Keller is best known as one of the leading practitioners of Poetic Realism, a nineteenth-century German-language and Scandinavian prose style that sought to retain the “poetic” values of fiction in the face of an often more cynical socio-politically engaged European Realism. Literary Realism in general is widely understood as “the combination of elements [that] leads the reader to believe that the text has a mimetic relationship to the world” (Robert Holub,
Reflections of Realism, Detroit 1991, p. 16). In Keller's case, this combination involves an avoidance of the fantastic (if not the improbable), and a deep emotional precision or psychological realism that endeared his work to Freud, who made frequent use of it in his essays and case studies. The typical conflict in Keller's…
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Citation: Hart, Gail. "Gottfried Keller". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 08 November 2006 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=5452, accessed 21 November 2024.]