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    • The Emigrants (Sebald novel) - Wikipedia
      • Summary In The Emigrants, Sebald's narrator recounts his involvement with and the life stories of four different characters, all of whom are emigrants (to England and the United States). As with most of Sebald's work, the text includes many black and white, unlabeled photographs and strays sharply from general formats of plot and narrative.
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  1. The Emigrants is a 1992 fictional work by German writer W.G. Sebald. Composed as a mosaic of semi-autobiographical narratives, Sebald’s work traces the stories of four immigrant men as an unnamed narrator encounters them during his travels.

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  3. The Emigrants (German: Die Ausgewanderten) is a 1992 collection of narratives by the German writer W. G. Sebald. It won the Berlin Literature Prize, the Literatur Nord Prize, and the Johannes Bobrowski Medal. The English translation by Michael Hulse was first published in 1996.

  4. The The Emigrants Community Note includes chapter-by-chapter summary and analysis, character list, theme list, historical context, author biography and quizzes written by community members like you. Best summary PDF, themes, and quotes.

    • Winfried Georg Sebald
  5. Sep 5, 2023 · In The Emigrants, the unnamed narrator (s) tells the stories of four men who left their homes in Germany around the time of, or prior to, the second...

  6. The Emigrants is the collective name of a series of four novels by Swedish author Vilhelm Moberg. Written in the mid-twentieth century, they explore the large Swedish emigration to the United States that started about a century before.

  7. Jan 1, 2001 · At first The Emigrants appears simply to document the lives of four Jewish émigrés in the twentieth century. But gradually, as Sebald's precise, almost dreamlike prose begins to draw their stories, the four narrations merge into one overwhelming evocation of exile and loss.

  8. The first book in the series, The Emigrants introduces Karl Oskar and Kristina Nilsson, their three young children, and eleven others who make up a resolute party of Swedes fleeing the poverty, religious persecution, and social oppression of Småland in 1850.

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