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  1. 25 de dic. de 2008 · Buddenbrooks: Directed by Heinrich Breloer. With Armin Mueller-Stahl, Iris Berben, Jessica Schwarz, August Diehl. In the 1840s, Lübeck is a dominating commercial town on the Baltic coast, and the Buddenbrooks are among the town's first families.

  2. 30,604 ratings1,936 reviews. A classic of modern literature: Buddenbrooks is the story of four generations of a wealthy bourgeois family in northern Germany facing the advent of modernity; in an uncertain new world, the family’s bonds and traditions begin to disintegrate. With an introduction by T. J. Reed, and translated by John E. Woods.

  3. 9 de oct. de 2022 · Thomas Mann in 1946. Yousuf Karsh. Johann Buddenbrook, a genial patriarch who is a practical and serious businessman, leaves his grain business to his family-oriented son Jean. All fares well for the family until the time arrives for the Buddenbrooks’ bourgeois legacy to pass down to Jean’s children. The decay of the family fortune is ...

  4. Buddenbrooks, novel by Thomas Mann, published in 1901 in two volumes in German as Buddenbrooks, Verfall einer Familie (“Buddenbrooks, the Decline of a Family”). The work was Mann’s first novel, and it expressed the ambivalence of his feelings about the value of the life of the artist as opposed to ordinary, bourgeois life.

  5. The novel “Buddenbrooks” was begun by Thomas Mann in October 1896. Initially, the writer planned to reflect in him the history of his family (mainly older relatives), but over time, the biographical narrative grew into an artistic one and spread to four generations of people connected by one common family history.

  6. The Buddenbrooks: Directed by Alfred Weidenmann. With Liselotte Pulver, Hansjörg Felmy, Nadja Tiller, Hanns Lothar. First part of two of the saga of the troubled Buddenbrook family and their business in mid-19th-century Germany.

  7. Summary. One of the most astute early reviews of Buddenbrooks was written by a young poet who was Thomas Mann's exact contemporary, Rainer Maria Rilke. What strikes today's reader is not so much Rilke's positive response to the novel as his perceptive grasp of the inner tensions that give Buddenbrooks its unique and innovative character.