Tristan

  • Autor: Thomas Mann
  • Editor: Lebooks Editora
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Sinopsis

Tristan by Thomas Mann is a short novella that explores the tension between artistic sensitivity and ordinary life. The story takes place in a quiet sanatorium, where patients seek rest and recovery, and where the refined but eccentric writer Detlev Spinell becomes fascinated by Gabriele Klöterjahn, a delicate young woman married to a healthy and practical businessman.
Spinell represents the world of art, introspection, and aesthetic refinement, while Gabriele's husband embodies vitality, simplicity, and bourgeois normality. The writer encourages Gabriele to revive her musical talent and emotional sensitivity, leading to a performance of a piece by Wagner that awakens deep and troubling feelings within her. This moment of artistic intensity contrasts sharply with the practical concerns of everyday life.
The novella reflects Thomas Mann's recurring theme of the opposition between life and art. Spinell's aesthetic idealism appears both seductive and destructive, suggesting that artistic exaltation may come at the expense of health and stability. The sanatorium setting reinforces this tension, as it becomes a symbolic space between vitality and decline.
Compact yet rich in symbolism, Tristan is both a psychological portrait and an ironic commentary on the role of the artist. The work anticipates many of Mann's later themes, particularly the conflict between disciplined bourgeois existence and the dangerous allure of artistic and emotional excess.