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  1. The Blood of the Walsungs (Wälsungenblut in German) is a novella written by the German author Thomas Mann. Originally written in 1905 and set to be published in the January 1906 issue of Die Neue Rundschau, it was pulled from print because of its similarities to Mann's new wife and her family.

    • Thomas Mann
    • German
    • Germany
    • Helen Tracey Lowe-Porter
  2. THE BLOOD OF THE WALSUNGS. It was seven minutes to twelve. Wendelin came into the firstfloor entrance-hall and sounded the gong. He straddled in his violet knee-breeches on a prayer-rug pale with age and belaboured with his drumstick the metal disk.

    • 67KB
    • 17
  3. 23 de oct. de 2020 · Mann's attitude toward the Jews is primarily hostile in the controversial novella Wälsungenblut (The Blood of the Walsungs), in which he projects anti-Semitic stereotypes onto distorted images of his wife and new in-laws.

    • Todd Kontje
    • 2008
  4. The Blood of the Walsungs is a novella written by the German author Thomas Mann. Originally written in 1905 and set to be published in the January 1906 issue of Die Neue Rundschau, it was pulled from print because of its similarities to Mann's new wife and her family.

    • Thomas Mann
    • German
    • Germany
    • Helen Tracey Lowe-Porter
  5. The Blood of the Walsungs (German: Wälsungenblut) is a 1965 West German drama film directed by Rolf Thiele, based on a Thomas Mann novella of the same name written in 1905 and published in 1921. It was entered in the 15th Berlin International Film Festival.

  6. The Blood of the Walsungs (Wälsungenblut in German) is a novella written by the German author Thomas Mann. Originally written in 1905 and set to be published in the January 1906 issue of Die Neue Rundschau, it was pulled from print because of its similarities to Mann's new wife and her family.

  7. Christina von Braun has traced an intriguing reversal in the meaning of the word Blutschande over the course of the nineteenth century.1 While the ultimate disgrace to the blood originally referred to incest, i.e., to sexual relations between kin deemed too close, it had been transformed by the twentieth century into a shameful exogamy, a betray...