Backfischroman
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The Backfischroman (teenage girl novel, literal meaning: ''baked fish novel'') is a genre in German literature. It denotes a particular type of novel of the 19th and early 20th century, primarily aiming at adolescent girls as an audience. In the 19th century, the now antiquated word ''Backfisch'' was a common term to describe girls between the ages 13 and 16 or more general during puberty. The exact origin of the term is not known. Most likely it was taken from the identical word used by fishermen to describe small young fish in a catch, which were of less use. For the origin of this use, different explanations are offered in literature. One states that it is derived from the English word ''back'', because those fish were often thrown back into the water. Another states an alternative literal meaning as baked fish and states that traditionally in cooking such small fish were only prepared by baking since they were considered not large enough for boiled or fried dishes. The Backfischroman is usually told from a first-person perspective, with the main character being an adolescent girl of middle or higher class upbringing. She tends to be an open and friendly person, who pursues her own interests independently of society's norms and later after a learning process makes her own free decision to accept the role for a woman as wife and mother. Typical well known examples are Emmy von Rhoden's ''Der Trotzkopf'' (1885) and Clementine Helm's ''Backfischchens Leiden und Freuden'' (1863). Later examples like
Else Ury Else Ury (1 November 1877 – 13 January 1943) was a German-Jewish novelist and children's book author. Her best-known character is the blonde doctor's daughter Annemarie Braun, whose life from childhood to old age is told in the ten volumes of t ...
's ''Nesthäckchen'' allow a bit more room and different topics for the female protagonist, being not quite as restrictive as before. This is due to changing attitudes from the
Wilhelmine The Wilhelmine period or Wilhelmian era () comprises the period of German history between 1888 and 1918, embracing the reign of Kaiser Wilhelm II in the German Empire from the death of Kaiser Friedrich III until the end of World War I and Wilh ...
period (1871–1918) to the
Weimar Weimar is a city in the state (Germany), German state of Thuringia, in Central Germany (cultural area), Central Germany between Erfurt to the west and Jena to the east, southwest of Leipzig, north of Nuremberg and west of Dresden. Together w ...
period (1918–1933). The terms Backfischroman and Backfischliteratur are not applied to girl literature from the middle of the 20th century onwards, which features an expanded range of topics and is less focused on traditional roles for women.


Translations

''Der Trotzkopf'' has been translated into English twice, once under the title An Obstinate Maid (1898) by Mary E. Ireland and once as Taming a Tomboy (1898), likely by the Belgian-born naturalist and free-thought advocate
Felix Leopold Oswald Felix Leopold Oswald (December 6, 1845 – September 27, 1906) was a Belgian American physician, Natural history, naturalist, Secularism, secularist and freethought writer. Biography Oswald was born in Namur, Belgium. He graduated from Free Uni ...
.T. Feldmann, "The Untameable ''Trotzkopf'': Commerce and Canonicity in the Curious Circulation of a Classic of Germans Children's Literature in the Low Countries and Germany", ''Dutch Crossing, 44(2): 253. ''


References


Further reading

*Jennifer Drake Askey: ''Good Girls, Good Germans: Girls' Education and Emotional Nationalism in Wilhelminian Germany''. Camden House (Boydell & Brewer), 2013, pp. 103–141 (Chapter "Mädchenliteratur I — Backfischbücher and Historical Novels") *David Ehrenpreis: ''The Figure of the Backfisch: Representing Puberty in Wilhelmine Germany''. Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte, 67. Bd., H. 4 (2004), pp. 479–508
JSTOR
*Elizabeth Harvey: ''Private Fantasy and Public Intervention: Girls' Reading in Weimar Germany''. In: Jennifer Birkett (ed.), Elizabeth Harvey (ed.): ''Determined Women: Studies in the Construction of the Female Subject, 1900–90''. Springer 1991, , pp
38-67
*Gisela Wilkending: ''Mädchenliteratur der Kaiserzeit: zwischen weiblicher Identifizierung und Grenzüberschreitung''. Metzler, 2003, {{ISBN, 9783476019639 (German) *Hadassah Stichnothe: ''Liebe, Krieg und Sommerferien. Der weibliche Adoleszenzroman im historischen Überblick''. Der Deutschunterricht, issue 2/16, pp. 14–26 (German) Young adult literature German literature Literary genres