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J**E
One of the hardest yet best books I have ever read
And I've read thousands...A few breadcrumbs first. This is really a trilogy. The first, 'The Romantic', ironically enough is written as a parody of Realism which prevailed in Lit at the time the novel happens. Just as the realists did, it tries to show by psychological insight the actions and motivations of an ineffectual neurotic. But between the obsessiveness of Broch's description & the sheer lack of any insight of the 'hero', it becomes a satire of sorts. Likewise, the next 'The Anarchist' is a parody of Expressionism, which prevailed in Lit when the action of this novel happens. While it has the hyperintense drama, hothouse environment and weird pseudomysticism you would expect, the 'hero' is a petty wanna be revolutionary who accomplishes nothing of any substance. The last, 'The Realist' uses the shifting points of focus, multiple styles of exposition and attempts at some grander scheme of Modernism, the dominant form of Lit at the time all 3 were written in the period between the World Wars.Broch meant this 'novel' to be an analysis and description of the Disintegration of Values (his term) that led Germany into WWI (& later WWII). He brings all this together in the last of the set by his personal tweaking & expanding of Hegel's thesis->antithesis->synthesis framework. In his version, all functional worldviews have a combination of Rationalism and Irrationality. When a system leans too heavily to one or the other it falls apart. The dominant approach of a (European) Universal Catholic church broke down as it turned into an empty set of often flouted Rational absolute rules. This set the stage for the Enlightenment which also turned into a strict emphasis on Rationality. That system's failure to account for the Irrational side of life set the stage for the Nihilistic Irrationality of proto- and later Nazi Germany. One could also use it to describe the rise & fall of Communism as an extension of the Enlightenment reliance on Reason. Since people are by nature Irrational, Communism had to fall.A simpler description of the book could be: a secular novelistic version of the stations of the cross ending in the Crucifixion. Unfortunately, Germany had to go to Hell from there. It took Germany another 15 years before it could rise from Hell.I read this (and many other German & Austrian writers of the period) to try to make some sense of what is happening now in the World & most particularly the US. I have found it here.We are nearing the end of the effectiveness of the Rational Secular Humanistic, Neoliberal Capitalism that has become the dominant worldview. Now dark forces of Irrationality are rising in an Invasion from Below (Broch again) and leading us into a new time of troubles. Look at how the far right love to talk about 'the gut' and 'common sense' as opposed to science among many other logical inconsistencies. Broch talks of how as systems collapse, it favors individuals who are ruthless and have an insane indifference to the suffering of others.Sound like any orange world leader we know?Hopefully we only need 15 weeks give or take without entering WWIII to pull our heads out of our Irrational asses and can come up with a new worldview where capitalism is combined with heart and fairness rather than the Darwinian feeding frenzy that we have now which has produced President Irrational.
S**A
Never a disappointment.
I purchased 'the sleepwalkers' from Goodwill Industries because they take care of second hand books as though they were 1st editions. I can rely on receiving an excellent copy, even though used, quickly and well priced. You are my first go to choice when ever a book i want is available from your site.Thank you so very much.Stella
K**R
A beautiful cover
Since I enjoyed Canetti's Auto da Fe so much and am still working my way through Musil's Man without Qualities, Amazon was insistent that I try this novel. The first part (The Romantic) was slow going at first but by the end I was hooked. The second part (The Idealist) also held my interest in its main character. The last part (The Realist)was readable in parts, especially when the capitalist and swine Hugenau was on stage. Nevertheless, there were too many parts of the third book that seemed utterly boring and needlessly obscure and philosophical. The poems interspersed did not help either.
M**G
Dreaming The Way To A Nightmare
Actually three novels in one, each portraying a seminal period in German history that ends with the rise of the Nazi's. When he's on his game, Broch deserves to be in the company of 20th Century European greats like Musil and Joyce. He writes at a profoundly deep level in the first novel, "The Romantic," and the immersion in character provides a dreamlike quality to the action. "The Anarchist" is coarser, and its protagonist's self-deceptions are fascinating, if appalling. "The Realist" I had difficulty with only because the author intrudes at various points with essays and analysis, which while often brilliant, break the narrative's spell. I realize this is something of a convention in European novels, and I plead a deficient sensibility, since the writing is usually first-rate. One notion of Broch's which haunts me, because it seems so appropriate to our own times: "when the secular rules, romanticism is the unavoidable result," or something to that effect. Thanks to the visual media, video games, etc., we've certainly no shortage of romanticism.
P**R
I recommend it!
I found this book to be very enjoyable! I bought it because I wanted to better understand Germany's ideological decent into fascist thinking. I got some very good philosophy and story out of this book.
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