Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editors’ Preface
- Eclectic Dichotomies in K. P. Moritz's Aesthetic, Pedagogical, and Therapeutic Worlds
- Sturm und Drang Comedy and the Enlightenment Tradition
- Heaven Help Us! Journals! Calendars!: Goethe and Schiller's Xenien as Circulatory Intervention
- Between Nanjing and Weimar: Goethe's Metaphysical Correspondences
- Projection and Concealment: Goethe's Introduction of the Mask to the Weimar Stage
- Embarrassment and Individual Identity in Goethe’s Wahlverwandtschaften
- The Daisy Oracle: A New Gretchenfrage in Goethe’s Faust
- Goethes Der Zauberflöte zweyter Theil als Bruch: Zur Semantik des Zauberbegriffs im ausgehenden 18. Jahrhundert
- “Ächt antike Denkmale”?: Goethe and the Hemsterhuis Gem Collection
- Bestseller und Erlebniskultur: Neue medienästhetische Ansätze bei Gisbert Ter-Nedden und Robert Vellusig verdeutlicht an Romanadaptionen von Franz von Heufeld
- Papierdenken: Blasche, Fröbel, and the Lessons of Nineteenth-Century Paper Modeling
- The Men Who Knew Too Much: Reading Goethe’s “Erlkönig” in Light of Hitchcock
- Genius and Bloodsucker: Napoleon, Goethe, and Caroline de la Motte Fouqué
- Instrument or Inspiration? Commemorating the 1949 Goethe Year in Argentina
- Media Inventories of the Nineteenth Century: A Report from Two Workshops
- Forum: (New) Directions in Eighteenth-Century German Studies
- Medical Humanities and the Eighteenth Century
- Disability Studies and New Directions in Eighteenth-Century German Studies
- Goethe's Talking Books: Print Culture and the Problem of Literary Orality
- Three Observations and Three Possible Directions: Musical and Eighteenth-Century Studies
- Lessing and Kotzebue: A Black Studies Approach to Reading the Eighteenth Century
- Law and Literature: Codes as Colonizing Texts and Legal Ideas in Anthropocene Works
- Johann Wolfgang Goethe, Migrant? or Debunking the Myth of 1955
- “Goethe Boom” Films: Bildung Reloaded
- Book Reviews
Genius and Bloodsucker: Napoleon, Goethe, and Caroline de la Motte Fouqué
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 June 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editors’ Preface
- Eclectic Dichotomies in K. P. Moritz's Aesthetic, Pedagogical, and Therapeutic Worlds
- Sturm und Drang Comedy and the Enlightenment Tradition
- Heaven Help Us! Journals! Calendars!: Goethe and Schiller's Xenien as Circulatory Intervention
- Between Nanjing and Weimar: Goethe's Metaphysical Correspondences
- Projection and Concealment: Goethe's Introduction of the Mask to the Weimar Stage
- Embarrassment and Individual Identity in Goethe’s Wahlverwandtschaften
- The Daisy Oracle: A New Gretchenfrage in Goethe’s Faust
- Goethes Der Zauberflöte zweyter Theil als Bruch: Zur Semantik des Zauberbegriffs im ausgehenden 18. Jahrhundert
- “Ächt antike Denkmale”?: Goethe and the Hemsterhuis Gem Collection
- Bestseller und Erlebniskultur: Neue medienästhetische Ansätze bei Gisbert Ter-Nedden und Robert Vellusig verdeutlicht an Romanadaptionen von Franz von Heufeld
- Papierdenken: Blasche, Fröbel, and the Lessons of Nineteenth-Century Paper Modeling
- The Men Who Knew Too Much: Reading Goethe’s “Erlkönig” in Light of Hitchcock
- Genius and Bloodsucker: Napoleon, Goethe, and Caroline de la Motte Fouqué
- Instrument or Inspiration? Commemorating the 1949 Goethe Year in Argentina
- Media Inventories of the Nineteenth Century: A Report from Two Workshops
- Forum: (New) Directions in Eighteenth-Century German Studies
- Medical Humanities and the Eighteenth Century
- Disability Studies and New Directions in Eighteenth-Century German Studies
- Goethe's Talking Books: Print Culture and the Problem of Literary Orality
- Three Observations and Three Possible Directions: Musical and Eighteenth-Century Studies
- Lessing and Kotzebue: A Black Studies Approach to Reading the Eighteenth Century
- Law and Literature: Codes as Colonizing Texts and Legal Ideas in Anthropocene Works
- Johann Wolfgang Goethe, Migrant? or Debunking the Myth of 1955
- “Goethe Boom” Films: Bildung Reloaded
- Book Reviews
Summary
Abstract: This article provides an overview of the starkly divided responses of German intellectuals to Napoleon and contrasts Goethe's and Caroline de la Motte Fouqué's representations of the French emperor, arguing that Goethe’s perception of the foreign ruler is linked to his notion of genius. Goethe saw in Napoleon the embodiment of strong leadership and considered him capable of containing violence and anarchy. While Goethe's response is marked by his cosmopolitan attitude, de la Motte Fouqué's attitude toward Napoleon is characterized by pronounced nationalism and violent hatred of the French. Her novel Edmund's Wege und Irrwege champions warfare as a means of personal catharsis and national rejuvenation.
Keywords: Napoleon, Caroline de la Motte Fouqué, warfare, nationalism
WE HAVE COME TO THINK OF our current moment as one of singular polarization. And yet, if we survey the political climate of early nineteenth-century Europe in general and the responses of German writers and thinkers to the momentous changes embodied by Napoleon in particular, we encounter an ideological landscape that is marked by stark contrasts and fierce opinions. These conflicting attitudes were rooted not only in Napoleon's personality (in what Byron called Napoleon's “antithetically mixed” spirit) and in the ideological and temperamental dispositions of his contemporaries, but also in the nature and impact of Napoleon's rule and policies in Germany.
In order to illuminate the division engendered by Napoleon, this article contrasts Goethe's response to the French emperor with that of Caroline de la Motte Fouqué. Much previous research on Goethe and Napoleon has focused on their personal encounter and on the import of Napoleon's comments on Werther. In contrast, I am interested in the larger significance of the figure of Napoleon for Goethe's thinking. I link Goethe's perception of Napoleon to his notion of genius, arguing that Goethe admired the Corsican’s Faustian energy and saw in him an exemplary incarnation of a “Tatmensch.” But his response to the French emperor was also informed by his conviction that only strong centralized leadership grounded in military success can contain violence and guarantee order and stability.
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- Goethe Yearbook 28 , pp. 243 - 262Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2021