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MARC Record from marc_columbia

Record ID marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-005.mrc:412728122:2383
Source marc_columbia
Download Link /show-records/marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-005.mrc:412728122:2383?format=raw

LEADER: 02383fam a2200373 a 4500
001 2320441
005 20220616021014.0
008 981218s1999 scuc 000 1 eng
010 $a 98055669
020 $a1571131493 (alk. paper)
035 $a(OCoLC)40545465
035 $a(OCoLC)ocm40545465
035 $9APH8856CU
035 $a(NNC)2320441
035 $a2320441
040 $aDLC$cDLC$dDLC$dNNC$dOrLoB-B
041 1 $aeng$hger
050 00 $aPT2635.E85$bA813 1999
082 00 $a833/.912$221
100 1 $aReuter, Gabriele,$d1859-1941.$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n85124422
240 10 $aAus guter Familie.$lEnglish$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n98111818
245 10 $aFrom a good family /$cGabriele Reuter ; translated and with an introduction by Lynne Tatlock.
260 $aColumbia, S.C. :$bCamden House,$c1999.
263 $a9903
300 $axlviii, 220 pages :$bportrait ;$c23 cm.
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
490 1 $aStudies in German literature, linguistics, and culture
520 1 $a"Upon publication in 1895, Gabriele Reuter's From a Good Family (Aus guter Familie) became something of a cultural event, making its author one of Germany's most talked-about women of letters and providing the publisher Samuel Fischer with his first popular success.
520 8 $aSet in the first two decades of the Second German Reich, this story of a Prussian bureaucrat's daughter caught between conformity and rebellion struck at the core of the class that upheld this empire, revealing the hypocrisy and misery at the very heart of the bourgeois family. It recorded the conflicted and ultimately interminable adolescence of a middle-class girl who failed to fulfill the destiny prescribed for her by her gender and class, a young woman who, despite an incipient high-spiritedness and independence of mind, internalized the attitudes of her culture to the point of lethal self-censorship.
520 8 $aThe feminist Helene Stocker remembered Reuter's novel as a wake-up call that gave such voiceless women the voice they desperately needed."--BOOK JACKET.
700 1 $aTatlock, Lynne,$d1950-$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n82243940
830 0 $aStudies in German literature, linguistics, and culture.$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n42023855
852 00 $bglx$hPT2635.E85$iA813 1999