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  1. In spite of surprising efforts of the Elector of Brandenburg to save Kohlhaas, he is sentenced to death. Later it turns out that Kohlhaas has on his person papers that contain important information about the House of Saxony. As Kohlhaas is led to execution, he sees in the crowd the disguised Elector of Saxony.

  2. "Michael Kohlhaas" supone la máxima expresión literaria del "outsider" romántico que lo es a su pesar. La fábula narra las peripecias de un individuo que se toma la justicia por su mano, cometiendo con ello mayores tropelías que las que intentaba sancionar.

  3. discussed in biography. In Heinrich von Kleist. (“The Earthquake in Chile”), “Michael Kohlhaas,” and “Die Marquise von O…” have become well-known as tales of violence and mystery. They are all characterized by an extraordinary economy, power, and vividness and by a tragic subject matter in which men are driven to the limits of ...

  4. El héroe de Michael Kohlhaas habría podido ser un individuo romántico que se enfrenta al despotismo de la nobleza y por ello se convierte en bandido. Pero, en manos de Kleist, protagoniza un caso casi prekafkiano, escrupulosa y objetivamente pormenorizado, de una inaudita complejidad y una ambigüedad muy moderna, capaz de ver sin temor el ...

  5. 29 de sept. de 2006 · En «Michael Kohlhaas» se narra la historia de un tratante de caballos que sufre el abuso de un potentado sajón cuando trata de atravesar sus dominios para vender sus animales en Dresde; el noble le arrebata sus caballos y le ridiculiza sin reparos, obligándole a solicitar unos documentos inexistentes para poder recuperarlos.

  6. Michael Kohlhaas Kleist's Michael Kohlhaas is among the most celebrated works in Ger­ man literature, and it has been the subject of extensive critical discus­ sion that is, however, far from producing any consensus.1 Two much disputed issues are always at the center of the critical discussion:

  7. Michael Kohlhaas is a German novella written by Heinrich von Kleist. It’s based on the story of Hans Kohlhase, which dates from the sixteenth century. Kleist published parts of the text in his literary journal Phöbus in 1808. The full work appeared in his 1810 book Erzahlungen, meaning novellas.