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The Pious Dance: A Classic Coming-of-Age LGBTQ+ Romance Novel (Translated & Annotated) (English Edition) (aka Der fromme Tanz)
Coles
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The Pious Dance: A Classic Coming-of-Age LGBTQ+ Romance Novel (Translated & Annotated) (English Edition) (aka Der fromme Tanz) in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $9.99
Original price: $11.99

Coles
The Pious Dance: A Classic Coming-of-Age LGBTQ+ Romance Novel (Translated & Annotated) (English Edition) (aka Der fromme Tanz) in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $9.99
Original price: $11.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
A Groundbreaking Literary Classic of LGBTQ Literature by Klaus Mann, First Published in Germany in 1926. Set in the Gay Underground of Berlin and Paris's Nightclub Scenes, the Novel Features the First Unapologetic Transgender Character in 20th-Century Literature.
The Pious Dance (Der fromme Tanz) , Klaus Mann's first novel, published when he was just twenty years old, stands as a groundbreaking work of early modernist German literature and a significant milestone in LGBT+ literary history. Written with the raw authenticity of youth, this semi-autobiographical work captures the spirited and tumultuous atmosphere of Weimar-era Berlin through the eyes of its protagonist, Andreas Magnus, a thinly veiled version of Mann himself.
This new edition features:
A New English Translation from the Original German Text
An Introduction by the Editor
Endnotes to each Act of the Novel
Chapter By Chapter Critical Analysis
Author Biography
Three Scholarly Essays
The three scholarly essays:
Klaus Mann's "The Pious Dance": A Work Beyond Definition
Beyond Binary: Early Trans Representation in Klaus Mann's Der fromme Tanz and the Evolution of LGBTQ+ Literature
Dancing Toward Tomorrow: Queer Utopian Longing in Klaus Mann's "The Pious Dance"
The novel's autobiographical elements are unmistakable, as Mann draws heavily from his own experiences as a young gay artist navigating Berlin's vibrant and permissive cultural scene of the 1920s. Through Andreas, Mann explores his own struggles with artistic identity, sexual awakening, and the search for meaningful connection in a world of fleeting encounters. The protagonist's journey through Berlin's cabarets, artistic circles, and underground gay venues mirrors Mann's own explorations of the city's liberal atmosphere during the Weimar Republic.
A Groundbreaking Literary Classic of LGBTQ Literature by Klaus Mann, First Published in Germany in 1926. Set in the Gay Underground of Berlin and Paris's Nightclub Scenes, the Novel Features the First Unapologetic Transgender Character in 20th-Century Literature.
The Pious Dance (Der fromme Tanz) , Klaus Mann's first novel, published when he was just twenty years old, stands as a groundbreaking work of early modernist German literature and a significant milestone in LGBT+ literary history. Written with the raw authenticity of youth, this semi-autobiographical work captures the spirited and tumultuous atmosphere of Weimar-era Berlin through the eyes of its protagonist, Andreas Magnus, a thinly veiled version of Mann himself.
This new edition features:
A New English Translation from the Original German Text
An Introduction by the Editor
Endnotes to each Act of the Novel
Chapter By Chapter Critical Analysis
Author Biography
Three Scholarly Essays
The three scholarly essays:
Klaus Mann's "The Pious Dance": A Work Beyond Definition
Beyond Binary: Early Trans Representation in Klaus Mann's Der fromme Tanz and the Evolution of LGBTQ+ Literature
Dancing Toward Tomorrow: Queer Utopian Longing in Klaus Mann's "The Pious Dance"
The novel's autobiographical elements are unmistakable, as Mann draws heavily from his own experiences as a young gay artist navigating Berlin's vibrant and permissive cultural scene of the 1920s. Through Andreas, Mann explores his own struggles with artistic identity, sexual awakening, and the search for meaningful connection in a world of fleeting encounters. The protagonist's journey through Berlin's cabarets, artistic circles, and underground gay venues mirrors Mann's own explorations of the city's liberal atmosphere during the Weimar Republic.


















