---
product_id: 5124897
title: "Tomboy"
brand: "thomas meineckedaniel bowles"
price: "€ 28.11"
currency: EUR
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 7
url: https://www.desertcart.sk/products/5124897-tomboy
store_origin: SK
region: Slovakia
---

# Tomboy

**Brand:** thomas meineckedaniel bowles
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- **What is this?** Tomboy by thomas meineckedaniel bowles
- **How much does it cost?** € 28.11 with free shipping
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## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    Tomboy
  

*by B***Y on Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on November 7, 2011*

Often when one describes books by comparison to other books, it is the absurd rather than the simple comparison that is most telling. While reading Thomas Meinecke's 1998 novel Tomboy, now translated into English by Daniel Bowles, I found myself reminded of A. S. Byatt's Possession. On many levels both superficial and profound the two are nothing alike. Possession is long, with a complicated, expansive, enthralling story and a variety of literary ambitions; Tomboy is short, almost claustrophobically focused on a particular milieu at a particular point in time, and has little in the way of sequential plot or obvious purpose. The number of readers who will enjoy both novels is miniscule. What they share, though, is an interest in the constrained nature of certain academic mindsets, the way in which what is studied can overshadow and define the personal. In Possession, the academics were concerned with writers, but in Tomboy, they are devotees of contemporary literary theory, the totalizing implications of which are seen to induce a kind of not-unpleasant obsessive paralysis.The protagonist, Vivian Atkinson, is a master's candidate at a university in Heidelberg, in the process of constructing a thesis on having, being, and seeming as related to gender and culture. As the breadth of the topic might suggest, she doesn't lack for angles from which to approach it, and much of the book is given over to her and her friends' description, quotation, and discussion of scholarly works and historical anecdotes that might further her analysis. But for Meinecke's characters questions about the meaning of gender, the possibility of redefining and escaping it, are not (forgive the pun) merely academic. These concerns are brought to bear on their own lives, which are marked with distinctly modern versions of collegiate eccentricity. As they listen to music, read newspapers, and otherwise hang out, everything is examined through the lens of various theories, mostly to do with gender and sexuality, but also taking in Jewish and German identity, German history, synthetic chemistry, and fashion.As far as I can ascertain, all or nearly all the scholars, musicians, and historical details mentioned in Tomboy are real, which adds to the verisimilitude of a book that feels, despite what may seem exaggerated quality, accurate to a particular brand of experience. Part of this accuracy is the absence of any plot development. Although various events of significance occur in the lives of the people around Vivian, these changes, and the passions that presumably drive them, remain offstage and opaque. Vivian herself is very much the reserved student, so busy thinking that she never seems to feel anything. Even in the course of an unusual sexual encounter she is thinking only about its symbolic significance and how it might be classified. Seen through her eyes, Tomboy is little more than a catalog of mundane (but striking) occurrences and quietly thoughtful reactions to them.For many readers this book would be a pointless or unpleasant experience. Those so averse to modern literary/political/philosophical theory that even descriptions of it make them itch should certainly not bother. Those looking for a satire on those ideas will also come away disappointed; if there is satire here, it's so deadpan as to obviate itself, though the book could probably sustain a theory-averse reading if you wanted to provide. It can hardly be described as a treatise in novel form, as there isn't really a coherent use of any of the ideas invoked here; they come to the reader as they do to Vivian, fascinating or risible but always without focus. Although they have colorful histories, the characters lack much in the way of personality; or, it might be better to say, their doctrinal concerns ~are~ their personalities. The language-- longish paragraphs separated by white space; sentences that are descriptively simple yet digressive and often grammatically elaborate-- has an oddly compelling quality that compensates for the lack of momentum, but there is no evocation of atmosphere, no sense of telling detail, nothing that would constitute good writing in the familiar senses of the word.And yet I enjoyed it. It hangs together better than it has any right to, the wealth of factually-accurate detail so atypical of the novel form has a pleasing paradoxical absurdity, and the juxtaposition of outre theory with the ordinary activities of students captures something about the simultaneously rich and sterile quality of academic life. Blandness, of prose style and of plot, itself becomes a mimetic literary tactic. This is a fraught approach, and even the colorful facts with which Meinecke alleviates it can only help so much. Those considering Tomboy would be well advised to use Amazon's preview feature to read the opening pages. That's what the entire novel is like, and it's easy enough to dismiss. But readers interested in unusual narrative structures, or the vagaries of the university, should give the novel some consideration; at the very least, they're likely to find it a diverting curiosity.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    Der Feminist Epistemology Des Nibelungen
  

*by C***K on Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 8, 2012*

The central character in Thomas Meinecke's Tomboy is Vivian Atkinson, a twenty-four-year-old student in Germany who is writing her master's thesis on gender studies. She is somewhat of a tomboy, in contrast to the sissiness of Hans/Hansi Mühlenkamm, a self avowed feminist, or Angela/Angelo Guida, the consort of PhD candidate Frauke St'ver, who is writing her thesis on the foreskin of Jesus Christ. For the fence sitters, there is Korinna Kohn, a Tennis Player, whose drug dealer husband gets carted off to prison leaving her pregnant. Vivian is an Army Brat whose father was stationed in Germany, and who has to some extent gone native. She is very absorbed in her thesis, and each time her research uncovers another piece of the puzzle she can barely wait to pound it into the liquid crystal of her Texas Instrument. Meinecke almost seems to be parodying the students, all but winking at the reader and implying that all of their high fallutin' theories may be nothing more than a tempest in a teapot, but perhaps the titular Tomboy is on to something.Meinecke weaves quite a tapestry of words, as he quotes freely from Vivian's research material, almost like a DJ sampling music in a megamix medley of hits from Monique Wittig, Judith Butler, Thomas Mann, Willa Cather, Otto Weininger, the Feminist Epistemology of Jacques Lacan, the S.C.U.M. Manifesto of Valerie Solanas, Simone de Beauvoir, bell hooks, Michel Foucault, Sigmund Freud, and the rantings of Richard Wagner. To power her studies tomboy Vivian likes to pound her Texas Instrument to the beat of Sleater-Kinney and Cat Power, although Wagner's Der Ring Des Nibelungen and Lola versus Powerman and the Money-Go-Round, Part One by The Kinks, also merit a mention.Though the impressive vocabulary of Thomas Meinecke would have provided an excellent opportunity to increase my word power, I chose to just power through without looking up every unfamiliar word in the dictionary, just enjoying the German words and country side. News reports would filter through, giving the novel a feel of a certain time and place. Versace and Lady Diana were two events that pinned the story into a particular time like a butterfly in a specimen box. Along with the tour of gender studies you also got one of the Army Base, Plastic Companies, and Rock Quarries of Germany, and insight into just how West Germany managed to recover so quickly after the war by focusing on innovations in plastic manufacturing.Still, though "real life" of the students was vividly described, you got the feeling that they were so absorbed by the academic world and their studies that they were only faintly aware of their surroundings. I myself found their earnest pondering kind of cute, but couldn't fully engage myself in their theoretical exercises either. I was reminded of the old joke about the Philosophers going on strike, and how that brought the kingdom to a standstill (NOT!) but then perhaps the author made that joke explicit rather than implicit at some point, he said vaguely, so as not to spoil the ending.The Bottom Line is that I enjoyed this novel once I gave up trying to follow the theoretical arguments, and even the narrative, and just enjoyed the ride. On the autobahn, there is no speed limit!
  
Jacques Lacan and Feminist Epistemology (Transformations)







  
  
    
  
The History of Sexuality, Vol. 1: An Introduction







  
  
     by Michel Foucault and Robert Hurley
  
Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity (Routledge Classics)







  
  
     by Judith Butler
  
Across the Acheron







  
  
     by Monique Wittig
  
Sexes and Geneologies: Sexes and Genealogies







  
  
     by Luce Irigaray and Gillian C. Gill
  
Sex and Character







  
  
     by Otto Weininger
  
Three Contributions to the Theory of Sex







  
  
     by Sigmund Freud
  
Triumph of the Will & Olympia - 2 DVD Special Embossed Tin!







  
  
     by Leni Riefenstahl
  
I Shot Andy Warhol







  
  
    
  
Paris Is Burning







  
  
     Starring Carmen and Brooke, Avis Pendavis, Pepper LaBeija, Octavia Extravaganza, et al.

### ⭐⭐ 







  
  
    Cack-handed and pretentious
  

*by P***N on Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on December 3, 2011*

Tomboy is a self-indulgent, smug exercise in faux-intellectual writing that is all method and no content. Meinecke claims to be "sampling words and texts the way a disc jockey samples music", but that has no value unless it creates something worthwhile. Sadly, in Tomboy style is an end in itself. And it's not done very well.Considering Meinecke's high intellectual purpose, his style is crude and unsophisticated. The only weapon in his writing armoury is the subordinate clause, in which nearly every sentence, insofar as he writes sentences, contains, rather like the sentence you are reading now, several diversions commenting on the content of the sentence - ideally with brief, unclear cultural or intellectual references - such that, by the end of the sentence, if you ever get to the end, and by this point you're probably wondering whether you should bother, you realise that the writer hasn't moved forward but instead, rather like a freshman trying too hard to impress his tutor with his first essay - and who hasn't done that? - simply gone round in circles.At times Tomboy reads like a parody of 60s and 70s books that wore their intellectual references on their sleeves, or of cheap pulp fiction where inept writers tried to give readers essential information in asides and afterthoughts. Dan Brown does this in The Da Vinci Code, where Langdon drives around Paris thinking to himself about what the landmarks are and how they are relevant to the story.If you want intellectual references, 
  
Umberto Eco







  
  
     does it better. If you want literary sampling, "spinning seemingly disparate tunes into a single, glowing melody" (as the blurb says), try 
  
David Peace







  
  
    .
  
Umberto EcoDavid Peace

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*Last updated: 2026-04-23*