Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Goethe's Reception of Ulrich von Hutten
- The School of Shipwrecks: Improvisation in Wilhelm Meisters theatralische Sendung and the Lehrjahre
- The Sublime,“Über den Granit,” and the Prehistory of Goethe's Science
- The Building in Bildung: Goethe, Palladio, and the Architectural Media
- Virgilian Retrospection in Goethe's Alexis und Dora
- Typologies of Repetition, Reflection, and Recurrence: Interpreting the Novella in Goethe's Wahlverwandtschaften
- Why Did Goethe Marry When He Did?
- Zum Verhältnis von Selbstsein und Miteinandersein in Goethes Urworte. Orphisch
- Schiller's Die Räuber: Revenge, Sacrifice, and the Terrible Price of Absolute Freedom
- Wallensteins Tod as a “Play of Mourning”: Death and Mourning in the Aesthetics of Schiller's Classicism
- The New Man:Theories of Masculinity around 1800
- BOOK REVIEWS
Wallensteins Tod as a “Play of Mourning”: Death and Mourning in the Aesthetics of Schiller's Classicism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Goethe's Reception of Ulrich von Hutten
- The School of Shipwrecks: Improvisation in Wilhelm Meisters theatralische Sendung and the Lehrjahre
- The Sublime,“Über den Granit,” and the Prehistory of Goethe's Science
- The Building in Bildung: Goethe, Palladio, and the Architectural Media
- Virgilian Retrospection in Goethe's Alexis und Dora
- Typologies of Repetition, Reflection, and Recurrence: Interpreting the Novella in Goethe's Wahlverwandtschaften
- Why Did Goethe Marry When He Did?
- Zum Verhältnis von Selbstsein und Miteinandersein in Goethes Urworte. Orphisch
- Schiller's Die Räuber: Revenge, Sacrifice, and the Terrible Price of Absolute Freedom
- Wallensteins Tod as a “Play of Mourning”: Death and Mourning in the Aesthetics of Schiller's Classicism
- The New Man:Theories of Masculinity around 1800
- BOOK REVIEWS
Summary
Jill A.Kowalik
(1949-2003)
in memoriam
Numerous critics have pointed out that with the exception of Schiller's Wilhelm Tell, the protagonists of his classical dramas die at the end: Wallenstein, Maria Stuart, Joan of Arc, and Don Manuel and Don Cesar, the two enemy brothers in Die Braut von Messina. If we associate Schiller with Romanticism, as Anglo-American criticism has done, this emphasis can be interpreted as part of the Romantic longing for death that we find in the works of his contemporaries from Novalis to Hölderlin. But if we classify Schiller as a representative of German Classicism, it is difficult to find an explanation for this preoccupation, because the affirmative aesthetics of German Classicism does not tolerate death and destruction. There is only one reference to the representation of death in Kant's Kritik der Urteilskraft of 1790. This reference is typical for the aesthetics of classicism, as it pleads for the indirect representation of the unpleasant. Kant claimed that sculpture excluded the representation of unpleasant or odious subjects by substituting allegory for the reality of nature, as for example, a beautiful genius figure for the representation of death:
Auch hat die Bildhauerkunst,weil an ihren Produkten die Kunst mit der Natur beinahe verwechselt wird, die unmittelbare Vorstellung häßlicher Gegenstände von ihren Bildungen ausgeschlossen und dafür den Tod (in einem schönen Genius) … durch eine Allegorie oder Attribute, die sich gefällig ausnehmen, mithin nur indirekt vermitteltst einer Auslegung der Vernunft, und nicht bloß für ästhetische Urteilskraft, vorzustellen erlaubt.
(Kritik der Urteilskraft § 48)- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Goethe Yearbook 15 , pp. 171 - 186Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2008