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Distributed for Reaktion Books

E.T.A. Hoffmann

A life of the nineteenth-century German writer and composer most famous for inspiring The Nutcracker.
 
E.T.A. Hoffmann (1776–1822) is celebrated for his supernatural fiction such as The Sandman as well as his musical achievements, notably the opera Undine. This book offers a concise yet comprehensive introduction to Hoffmann as a Romantic writer, composer, and public figure. It follows his life as a lawyer, theater director, and senior judge in Berlin, where he clashed with authorities over their persecution of student radicals. Drawing on Hoffmann’s personal writings and contemporary recollections, Ritchie Robertson also highlights how historical events like Napoleon’s invasion disrupted Hoffman’s career. Considering his literary and musical contributions together, the book presents Hoffmann as a multifaceted artist whose inventiveness, both comic and spine-chilling, remains influential today.
 

216 pages | 28 halftones | 5.12 x 7.87 | © 2025

Critical Lives


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Table of Contents

Introduction

1 From Konigsberg to Berlin, from Music to Literature
2 Bamberg: Medicine, Psychology and Fiction
3 Hoffmann the Storyteller
4Hoffmann in Berlin, 1814–22
5 Hoffmann’s Literary Afterlife

References
Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Photo Acknowledgements

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