Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: The Pursuit of Unhappiness
- 1 The Confinement of Tragedy: Between Urfaust and Woyzeck
- 2 Goethe’s Faust as the Tragedy of Modernity
- 3 Before or Beyond the Pleasure Principle: Goethe’s Wahlverwandtschaften and the Tragedy of Entsagung
- 4 Hölderlin und das Tragische
- 5 Nietzsche, Büchner, and the Blues
- 6 Freud und die Tragödie
- 7 The Death of Tragedy: Walter Benjamin’s Interruption of Nietzsche’s Theory of Tragedy
- 8 Rosenzweig’s Tragedy and the Spectacles of Strauss: The Question of German-Jewish History
- 9 Requiem for the Reich: Tragic Programming after the Fall of Stalingrad
- 10 The Strange Absence of Tragedy in Heidegger’s Thought
- 11 The Tragic Dimension in Postwar German Painting
- 12 Vestiges of the Tragic
- 13 Atrocity and Agency: W. G. Sebald’s Traumatic Memory in the Light of Hannah Arendt’s Politics of Tragedy
- 14 “Stark and Sometimes Sublime”: Hannah Arendt’s Reflections on Tragedy
- 15 The German Tragic: Pied Pipers, Heroes, and Saints
- Afterword: Searching for a Standpoint of Redemption
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
Acknowledgments
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 February 2023
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: The Pursuit of Unhappiness
- 1 The Confinement of Tragedy: Between Urfaust and Woyzeck
- 2 Goethe’s Faust as the Tragedy of Modernity
- 3 Before or Beyond the Pleasure Principle: Goethe’s Wahlverwandtschaften and the Tragedy of Entsagung
- 4 Hölderlin und das Tragische
- 5 Nietzsche, Büchner, and the Blues
- 6 Freud und die Tragödie
- 7 The Death of Tragedy: Walter Benjamin’s Interruption of Nietzsche’s Theory of Tragedy
- 8 Rosenzweig’s Tragedy and the Spectacles of Strauss: The Question of German-Jewish History
- 9 Requiem for the Reich: Tragic Programming after the Fall of Stalingrad
- 10 The Strange Absence of Tragedy in Heidegger’s Thought
- 11 The Tragic Dimension in Postwar German Painting
- 12 Vestiges of the Tragic
- 13 Atrocity and Agency: W. G. Sebald’s Traumatic Memory in the Light of Hannah Arendt’s Politics of Tragedy
- 14 “Stark and Sometimes Sublime”: Hannah Arendt’s Reflections on Tragedy
- 15 The German Tragic: Pied Pipers, Heroes, and Saints
- Afterword: Searching for a Standpoint of Redemption
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
Summary
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2014