Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: A Transnational Literary Field in the Age of Nationalism
- 1 The Passion of Johannes Scherr: Historiography as Trauma
- 2 Between Integration and Differentiation: On the Relationship between German and Austrian Literature in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century
- 3 Reading Stifter in America
- 4 Travel Writing and Transnational Marketing: How Ida Pfeiffer brought the World to Austria and Beyond
- 5 Ernst Brausewetter's Meisternovellen Deutscher Frauen (1897–98): Gender, Genre, and (Inter)National Aspiration
- 6 Arbiter of Nation? The Strange Case of Hans Müller-Casenov's The Humour of Germany (1892/1893)
- 7 Visualizing the End: Nation, Empire, and Neo-Roman Mimesis in Keller and Fontane
- 8 Eurocentric Cosmopolitanism in Thomas Mann's Buddenbrooks
- 9 European Peace from a Transatlantic Perspective: Victor Hugo and Bertha von Suttner
- 10 Hermann Graf Keyserling and Gu Hongming’s Ethics of World Culture: Confucianism, Monarchism, and Anti-Colonialism
- 11 Constructing Symphonic Worlds: Gustav Mahler, Weltliteratur, and the Musical Program
- 12 The Garb of National Literature: Transnational Identities and the Early Twentieth-Century Schriftstreit
- 13 From European Symbolism to German Gesture: The International and Transnational Nationalism of Stefan George's Blätter für die Kunst
- 14 Canon Fire: Dada's Attack on National Literature
- Selected Bibliography
- Contributors
- Index
8 - Eurocentric Cosmopolitanism in Thomas Mann's Buddenbrooks
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 January 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: A Transnational Literary Field in the Age of Nationalism
- 1 The Passion of Johannes Scherr: Historiography as Trauma
- 2 Between Integration and Differentiation: On the Relationship between German and Austrian Literature in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century
- 3 Reading Stifter in America
- 4 Travel Writing and Transnational Marketing: How Ida Pfeiffer brought the World to Austria and Beyond
- 5 Ernst Brausewetter's Meisternovellen Deutscher Frauen (1897–98): Gender, Genre, and (Inter)National Aspiration
- 6 Arbiter of Nation? The Strange Case of Hans Müller-Casenov's The Humour of Germany (1892/1893)
- 7 Visualizing the End: Nation, Empire, and Neo-Roman Mimesis in Keller and Fontane
- 8 Eurocentric Cosmopolitanism in Thomas Mann's Buddenbrooks
- 9 European Peace from a Transatlantic Perspective: Victor Hugo and Bertha von Suttner
- 10 Hermann Graf Keyserling and Gu Hongming’s Ethics of World Culture: Confucianism, Monarchism, and Anti-Colonialism
- 11 Constructing Symphonic Worlds: Gustav Mahler, Weltliteratur, and the Musical Program
- 12 The Garb of National Literature: Transnational Identities and the Early Twentieth-Century Schriftstreit
- 13 From European Symbolism to German Gesture: The International and Transnational Nationalism of Stefan George's Blätter für die Kunst
- 14 Canon Fire: Dada's Attack on National Literature
- Selected Bibliography
- Contributors
- Index
Summary
In his monumental study of German identity, Dieter Borchmeyer identifies two broad trends in the discourse about the nation. On the one hand, in his view, we find those who seek to delimit membership in the national community to an inner core defined by language, culture, or, most notoriously, race. On the other hand, we discover authors who insist—paradoxically—that the essence of the German nation lies in its cosmopolitanism, in its ability to embrace and absorb difference. Schiller's “Deutsche Größe” (German greatness), a fragmentary poem given its name by patriotic nineteenth-century editors, serves as one of Borchmeyer's prime examples of the cosmopolitan tradition in German thought. Probably composed sometime over the course of 1801, Schiller's poem takes as its theme the contrast between Germany's crumbling Empire and its great cultural achievements. While other European nations, in particular Britain and France, consolidated their state administrations and extended their power abroad, the Germans joined together in the realm of the spirit. Lack of political unity is not to blame for Germany's problems, Schiller's sketch suggests. Just the opposite, in fact: particularism was a liberating factor in the development of diverse German regions unconstrained by a single national capital. The imminent collapse of the Reich is a fortunate fall, for German language and culture are now poised to rise and extend their reach around the world. “Unsre Sprache wird die Welt beherrschen” (Our language will rule the world), proclaims Schiller, for the Germans’ time has come: “Jedes Volk hat seinen Tag in der Geschichte, doch der Tag der Deutschen ist die Ernte der ganzen Zeit” (Every people has its day in history, but the day of the Germans is the harvest of all time).
Although these lines may seem ominous today, Schiller insists that violent conquest is not what he has in mind. In strife-torn Europe, German culture stands above the fray and is thus poised to radiate peace and understanding to a global audience. At about the same time, Schiller's former student Novalis was writing his “Europa” essay, which begins with a nostalgic look back at the unity of Christian Europe in the Middle Ages, but concludes with a prophetic vision in which he proclaims that the Germans will lead the way to a new, pan-European harmony.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2023