The Man Without Qualities

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (132 of them)

i would agree about mann except that i do think a lot of the stiffness in 'magic mountain' is not unintentional. it seemed to me like a writerly way to solve the problem of how to depict attraction to and enticement by competing 'great ideas' and their corresponding ways of life, without the course of a novel being the most apt place to express such things. (i put it that way, mainly because i'm trying not to say 'mann didn't understand these things well enough to do them justice in fictional form'.) things in that novel seem quite affected by the naive hans, spiritual education in progress, being the focal point of the narrative, even if the official narrator is distinct from hans.

j., Monday, 18 October 2010 21:47 (thirteen years ago) link

the "essays" in Man Without Qualities are (with or without context to the actual "prose" of the book) some of the best, most pure philosophical material ever written (in style and in contents) and Musil insights are magnificent and inspiring.

Zeno, Monday, 18 October 2010 21:48 (thirteen years ago) link

six months pass...

i finally read "the confusions of young torless", it was great. i found it tougher going than mwq but still full of really brilliant insight. also i'd forgotten, beyond the philosophy even, what a brilliant mood musil can conjure. torless is so relentlessly violent and bleak, even the thoughts and feelings seem to have a real sense of blood and thunder to them.

i also bought flypaper, a collection of short stories, but not started it yet.

Phelan Nulty (Local Garda), Thursday, 12 May 2011 10:51 (twelve years ago) link

Been finishng his diaries - a lot more relaxed than his novels. Diaries that were not intended for publication will always do that on one level, but its even more pronounced in this case.

Took a while for it to warm up to the contents, so this got more interesting with the entries composed while he was engaged with MwQ, and its reaction: namely his frustration at lack of reaction and non-recognition in Austria. He did save most of his energies for the novel but there are some gems: when he describes H!tler as an emotion, then you see his scientific background on the one hand, and openess to mysticism on the other. A good moment is when he reflects on MwQ that has been pusblished so far as having too much essayistic material that doesn't stick (or words to that effect). The introduction is worth a good scan.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 12 May 2011 18:19 (twelve years ago) link

Just finished today and there is a wonderful set of entries, a kind of notes-to-an-autobiography that (like so many of his ideas for novels, etc) never materialized.

Really a must (even when there is planty to quibble over and get frustrated by), just an opportunity to spend more time in his company.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 13 May 2011 17:39 (twelve years ago) link

Also: http://www.richardnagy.com/current/

Egon Schiele exhibition (whose paintings were reproduced on those MwQ Picador covers)

xyzzzz__, Friday, 13 May 2011 17:42 (twelve years ago) link

Young Torless frightened me when I read it in college in '95 -- one of the first times a work of lit forced me to rethink my sexuality.

ginny thomas and tonic (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 13 May 2011 17:45 (twelve years ago) link

it really is quite intense alright.

thanks for that info julio, i have had diaries in my amazon basket for a long time, must buy them then. also will check that exhibition...

Phelan Nulty (Local Garda), Saturday, 14 May 2011 19:00 (twelve years ago) link

No probs Ronan.

All I need to read now is that volume that ceme with the Burton Pike translation of sketches/scenes/proposed endings fo MwQ (only available w/the hardback I think)

xyzzzz__, Monday, 16 May 2011 17:55 (twelve years ago) link

no, not in the current u.s. paperback ed—it's all crammed into the second volume.

j., Monday, 16 May 2011 23:03 (twelve years ago) link

two months pass...

anyone else read flypaper? don't know why i held off on reading more than the title essay till now, it's such perfect musil material. "it's lovely here" and "monuments" in particular are really good. when he's in the mood to make a point it's always so nicely weighted, never browbeating. and he has that 1 per cent smartass quality running through things too.

LocalGarda, Monday, 15 August 2011 14:27 (twelve years ago) link

I had completely forgotten that I was the one who recommended this formative book to LG. What a feather in my cap! To be honest, I am now incapable about thinking of this book or Musil without thinking of LG, and vice versa.

Virginia Plain, Monday, 15 August 2011 20:31 (twelve years ago) link

:) i owe you greatly. it's still such a big thing for me, that book. i have considered musil related tattoos.

LocalGarda, Monday, 15 August 2011 23:01 (twelve years ago) link

you should totally research the system (of notation? symbols?) he used to organize his notebooks for 'man'.

j., Tuesday, 16 August 2011 03:25 (twelve years ago) link

Ha, LG, I refuse to take responsibility for any Musil-related body ink. Whenever I see reference to this book (granted probably most often on this board) I think to myself, LG got so much more out of it than I did, I should read it again. And then I see a shiny thing in the distance and forget all about it until the next time it comes up.

Virginia Plain, Tuesday, 16 August 2011 13:58 (twelve years ago) link

i have probably mentioned my failure to finish this book already on this thread

thomp, Tuesday, 16 August 2011 14:07 (twelve years ago) link

failure to finish book, failure to reread thread

j., Tuesday, 16 August 2011 18:18 (twelve years ago) link

seven months pass...

i started reading this cuz i was really impressed with von rezzori and i guess musil was a big influence on his writing but:

To me, a book that changes the way you think and really dominates your thoughts

'dominatees your thoughts' is a really good way of putting it, so far it has this real immensity, physicality, it almost sort of looms. i mean not even really sure of what i think about it, because it ends up thinking for me, almost?

Lamp, Tuesday, 3 April 2012 02:43 (twelve years ago) link

which translation are you reading? i really don't want to scroll back up and see how long i've been reading this for

thomp, Tuesday, 3 April 2012 13:01 (twelve years ago) link

wilkins and pike

Lamp, Tuesday, 3 April 2012 17:35 (twelve years ago) link

do you find it oppressive or just boring?

Lamp, Tuesday, 3 April 2012 17:35 (twelve years ago) link

Got tonka and other stories recently, not started it yet tho.

I'm going to allow this! (LocalGarda), Friday, 6 April 2012 07:21 (twelve years ago) link

diaries are worth a look

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Friday, 6 April 2012 08:48 (twelve years ago) link

do you find it oppressive or just boring?

kind of ... both?

it's weird, tho, i think the older translation does a more thorough job of making everything be in quotation marks -- like there's obv characters (the businessman who comes to a revelation that 'one should only expend the interest of one's soul - never the capital!') whose interior lives are plain awful, but absolutely everything is ventriloquised by this narrator or structure of feeling that puts it into that space. which is sort of aligned with but not identical to ulrich's malaise

whereas i think the new one seems closer to making it seem like there are human beings in there somewhere. i swapped halfway through and then gave up.

thomp, Friday, 6 April 2012 09:13 (twelve years ago) link

probably my favorite novel of all time.

anyone read Posthumous Papers of a Living Author and can recommend?

nostormo, Friday, 6 April 2012 15:06 (twelve years ago) link

back on this. i half wonder if one of his sublimed models was de sade.

thomp, Sunday, 15 April 2012 11:30 (twelve years ago) link

in the earlier translation the telegram runs:

"Herewith notify you of my decease of current date."

thomp, Sunday, 15 April 2012 11:31 (twelve years ago) link

really need to finish/restart this

Exile in lolville (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 15 April 2012 12:00 (twelve years ago) link

okay, 'into the millennium' is kind of amazing throughout

thomp, Friday, 20 April 2012 09:47 (eleven years ago) link

FINALLY

thomp, Sunday, 22 April 2012 10:31 (eleven years ago) link

And the verdict?

Thinking of reading this one again soon.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 22 April 2012 15:06 (eleven years ago) link

nine months pass...

So, about 2 1/2 years after getting the books (vol 1 and 2 of the new translation) and reviving this thread (as Michael Pemulis), I finally started reading Vol 1, am about 300 pages in and am absolutely loving it. Even with high expectations going in, it's managed to completely exceed them all and totally blow me away.

Federico Boswarlos, Friday, 8 February 2013 18:33 (eleven years ago) link

three months pass...

Törless entirely abandoned himself to their influence, for the situation in which his mind now found itself was approximately this: At schools of the kind known as the Gymnasium, at his age, one has read Goethe, Schiller, Shakespeare, and perhaps even some modern writers too, and this, having been half digested, is then written out of the system again, excreted, as it were, through the finger-tips. Roman tragedies are written, or poems, of the most sensitive lyrical kind, that go through their paces garbed in punctuation that is looped over whole pages at a time, as in delicate lace: things that are in themselves ludicrous, but which are of inestimable value in contributing to a sound development. For these associations originating outside, and these borrowed emotions, carry young people over the dangerously soft spiritual ground of the years in which they need to be of some significance to themselves and nevertheless are still too incomplete to have any real significance. Whether any residue of it is ultimately left in the one, or nothing in the other, does not matter; later each will somehow come to terms with himself, and the danger exists only in the stage of transition. If at that period one could bring a boy to see the ridiculousness of himself, the ground would give way under him, or he would plunge headlong like a somnambulist who, suddenly awaking, sees nothing but emptiness around him.

Mastery of the authoritative tone is in evidence there.

Aimless, Friday, 17 May 2013 23:51 (ten years ago) link

seven months pass...

Read about his poem Isis and Orisis today and a translation in this blog about Musil

Isis and Osiris

On the foliage of stars the moon
Boy in silvery rest withdrew
And the hub of the sun's wheel soon
Turned and looked at him anew.

From the desert the red wind wails.
And the coasts are empty of sails.

And the sister quietly loosened
The sleeper's sex and devoured it.
And she gave her soft heart, the red one,
In return, and laid it upon him, upon him.

And in the dream the wound healed over.
And his sweet sex she devoured.

See how the sun thundered away
As the sleeper was shocked from sleep,
Stars swayed, like ships,
Shaking trees, if they are chained,
When the great storm begins.
See, there his brothers stormed
After the lovely thief,
And he cast his net out.
And the blue space broke,
The woods broke under her tread,
And the stars ran along in dread,
But the tender birdshouldered one
Could not be caught by anyone, no matter how fast.

Only the boy she called to at night
Finds her, when moon and sun exchange.
Of all the hundred brothers, only this one,
And he eats her heart and she eats his.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 9 January 2014 23:01 (ten years ago) link

eleven months pass...

Anyone read Heimito von Doderer's The Demons, reading about it in this blog although that piece complains about criticisms of it rather than putting an argument forward for same.

I suspect it isn't v good as the good stuff does manage to stay in circulation in small but visible enough ways but I'd like to hear anyone's thoughts.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 8 January 2015 10:31 (nine years ago) link

one month passes...

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b03ncph0

Just found it, haven't listened..

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 17 February 2015 23:52 (nine years ago) link

lol er starts with some old concert.

Matthew Sweet annoys me...still wasn't expecting this book to be featured.

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 18 February 2015 00:01 (nine years ago) link

That broacast was good in parts: covered Kakania, the way Musil writes about women, how he used himself as a human laboratory is very true an probably much more of post-Freuian psychologist. Agathe. Loved the voice of the guy who reads the passages from the book.

As for the panel Boyd was boring, Drabble was annoying at times (I think the way this book flows from a non-fiction essayism to a fiction of sorts can be baggy and risky but its amazing how Musil pulls it off and keeps you turning pages). Blom seems to have had the longest engagement with the book by far and his comments show that.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 19 February 2015 11:04 (nine years ago) link

Agree with that - I listened to this earlier this year, forget how I found it.

I thought all of them kind of got it wrong and raised really trite points apart from Blom (assuming he was the German academic.) I just think they failed to actually value it in any meaningful way whereas everything he said really showed a sense of the book as a whole and the wide range of topics it covers.

The others just seemed to say "oh it's ridiculous, this parallel campaign" - as if the book was like a short jolly satire.

Moyes Enthusiast (LocalGarda), Thursday, 19 February 2015 13:53 (nine years ago) link

one month passes...

http://www.openlettersmonthly.com/there-will-be-no-more-great-ideas/

Excellent piece - its great Blanchot (also one of my favourite novelists but he wrote differently) has written on him, must chase that.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 20 March 2015 21:51 (nine years ago) link

one month passes...

http://enemiesproject.bigcartel.com/product/the-kakania-anthology

Looks interesting.

xyzzzz__, Monday, 20 April 2015 11:56 (eight years ago) link

three months pass...

bought

doing my Objectives, handling some intense stuff (LocalGarda), Saturday, 25 July 2015 10:24 (eight years ago) link

thought about buying, then i saw the design

r|t|c, Saturday, 25 July 2015 14:09 (eight years ago) link

two months pass...

I'm going in!

as verbose and purple as a Peter Ustinov made of plums (James Morrison), Wednesday, 21 October 2015 09:56 (eight years ago) link

good luck!

doing my Objectives, handling some intense stuff (LocalGarda), Wednesday, 21 October 2015 12:09 (eight years ago) link

Cheers! loving it so far. Not sure what I expected, but this is quite surprising and contemporary and entertaining so far. Just read up to how Ulrich surprises himself by asking for clemency for the sex murderer.

I've been meaning to start this for a while: I've had the book for ages, but couldn't work out if it was complete or not, and had to lots of googling to get a look at various contents pages of various editions online.

My copy is the UK "one-volume" edition of the Wilkins/pike translation, which stops abruptly on p1130 without any explanation, leaving out all the posthumous/unpublished stuff, so I've had to order volume 2 of the US edition to get all that as well. Seems as though the publisher, Picador, could have included a page or two of explanation, instead of these stupid ads at the end for kent Haruf books I don''t want to read.

In the unlikely event the vol 2 doesn't arrived before I get up to that point, I will be making use of http://gen.lib.rus.ec/search.php?req=musil+qualities+knopf&open=0&view=simple&phrase=1&column=def

as verbose and purple as a Peter Ustinov made of plums (James Morrison), Wednesday, 21 October 2015 23:14 (eight years ago) link

My memories of bleak, scary Young Torless did not lead me to expect this to be as humourous as it is (this is not a complaint)

as verbose and purple as a Peter Ustinov made of plums (James Morrison), Thursday, 22 October 2015 04:15 (eight years ago) link

Link to that BBC episode xyzzzz mentioned ~2yrs ago, with download http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p02twpys

Will listen to when have finished book. Forgive me for using this thread as a sort of notebook.

as verbose and purple as a Peter Ustinov made of plums (James Morrison), Thursday, 22 October 2015 04:19 (eight years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.