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8 - The development of German prose fiction

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 May 2006

Eva Kolinsky
Affiliation:
University of Wolverhampton
Wilfried van der Will
Affiliation:
University of Birmingham
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Summary

The novel in the belated nation

There is a widespread view of German culture generally which says that it is, in all kinds of ways, thoughtful, sophisticated and profound; but that it is curiously bereft of any sustained relationship to the familiar, empirically knowable facts of daily living. Instead of concerning themselves at all vigorously with outward things, the Germans, so the argument runs, attend to such pursuits as music (that supremely nonreferential art), speculative philosophy, and theology (particularly when it assumes the guise of radical inwardness). This problematic condition of inwardness reveals its shortcomings nowhere more clearly than in the bulk of narrative prose works that issued from the German-speaking lands in the great age of European realism (that is, from the mid-eighteenth century onwards): whatever distinction may inhere in that body of prose writing, it cannot be claimed to be the distinction of common-orgarden realism.

However overstated such a view of German culture may be, there are elements of truth to it. Certainly its prose literature from Goethe on does pose an acute evaluative problem. The dilemma is felt by both non-German and German critics alike. Wolfgang Preisendanz speaks for many commentators when he writes:

If one takes as one's yardstick the contribution made [by German writers] to the definition of their contemporary age, then there seems to be much justification to the frequently voiced reproach that the assertion of 'poetry's direct access to the highest court of appeal' caused a withdrawal from - or at the very least a lack of contact with - the urgent, burning problems and realities of politico-social life, and that - yet again - the social integration of the creative writer in Germany was prevented.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1999

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