Global Intimations: Cultural Geography in Buddenbrooks, Tonio Kröger, and Der Tod in Venedig

2006 
AbstractCultural geography emphasizes the role of imagination in structuring geographical objects of study and conversely sees places and landscapes as social fields in which identities are constructed. This article considers geographical motifs, within the context of Heimat discourse, in Buddenbrooks, which shows the collapse of locally rooted identity, and Tonio Kroger, which engages more explicitly and ironically with Heimat themes. Der Tod in Venedig leaves Heimat behind, however, as its hero travels abroad and muses upon European civilization. Aschenbach's reflections either sustain or undermine his sense of self, as he tries to superimpose a geographical order upon his world. But the boundaries prove porous and control slips away as the markers of otherness binding identity threaten to collapse. Aschenbach's deepest anxieties are stirred when class and national characteristics come into tension and mix with other cultural differences which cannot be assimilated to national stereotypes or when stereo...
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