aware of. At the same time there was a severe ..."

Hi Rachel,
you might like to join The Novella Club group reads discussion on Death in Venice.

http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/1...

Cheers.


Ahsan This book has NOTHING to do with pedophilia. Neither is it about senility. It is about Aschenbach's descend from an 'Apollonian' life to a more 'Dionysian' one. From structure to fluidity.
NOT pedophilia. Oh my god. You should reread the book again.


Luis Well, there is this episode, narrated by Fuentes, who met Mann in a Zurich hotel in 1950 (translated directly from Spanish, sorry for any mistakes):

"Many young men were playing tennis in the courts, yet him (Mann) had eyes for only one, the Chosen One, the Apollo of tennis. He was certainly a very beautiful young man, no more than 20 years old, maybe 21, my own age. Mann could not take his eyes off the boy and I could not take mines off Mann (...) Mann, the septuagenarian, could not hide this passionate desire for a 20 year old boy playing tennis in a Dolder's court (...) Then, a young woman came to his father, affectionately nagged him, made him desist of this coquetry and come back with her to everyday life..."


back to top