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OverviewDaughter of a noted Viennese landscapist, Alma Maria Schindler Werfel (1879-1964) lived at the centre of Austrian musical and artistic creativity. Renowned for her beauty and artistic discernment, she was lionized by a circle of friends that included Klimt, Zemlinsky, Berg, Schoenberg, and Schnitzler, and had many lovers in addition to her three husbands, the composer Gustav Mahler, architect Walter Gropius, and writer Franz Werfel. While her own potential remained largely unfulfilled, her personality is evident in some of the greatest works produced in Austria this century. This biography also examines the extent to which the decline of Austria from imperial power to Nazi satellite, and small state influenced her turbulent life. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Francoise Giroud , R.M. StockPublisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 21.50cm Weight: 0.374kg ISBN: 9780198161561ISBN 10: 0198161565 Pages: 169 Publication Date: 12 September 1991 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsA goddess who made gods of her lovers; Vienna, in flight from reality; the forming of Alma; preparation for tyranny; a semblance of a life; social life and servitude; ruthless queen and obedient subject; Alma Oskar Kokoschka; not guilty at all; Frau Alma Werfel; refugees; Mahler's widow once more.ReviewsAlthough in this unsatisfying biography she describes Alma Mahler as a goddess who made a god of each of her lovers, Giroud (ed. in chief, L'Express; I Give You My Word, 1974) also depicts the composer's wife as an arrogant, narcissistic woman who played whatever role she was cast in by creative, demanding men who in turn adored her for conforming to their expectations. Mahler was born into the artistic circles of Vienna in 1879. According to Giroud, Gustav, her first husband and 20 years her senior, enslaved her to his domestic needs, denigrated her taste for Nietzsche, Wagner, and Plato, and read Kant to her while she was in labor with the second of their two daughters, who died at age four. Sexually deprived, Alma began an affair with architect Walter Gropius; her husband consulted Freud. After Gustav's death and several other affairs, Mahler married Gropius, with whom, Giroud says, she had nothing in common except an exquisite daughter who died at age 17. The couple divorced. Although the work of Mahler's creative mates bored her, as Giroud puts it, Mahler liked the painting of Oskar Kokoschka, with whom she had an affair before, at age 50, marrying Franz Werfel, the author of The Song of Bernadette. There were other lovers, even at age 55, in what Werfel called his wife's last fling, with a 38-year-old priest. As Werfel's fame declined, Mahler resumed her role as the great composer's widow, or sometimes as the widow of the four arts. She died in 1964, at age 85. A grudging tribute without insight, compassion, or even evidence of the power that inspired the love that Mahler supposedly cultivated as an art. Mahler's determination, which allowed her to survive the loss of children and husbands, and her life in prewar Vienna certainly deserve at least as much attention as the amount of benedictine she drank. (Kirkus Reviews) Author InformationAbout the Author: Francoise Giroud has written numerous books, including biographies of Marie Curie and Christian Dior. Director of the French magazine Elle from 1945 to 1952 and co-founder of L'Express, she was Minister of Culture under Giscard D'Estaing from 1974 to 1977 Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |