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Paintings in Goethe's Wilhelm Meister Novels: The Dynamics of Erecting and “Eroding” the Paternal Law

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2013

Simon J. Richter
Affiliation:
University of Pennsylvania
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Summary

A PICTURE IS NOT JUST A textual ornament, and collecting is not just a matter of accumulating beautiful things.“This important theme [i.e., the art collection] in the symbolic texture of the novel [Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre] most probably occurred to Goethe in the autumn of 1793, as his mother began to break up the family home and to sell the objects familiar to him from his childhood, which he had seen for the last time on his way back from Mainz a few months before—among them his father's pictures.” The treatment of artwork in the novel not only provides a referential subtext to Wilhelm's struggle for identity in his very own Oedipal drama but also functions as an allegorical representation of the sociopsychological motivations and meanings attached to the activities of acquiring, displaying, and discussing art. In this context, paintings veil as well as expose characters' desire to embody, posses, and/or control the content expressed in their pictorial images. Above all, Wilhelm's passionate attachment to his favorite painting, Der kranke Königssohn, haunts the reader throughout the Lehrjahre and fuels scholarly interest to investigate nuances of signification informed by the intertextual complexity between painting and plot.

Even though this one painting stands out prominently due to the novel's multiple references to it, the examination of all artwork, including works of art that only seem to appear marginally, such as family portraits in private homes and historical allegories in the Pedagogic Province, exposes a layer of meaning that illuminates the relationship between art, literature, and Goethe's construction of human identity.

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Goethe Yearbook 13 , pp. 105 - 124
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2005

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