Death in Venice: Difference between revisions

Added context For blue blood: "raised the author of the Frederick to nobility on the occasion of his fiftieth birthday. "
No edit summary
(Added context For blue blood: "raised the author of the Frederick to nobility on the occasion of his fiftieth birthday. ")
(5 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1:
{{work}}
{{delete|This page has been tagged with {{tl|trope list needs context}} for more than six months. As per [[att:Style Guide#Adding Tropes to Works|this wiki's Style Guide]], "Work pages with nothing but Zero Context Examples are themselves subject to deletion if no one chooses to rescue them." Two-week notice: Fix this page before May 18, 2024, or see it deleted by the Mods.}}
[[File:Wolfgang Born Der Tod in Venedig 1921.jpg|thumb|]]
{{trope list needs context}}
 
'''''Death in Venice''''' is a 1912 novella written by [[Germany|German]] author Thomas Mann (original title ''Der Tod in Venedig''). The story is about an aged author who travels to [[Venice]] and falls in love with a stunningly good-looking aristocratic fourteen-year-old boy, to whom he never speaks.
 
The novella is highly autobiographical: while holidaying in Venice, thirty-seven-year-old Mann, a married father, had crushed from afar on a ten-year-old Polish aristocrat, Wladyslaw Moes. Luchino Visconti adapted the novella into a film in 1971 and Benjamin Britten adapted it into an opera in 1973.
 
Project Gutenberg has a copy [https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/66073 here].
 
{{tropelist}}
{{context}}
* [[Blue Blood]]: A German prince nominates Gustav Aschenbach to a nobility on his fiftieth birthday.
* [[Blue Blood]]
* [[Long-Haired Pretty Boy]]
* [[Longing Look]]