Der wilde Garten : Roman by Grete von Urbanitzky
(10 User reviews)
1697
Urbanitzky, Grete von, 1891-1974
German
"Der wilde Garten" by Grete von Urbanitzky is a novel written in the early 20th century. It follows the devoted teacher Fräulein Dr. Hanna Südekum as she tries to guide adolescent girls—especially Gertrud—through awakening, rebellion, and the constraints and blind spots of adult society while confronting her own loneliness. Parallel strands with a ...
of desire, authority, and modernity. The opening of the novel shows Hanna in her modest room comforting Gertrud, whose mother has torn up a secret notebook of treasured quotations, and recalls how Hanna first won the troubled girl’s trust after a schoolyard clash. Three years pass: Hanna’s life is wholly bound to the girls’ school; she mistrusts parents’ evasions, tutors a boy (Erwin) who idolizes a powerful statesman, and is disturbed when a young couple she knows return entranced by the free-spirited sculptor Alexandra. As puberty transforms her class—bringing giggles, panic, and a classmate’s death from illness—an anonymous report leads Hanna and a colleague to a night club, where they find a pupil with an actor and then heading to a hotel, a shock compounded when Hanna later glimpses her married friend in an intimate night scene. She struggles to teach amid the girls’ new obsessions, grows painfully distant from Gertrud, and suffers a private crisis about aging and solitude; the section closes with another student, Grete, raging at adult lies and at books that ignore girls’ inner battles. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
Elizabeth Rodriguez
3 months agoIn my opinion, the content flows smoothly from one chapter to the next. An impressive piece of work.
Andrew Allen
1 month agoIf you enjoy this genre, the logical flow of arguments makes it an essential resource for research. This made complex ideas feel approachable.
Paul Campbell
5 months agoFrom an academic standpoint, the presentation of ideas feels natural and engaging. Simply brilliant.
Jessica Harris
1 month agoThis stood out immediately because the diagrams and footnotes included in this version are very helpful. I finished this feeling genuinely satisfied.
There are no comments for this eBook.
Thomas Hernandez
5 months agoAfter looking for this everywhere, the content remains relevant throughout without filler. An unexpectedly enjoyable experience.