1.
What role does memory play in A Letter From an Unknown Woman and one
of the other short stories by Zweig? To
what ends? Possible angles to consider
would be the role of the past, the effects of nostalgia, memory and confession,
the faultiness of memory itself, etc.
2.
What role does love play in A Letter From an Unknown Woman and one
of the other short stories by Zweig? To
what ends? Possible angles to consider
would be the pain of lost love, young/naive love, the power of first love, the
nature of devotion, lust vs. love, the links between love and cruelty, etc.
3.
What role does class play in A Letter From an Unknown Woman and one
of the other short stories by Zweig? To
what ends? Possible angles to consider
would be the gap between rich and poor, the impact of of economic destitution,
the frivolity of wealth, etc.
4.
What is the function of story-telling in A Letter From an Unknown Woman and one
of the other short stories by Zweig? To
what ends? Possible angles to consider
would be the use of letters, the links made between memory and fiction, stories
within stories, the “storyteller” figure, the concern over capturing the real
vs. imagining a fiction, etc.
5.
What is the role of accident and/or
coincidence in A Letter From an Unknown
Woman and one of the other short stories by Zweig? To what ends?
Possible angles to consider would be chance meetings, mistaken
identities, false impressions, missed opportunities, etc.
6.
What connections are made between the past
and the present in A Letter From an
Unknown Woman and one of the other short stories by Zweig? To what ends?
Possible angles to consider would be learning about the past only after
it is past, failing to understand the past, trying to rectify the problems of
the past, the loss of innocence that comes with the acquiring of experience,
etc.
7. Discuss the role of revelation, both its
presence and its absence, in A Letter
From an Unknown Woman and Fantastic
Night. The former withholds any real
revelation, or at least it teases the reader with its possibility; the latter
contains a moment of true revelation, even of epiphany, only to have the impact
of this revelation be horribly and ironically overturned.
8. Discuss the role of World War I in two of
the stories by Zweig. How does the war
impact the plot and the characters of the stories? To what ends?