The Thomas Mann Group discussion

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Week 7 - Buddenbrooks: June 24 - 30. Until the end of the book and Part XI.
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Apr 09, 2013 01:39AM

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Gary wrote: "In the last thread, there was some discussion about Mann's description of Hanno's day at school. As Jonathan pointed out, it belongs in this thread so I jumped over here. While it did seem intermin..."
Thank you Gary for putting us in the straight path...
I found the treatment of Hanno, both the day at school, and what follows as most peculiar. No redemption here.
Thank you Gary for putting us in the straight path...
I found the treatment of Hanno, both the day at school, and what follows as most peculiar. No redemption here.


Lohengrin - Wagner opera featuring the Swan Knight, I didn't know much about it either - had a look at wikipedia, I saw it was first performed in 1850 so Lubeck again a bit behind the times here, interestingly this was apparently the opera that inspired King Ludwig of Bavaria to start having Neuschwanstein built and to withdraw into his fantasy world.
I don't know if Mann at the time of writing would have been aware of rumours about Ludwig's sexuality, but Wagner was significant for Mann and the inspiring a withdrawl into a self-absorbed fantasy world seems significant too...

One of the main points of Lohengrin is that Elsa has been told not to ask, not to enquire after her husband's (the swan knight's name), and of course she does, with tragic consequences. Sorry, it's been ages since I saw that opera (I'll have to research the story-line a bit more).
By the way, the bridal chorus from Lohengrin is famous the world over and probably second only to Mendelssohn's Wedding March from A Midsummer Night's Dream. Here comes the Bride (that's the beginning of the English version of the bridal chorus from Lohengrin).
An often important theme with many of Wagner's operas seems to be the issue of illicit, dangerous love or the breaking certain set rules. In Tristan and Isolde, Tristan and Isolde's love affair is not only wrong and adulterous, but more importantly, it is so ecstatic, so all encompassing that it leads to their deaths. In The Flying Dutchman, Selma falls in love with what might be a ghost and sacrifices herself (to be loyal to the Flying Dutchman until death) in order to save him from a famous (or infamous) curse, although there is actually always some doubt wether the apparition of the Dutchman is real or wether Selma has imagined it all and basically sacrifices herself for something quite unreal. And in Lohengrin, Elsa breaks the one rule set by her husband (Lohengrin), not to ask, not to enquire after his name.

The withdrawal into the fantasy world is a significant connection though, I can definitely agree with that. What disturbs me is that death is very different from that.

I was wondering about this and how explicit or guessable it might have seemed when the book was published, then I remembered the play Spring's Awakening by Wedekind which was first performed in Munich in 1891 and featured a homosexual kiss between schoolboys (as well as suicide, masochism and I think abortion too certainly pregnancy among schoolchildren). That they were called outlaws by their school fellows might be significant too if the subtext is that the physical expression of their feelings would be illegal.
Perhaps unplanned on Mann's part but I found it ironic that Kai was reading Poe as his escape from the Bible and Ovid and I am reading this in an edition of Buddenbrooks in which the lines are also numbered in fives. Today's escapism is tomorrow's classic to be inflicted on school children!

I think that Mann always considered Wagner's music to be quite decadent, and the fact that Hanno himself is considered decadent and thus easily influenced by Wagner's music is the main point here.
In a short story by Tomas Mann, Tristan,, a decadent musician/artist staying at a medical spa, woos the frail and artistic wife of an industrialist with the music of Wagner (specifically Tristan and Isolde) and causes her decline and death.
Thomas Mann considered himself a Wagnerian, but he always viewed Wagner's music as somewhat dangerous, especially for and to those of an artistic temperament.




Gundula wrote: "Gary wrote: "Unlike poor Hanno, I'm trying to follow the rules. Is it significant that Hanno saw Lohengrin the night before? I'm not familiar with the plot. (Jan-Maat, where are you?)"
One of the ..."
Thank you for this information Gundula... (I almost wrote Gerda...!!)
One of the ..."
Thank you for this information Gundula... (I almost wrote Gerda...!!)
Jan-Maat wrote: "Gary wrote: "There is also the suggestion that his relationship with Kai, which has aroused the suspicions of outsiders, as evolved into an intimacy which is probably physical. This seems to be als..."
With Gary, I am also happy you brought up Wedekind's play, even though I have not read/watched it. It helps us to put ourselves into that period and read better the signs.
With Gary, I am also happy you brought up Wedekind's play, even though I have not read/watched it. It helps us to put ourselves into that period and read better the signs.
Elena wrote: "In general, I see Mann using just a few small telling details to narrate his plot (transformative wars are just glimpsed indirectly by the narrator as soldiers are quartered in town, steal silver o..."
Great post, Elena..
And yes, may be you got the key to this difficult chapter.. if it is excruciating to read, it was excruciating to Hanno himself.. and Mann is precisely recreating the tediousness of the day.
Great post, Elena..
And yes, may be you got the key to this difficult chapter.. if it is excruciating to read, it was excruciating to Hanno himself.. and Mann is precisely recreating the tediousness of the day.

Okay. This notion is so foreign to me. I assume that's the reason it's hard for me fully appreciate how the opera illuminates his themes.


Elena wrote: "Mann's early powers of observation are stunning. How could he know in 1900 that Wagner's aesthetic was so dangerous? It is just music after all...Maybe Wagner's influence on Ludwig II? I must read..."
Wagner's music had already created quite a stir during the nineteenth century and that was just based on its musical aspects (new harmonies, instrumentation, etc). If a particular political movement also chose it as emblematic of their own beliefs later in the twentieth century, I see it more as a phenomenon of how politics likes to absorb and adopt cultural elements and dress their politics with them.
Wagner's music had already created quite a stir during the nineteenth century and that was just based on its musical aspects (new harmonies, instrumentation, etc). If a particular political movement also chose it as emblematic of their own beliefs later in the twentieth century, I see it more as a phenomenon of how politics likes to absorb and adopt cultural elements and dress their politics with them.

iirc Wagner was fairly scandalous (politically and personally) in his own lifetime, which I suppose was reflected in some of the passionate/erotic themes in the operas - perhaps dangerous in the sense of Mann thinking this was strong stuff and not suitable for everybody?
Jan-Maat wrote: "Elena wrote: "Mann's early powers of observation are stunning. How could he know in 1900 that Wagner's aesthetic was so dangerous? It is just music after all...Maybe Wagner's influence on Ludwig II..."
Yes, I agree with this (posted similarly in previous comment).. Even without taking into account the textual elements (i.e. stories in operas), but just the purely musical. And it was even within Germany that the debate and rivalry between the Brahms-Wagner arouse.
Yes, I agree with this (posted similarly in previous comment).. Even without taking into account the textual elements (i.e. stories in operas), but just the purely musical. And it was even within Germany that the debate and rivalry between the Brahms-Wagner arouse.


"There was an autoerotic element in his artistic sublimation of sexual energy, and it was connected with the fascination Wagner's music had held for him since 1892, when Tannhäuser and Lohengrin were staged in Lubeck...Lohengrin had brought him to an almost feverish pitch of emotional excitement, and in Munich he rarely missed a new production of a Wagner opera. The sensuality of Wagner's music seems to have had a catalytic effect on Thomas's youthful sexuality, at once intensifying the flow of desire and helping him to sublimate it dreamily into the kind of fantasy he could distill into fiction."



Thanks for that important but very sad detail...

Thyphoid is mainly contagious via lice in dirty clothing, perhaps Kai's dirtiness (in more way then one) was what killed poor Hanno.

Thyphoid is mainly contagious via lice in dirty clothing, perhaps Kai's dirtiness (in more way then one) was what killed poor Hanno.
That is an intriguing theory. Was Mann making a comment on his own sexuality? As a young man who craved a "normal" life, he must have had a great deal of ambivalence-even self-loathing-about his desires.



I agree, Kai and Anna are the two characters treated with a genuine affection, free of the irony doused on the BBs. Kai is a wonderful tribute to Mann's childhood friend. When Hanno succumbs Kai kisses his hands, not your ordinary childhood friendship, but noble in its own way. Kai's refinement to me seems very Scandinavian like his name, non-Prussian. For me his reaction to Hanno's death was a positive moment in a way because I felt Kai would transform Hanno's memory into literature that would live on. He's a classic nordic type but Anna is apparently part Asian. She too will live on in her children. I think Mann is turning the vulgar theories of his age inside out...


Good point! I hadn't really thought about that.

I wasn't surprised. I didn't expect Hanno to die, I expected him to become a lot like his uncle, Christian. His death moved me more than that would have, so I guess my sadness was more grief, more pity?, than despair.

Dunno, that ending is pretty well sign posted - or a negative ending for the family is well sign posted. It is interesting that people who are moving up in the world like the Hagenstroms or Morten are kept away from the Buddenbrooks and their story, with Kai and his father apparently utterly decayed and impoverished (though noble) and so on. If there are happy endings - they are not for the likes of the Buddenbrooks.
Trying to think now if that fin de siecle pessimism was rare or not, **wracks brains**


Thanks for pointing me in the right direction with other fin de siècle pessimistic novels, Gary. It's still surprising to me, though, that he ended up writing a book with this tone as a 25 year old.



I also was expecting suicide from Hanno after that school day then that exposition at the piano. It seemed as if he gave that performance all he had. That he died didn't surprise me as much as the cause.

Interesting point, both Hanno and Tom die from "natural causes" ...but we read something into it...The women survive it all...and I rather expect Tony in Luebeck and Gerda in Amsterdam to go on to do something interesting once freed of all the BB expectations...

I agree that I would expect something from Gerda, but Tony seemed crushed in the end. Do you think she would be able to rebound with no one to "care for" since that seems to have sustained her in the past.
Books mentioned in this topic
Thomas Mann: Eros and Literature (other topics)Spring's Awakening (other topics)