Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- “Pfeile mit Widerhaken”: On the Aphorisms in Goethe's Wahlverwandtschaften and Wanderjahre
- Epic World Citizenship in Goethe's Hermann und Dorothea
- The Pace of the Attack: Military Experience in Schiller's Wallenstein and Die Jungfrau von Orleans
- Die “reine Seele” und die Politik: Partikularität und Universalität in Goethes Iphigenie
- A Symbolic-Mystic Monstrosity: Ideology and Representation in Goethe's Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre
- Goethes Prometheus: Kritik der poetischen Einbildungskraft
- “Ein Geschöpf der Einbildung unseres Herrn Leßing”: Fictions of Acting and Virtue in the Postmortem Reception of Charlotte Ackermann (1757–1775)
- Special Section on Goethe and Twentieth-Century Theory co-edited with Angus Nicholls
- Goethe and Twentieth Century Theory: An Introduction
- No Escape? Goethe's Strategies of Self-Projection and Their Role in German Literary Historiography
- Biographismus und Anti-Biographismus in philosophischen Goethe-Deutungen des 20. Jahrhunderts
- Sorge in Heidegger and in Goethe's Faust
- Orient und Okzident: Der West-östliche Divan als postkoloniales Paradigma
- Book Reviews
No Escape? Goethe's Strategies of Self-Projection and Their Role in German Literary Historiography
from Special Section on Goethe and Twentieth-Century Theory co-edited with Angus Nicholls
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- “Pfeile mit Widerhaken”: On the Aphorisms in Goethe's Wahlverwandtschaften and Wanderjahre
- Epic World Citizenship in Goethe's Hermann und Dorothea
- The Pace of the Attack: Military Experience in Schiller's Wallenstein and Die Jungfrau von Orleans
- Die “reine Seele” und die Politik: Partikularität und Universalität in Goethes Iphigenie
- A Symbolic-Mystic Monstrosity: Ideology and Representation in Goethe's Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre
- Goethes Prometheus: Kritik der poetischen Einbildungskraft
- “Ein Geschöpf der Einbildung unseres Herrn Leßing”: Fictions of Acting and Virtue in the Postmortem Reception of Charlotte Ackermann (1757–1775)
- Special Section on Goethe and Twentieth-Century Theory co-edited with Angus Nicholls
- Goethe and Twentieth Century Theory: An Introduction
- No Escape? Goethe's Strategies of Self-Projection and Their Role in German Literary Historiography
- Biographismus und Anti-Biographismus in philosophischen Goethe-Deutungen des 20. Jahrhunderts
- Sorge in Heidegger and in Goethe's Faust
- Orient und Okzident: Der West-östliche Divan als postkoloniales Paradigma
- Book Reviews
Summary
ACCORDING TO HAROLD BLOOM, “every Goethe text, however divergent from the others, bears the mark of his unique and overwhelming personality, which cannot be evaded or deconstructed.” While Bloom is concerned with the force of Goethe's personality as it manifests itself in his works, the impact of his personality on German literary historiography is no less remarkable. To take but one example of his enduring iconic status, the successful Deutsche Literaturgeschichte by Wolfgang Beutin et al.—in its seventh expanded edition —conveys the essence of its subject matter by depicting the head of Goethe as the sole image on the front cover. Unscathed by the “Death of the Author,” Goethe the man continues to be at the centre of German literary history. On the back cover we find some also-rans: Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, Annette von Droste-Hülshoff, Bertolt Brecht, and Christa Wolf. While these authors contribute to the project of German literary history as exemplary participants who are subject to the changing forces of literary taste and perhaps political correctness (Wolf has displaced Wolfgang Borchert), Goethe endures as the embodiment of all that is most valuable in over a millennium of writing in the German language.
In the following, it will be assumed that Goethe's role in German literary history is not just the result of his literary works and their reception by later scholars, but also the consequence of his strategies of self-projection.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Goethe Yearbook 16 , pp. 173 - 192Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2009