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Buddenbrooks: Verfall einer Familie

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About This Book

The novel traces several generations of a prominent bourgeois family as they manage business, social obligations, and private desires, portraying how prosperity, rigid respectability, and changing times gradually erode their fortunes and cohesion. Detailed scenes of household rituals, marriages, illnesses, and generational conflicts reveal characters' compromises between duty and aspiration, while shifts in taste, finances, and personal health undermine inherited certainty. The narrative examines the emotional costs of social ambition and the interplay of private lives and public reputation, concluding in a sober account of decline shaped by contingency and cultural change.

About the Author

Mann, Thomas portrait

Thomas Mann

Thomas Mann was a German novelist, short story writer, and essayist, renowned for his profound exploration of the human condition and the complexities of modern life. Born in 1875, he gained international acclaim with his seminal work "Buddenbrooks," which chronicles the decline of a wealthy merchant family. Mann's literary prowess is further exemplified in his novella "Death in Venice," a poignant tale of obsession and artistic struggle. His works often delve into themes of morality, identity, and the interplay between art and life. A Nobel Prize laureate in Literature, Mann's contributions have left an indelible mark on 20th-century literature.

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