The Radetzky March

The Radetzky March by Joseph Roth is a novel published by Penguin in 1995, featuring 331 pages in English. This edition presents a narrative that begins with a pivotal accident, which leads to the elevation of Joseph Trotta from a humble soldier to a baron in the Austro-Hungarian Empire. As the story unfolds, it explores the complexities of status and identity within a changing world, particularly as World War I looms and the monarchy’s relevance diminishes.
Readers will find a detailed exploration of the Trotta family’s transformation and the burdens that accompany their newfound status. The narrative delves into themes of honor and duty, as Trotta’s grandson, Carl Joseph, grapples with personal failures and the weight of inherited privilege. The story poignantly captures the family’s decline, shifting focus from their loss of social standing to a deeper existential crisis marked by a loss of purpose, reflecting the broader historical context of the era.
Official synopsis Publisher
Joseph Roth’s 1932 novel, The Radetzky March, starts with an accident that creates a dynasty. When an infantry lieutenant steps in front of a bullet intended for the young Franz Joseph, the Austro-Hungarian emperor rewards him with wealth, promotion, and a knighthood. Almost overnight, Joseph Trotta is “severed” from his ancestors, and his family is transformed from unremarkable soldiers and peasants living in the outer reaches of the empire to barons and high-ranking officials living near the imperial palace. As long as Franz Joseph is the Kaiser, their status is secure. As World War I approaches and the monarchy’s limitations become apparent, Trotta’s son and grandson become even further removed from this paradise. They continue to follow the codes of honor and duty, though such behavioral guides become pointless, even burdensome, in a world shorn of simple faith in an emperor. Trotta’s grandson Carl Joseph finds his military career overwhelmed by bad horsemanship, alcohol dependency, frivolous roulette and baccarat debts, and misguided love affairs–the kinds of flaws, he thinks, that are inevitable without the self-assurance and practical knowledge that he would have gained had he earned (rather than inherited) his position. Not long ago, he thinks wistfully, his family lived as peasants “in dwarfed huts, making their wives fertile by night and their fields by day.” It is here that the Trottas’ demise is at its most poignant, as the focus of the narrative shifts from the loss of status to the far more devastating loss of purpose.
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