
Contents
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National Representation National Representation
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The Burden of Politics The Burden of Politics
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Exile as a Transformative Condition Exile as a Transformative Condition
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Stylistic Adaptations Stylistic Adaptations
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Literature as Therapy and World Building Literature as Therapy and World Building
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Publishing Revolutions Publishing Revolutions
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Cite
Abstract
This concluding chapter considers the continuing importance of Thomas Mann in the world republic of letters. It explains how the parameters that conditioned Mann's rise to the status of literary celebrity and antifascist icon in the United States of the 1930s and 1940s foreshadowed developments in the world republic of letters. These developments, moreover, did not fully come to fruition until after the Second World War. Furthermore, they continue to affect global literary production in the twenty-first century. In many respects, Thomas Mann was a forerunner for experiences that have become commonplace for writers in our own day, especially those that hail from the periphery of the global literary community.
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