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The Breaking of the Storm

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The Breaking of the Storm
AuthorFriedrich Spielhagen
Original titleSturmflut
TranslatorS. E. A. H. Stephenson
LanguageGerman
PublisherStaackmann [de]
Publication date
1877
Publication placeGermany
Published in English
1877
Pages1076 (3 volumes)

The Breaking of the Storm (German: Sturmflut) is an 1877 novel by the German writer Friedrich Spielhagen. It is set in the world of German business and follows the flexible middle-class man Reinhold Schmidt as he navigates the contradictions and hazards of the recently unified Germany. The novel is divided into six books and was originally published by Staackmann [de] in three volumes.[1][2]

The novel deals with themes related to German unification and the tensions between an older generation attached to the liberalism of the 1848 revolutions, represented by Reinhold's uncle, and a younger generation that embraces the Realpolitik of Otto von Bismarck, regarded by the protagonist as a uniquely German fusion of realism and idealism. The title creates a parallel between the 1872 Baltic Sea flood and the 1873 stock market crash.[3] The literary scholar Jeffrey L. Sammons called the book "the major fictional treatment of the financial crash of the 1870s as a harbringer of the predatory but erratic capitalism that was to become characteristic of the Reich".[4]

References

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  1. ^ Szabó, László V. (2022). "„…hinabgeschleudert in die Flut". Ökonomie und Naturkatastrophe in Friedrich Spielhagens Sturmflut" (PDF). Wege der Germanistik in transkultureller Perspektive. Jahrbuch fuer Internationale Germanistik (in German). Bern: Peter Lang. pp. 153–165. doi:10.3726/b20290. ISBN 9783034338325.
  2. ^ Neumann, Bernd (1992). "Auf dem Weg zum Stadtroman. Friedrich Spielhagens Sturmflut als Darstellung des Berlins der „Gründerzeit"". In Siebenhaar, K. (ed.). Das poetische Berlin. DUV: Literaturwissenschaft (in German). Wiesbaden: Deutscher Universitätsverlag. pp. 17–39. doi:10.1007/978-3-663-14654-4_2. ISBN 978-3-663-14654-4.
  3. ^ Griffiths, Elystan (2005). "Unity, Division and the Problem of Representation: German Unification in the Novels of Friedrich Spielhagen". Field Studies: German Language, Media and Culture. Peter Lang. pp. 110–112. ISBN 9783039103096.
  4. ^ Sammons, Jeffrey L. (2002). "Friedrich Spielhagen: The Demon of Theory and the Decline of Reputation". A Companion to German Realism, 1848-1900. Camden House. p. 148. ISBN 9781571133229.
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