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MHRA Critical Texts Vol. 4
ISBN 0-947623-69-8
5 December 2005
pp. 264.
Pbk £12.99/$24.99
(In German)
Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach is now famous for her novels, aphorisms, novellas,
and diary writing. Ebner-Eschenbach, however, saw herself as a playwright,
wrote exclusively dramas during the first 30 years of her literary career,
and was extremely ambitious; in her own words, she was aiming to become ‘the
Shakespeare of the nineteenth century.’ She authored twenty-six plays,
which were reviewed contemptuously by her contemporaries and ignored by posterity.
None of the eight ‘complete’ editions of Ebner-Eschenbach’s
works includes a single full-length play by the author. The reasons for this
are rooted partly in the contemporary gendered vision of drama as a genre:
in the wake of Goethe and Schiller, who also furnished Ebner’s dramatic
inspiration, drama (particularly tragedy) had come to be considered the ‘highest’
literary genre and therefore one that was inaccessible to women.
The plays selected for this volume are Ebner’s two great historical
dramas, Maria Stuart in Schottland (1860) and Marie Roland (1867).
Both plays portray the lives of great women from history, one a queen, the
other a revolutionary, focussing on the historical moment of the decision
that led to their respective execution. Both plays are indebted to the dramatic
work of Friedrich Schiller, whose play Maria Stuart (1800) Ebner
read as positing femininity and the right to political action as opposites
in terms. In struggling with Schiller’s dictum of the ‘Unweiblichkeit’
of politically active women (Ebner’s sarcastic diary entry: “Gehorsam
ist des Weibes Pflicht auf Erden, sagte mein angebeteter Schiller”),
Ebner created two plays in which the observance of “feminine duty”
directly impacts the heroine’s ability to act publicly and politically.
Schiller’s premise forms the central theme of both Maria Stuart
in Schottland, an attempt to counter-act his verdict by relating the
early history of the Queen of Scots and re-interpreting her character, her
history, and her politics substantially, and the later Marie Roland.
Thus Ebner's plays can be read as direct responses to Schiller’s drama,
both to its ideological premises (which she opposes) and to its form and style
(which she imitates).
Ebner’s tragedies distinguish themselves from the work of other early
and mid-nineteenth-century Austrian ‘epigonal’ playwrights, such
as Grillparzer and Hebbel: like them, Ebner attempts to revive the “Classical”
form (blank verse, five acts, strict Aristotelian form, and a prevalence for
historical themes); unlike them, she attempts to fill the Classical form with
new ideological content, to re-write history as well as revise the tradition
of historical drama.
"In her informative and very readable introductory
essays, Kord traces Ebner-Eschenbach’s development and reception as a dramatist,
and presents the individual plays in an engaging manner. The perspective is
particularly illuminating and subtly differentiated in the case of the two
historical tragedies, Maria Stuart in Schottland and Marie Roland."
Ulrike Tanzer, Austrian Studies, 14 (2006), 355.
"... a welcome addition, making accessible some of
the lesser-known dramas in a helpfully annotated format, and shed[ding] fresh
light on E-E."
Barbara Burns, The Year's Work in Modern Language Studies 2005, 66
(2007).
"These important editions of little-known dramas by the Austrian author Marie von
Ebner-Eschenbach (1830–1916) are vital for anyone who wants to research and teach
beyond the canon. They are the result of arduous editorial work and aremeticulously
annotated by Susanne Kord ... These volumes are likely to provoke much future research on Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach; they provide stimulating analyses of the texts and detailed notes and
bibliographies. In addition, they are such good value that they can be easily included
on undergraduate reading-lists."
Charlotte Woodford, MLR, 102 (2007), 1182-4.
Table of Contents:
1. Einleitung
2. Maria Stuart in Schottland. Historische Tragödie (1860)
3. Marie Roland. Trauerspiel in fünf Aufzügen (1867)
4. Anmerkungen
5. Dramatische Werke
6. Literaturverzeichnis
Macht des Weibes: Zwei historische Tragödien von Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach is a companion volume to Letzte Chancen: Vier Einakter von Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach published as Vol. 3 in the MHRA Critical Texts series.
Susanne Kord is Professor of German at University College
London.
Trade Orders:
UK: Bertrams
If you wish to order multiple copies please send enquiries to:
criticaltexts@mhra.org.uk
Letzte Chancen:
Vier Einakter
von Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach.