Vienna: The Image Of A Culture In Decline

Vienna: The Image Of A Culture In Decline

$60.00 AUD

Availability: in stock at our Tullamarine warehouse

Condition: SECONDHAND

This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.

Edition: reprint of the 1938 Edition

Condition remarks:
Condition: Very Good. Jacket: worn/faded, no tears. The hardcover binding solid and intact with minimal visible wear. Page Condition: Good. Markings: No markings.

A landmark work of cultural history, Vienna: The Image of a Culture in Decline presents a richly textured portrait of the Habsburg capital at its glittering, decadent zenith in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Edward Crankshaw chronicles the collision of brilliance and dysfunction within Viennese society — a world that simultaneously produced Freud, Mahler, Klimt, and Wittgenstein while its political and imperial foundations crumbled beneath it. With the authority of a seasoned scholar and the prose of a gifted essayist, Crankshaw illustrates how the very tensions and contradictions of fin-de-siècle Vienna gave birth to the ideas and art forms that would define modernity. The result is an elegant, penetrating account of a civilisation at its most creative and most fragile — a city whose decline cast a long shadow over the entire twentieth century.

Author: Edward Crankshaw
Format: Hardback
Published: 1976, Macmillan
Genre: European history

Description

Edition: reprint of the 1938 Edition

Condition remarks:
Condition: Very Good. Jacket: worn/faded, no tears. The hardcover binding solid and intact with minimal visible wear. Page Condition: Good. Markings: No markings.

A landmark work of cultural history, Vienna: The Image of a Culture in Decline presents a richly textured portrait of the Habsburg capital at its glittering, decadent zenith in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Edward Crankshaw chronicles the collision of brilliance and dysfunction within Viennese society — a world that simultaneously produced Freud, Mahler, Klimt, and Wittgenstein while its political and imperial foundations crumbled beneath it. With the authority of a seasoned scholar and the prose of a gifted essayist, Crankshaw illustrates how the very tensions and contradictions of fin-de-siècle Vienna gave birth to the ideas and art forms that would define modernity. The result is an elegant, penetrating account of a civilisation at its most creative and most fragile — a city whose decline cast a long shadow over the entire twentieth century.