front cover of Reading Robert Walser
Reading Robert Walser
Criticism, Creativity, Correspondence
Simon Wortham
University College London, 2025
A radical engagement with Robert Walser’s correspondence that turns literary criticism into an act of creative recovery.

Robert Walser’s letters to Frieda Mermet, the laundry manager at a Swiss psychiatric hospital, offer an intimate and enigmatic glimpse into the mind of a writer whose literary fortunes waned even as his influence grew in the decades following his death. Covering nearly thirty years, from 1913 to 1942, these letters chart Walser’s transition from a celebrated modernist to a man institutionalized, yet still deeply engaged with language and identity.

In Reading Robert Walser, Simon Wortham studies Walser’s letters within the broader context of modernist literature and deconstruction, and also imaginatively reconstructs Mermet’s possible lost responses, blurring the lines between criticism and creativity. The result is an innovative exploration of authorship and the act of reading itself—one that deepens our understanding of Walser’s life and work while questioning the very nature of literary correspondence.
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front cover of They Have All Been Healed
They Have All Been Healed
Reading Robert Walser
Jan Plug
Northwestern University Press, 2016
In perhaps the most provocative reading to date of the Swiss German modernist Robert Walser, Walter Benjamin asserted that Walser's figures "have all been healed." They Have All Been Healed takes up and extends Benjamin's assessment by following the figure of healing throughout major works by Walser, from his minidrama Snow White and his acknowledged masterpieces The Walk and Jakob von Gunten to his enigmatic last novel, The Robber. At the same time, Jan Plug reads Walser alongside his most compelling readers, tracing how not only Benjamin but also Giorgio Agamben, W. G. Sebald, and the Brothers Quay complicate, clarify, and enact that same process of healing in their own work. Working out the theological implications of Walser's work and of the tradition to which he gives rise, Plug at once recasts one of the major authors of the twentieth century and articulates a new conception of healing and salvation.
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