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  1. Thomas Mann Biography (submitted by Peter Yang) Death in Venice; be unable to go to school of child (submitted by hetong chen) Thomas Mann - Top Biography (submitted by Chinnappan Baskar) Two books on Thomas Mann, one of it a dissertation the other a novel (submitted by Dr. Christian Gloystein) Mann Thomas Biography (submitted by )

  2. 托马斯·曼和他的夫人Katia Mann的墓碑在后,他们的墓前是小儿子Micheal Mann的墓碑. 早在1949年托马斯·曼便借歌德200周年诞辰纪念活动之际访问了德国,到了法兰克福以及魏玛。公众对托马斯·曼的访问抱着怀疑的态度,不过托马斯·曼却说:“我不分占领区。

  3. Apr 11, 2018 · Novelist, anti-fascist intellectual, and world citizen. Thomas Mann is widely recognized as one of the greatest German novelists of the twentieth century. Exile from his homeland created the opportunity for him to become a major transatlantic figure as well. The intellectual and civic leadership he offered, especially his public opposition to ...

  4. Thomas Mann - Novels, Fiction, Nobel Prize: The novels on which Mann was working throughout this period reflect variously the cultural crisis of his times. In 1933 he published The Tales of Jacob (U.S. title, Joseph and His Brothers), the first part of his four-part novel on the biblical Joseph, continued the following year in The Young Joseph and two years later with Joseph in Egypt, and ...

  5. Abstract. Thomas Mann, German novelist and essayist, was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature in 1929 for his masterpiece, The Buddenbrooks, aided by his much acclaimed The Magic Mountain, which depicts life in a tuberculosis sanitorium. One of the most medically perceptive writers of the century, Mann was obsessed by illness and disease and ...

  6. Thomas Mann, German novelist, was chosen today to receive the 1929 Nobel Prize for literature, which is worth $46,299 this year. View Full Article in Timesmachine » Share full article

  7. Oct 21, 2016 · The Magic Mountain (1924) Thomas Mann’s magnum opus is a novel that portends the destruction of European civilization (a destruction that really had ravaged the land just a decade prior to publication in 1924) through the dark, pathological eye-glass of a Swiss sanatorium. The novel’s protagonist, Hans Castorp, takes on the classic role of ...

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