"This book is willfully 'disheveled,' for lack of a better word. That is, it insists on and performs—successfully, I believe—a purposeful entanglement between autobiography and literature."—Françoise Meltzer, <i>Critical Inquiry</i>
"This is no ordinary book. . . . Recommended. All levels of students through faculty"—R. C. Conard, <i>Choice</i>
"Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht is a true international figure—a Bavarian Romance scholar with an American career that extends to literary theory, cultural history, and history of ideas. . . . His ambitious new book on mood, philosophy of history, and contemporary analysis is an interesting and peculiar example of what the humanities can also create."—Frederik Stjernfelt, <i>Weekendavisen</i>
"Quirky, superbly composed, and nuanced. . . . A totally original meditation on how our sense of time has changed over the last two-thirds of a century."—Harold Bloom, Yale University
"This is a fascinating and important book—important because of the way it connects a certain postwar mood with literary and personal examples. I am familiar with a good deal of Gumbrecht's previous work, and as far as I know, this is the first time he has directly addressed the situation of Germany after the Second World War in such a way. The courage, and intellectual honesty, it has taken to write <i>After 1945</i> are impressive indeed."—Françoise Meltzer, University of Chicago