Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Special Section on Goethe's Lyric Poetry
- Introduction: New Approaches to Goethe's Lyric Poetry
- Intimacy, Morality, and the Inner Problematic of the Lyric
- Beyond the Poem: Strategies of Metapoetic Reflection in Goethe's Erster Weimarer Gedichtsammlung
- Meistersänger als Beruf: The Maieutics of Poetic Vocation in “Erklärung eines alten Holzschnittes …”
- Song or Narration?: Goethe's Mignon
- The Sucking Subject: Structural Ambiguities of Goethe's “Auf dem See” in Literary and Linguistic Perspective
- “Höhere Begattung,” “höhere Schönheit”: Goethe's Homoerotic Poem “Selige Sehnsucht”
- Poetry after Faust
- Forms of Knowledge/Knowledge of Forms: The Epistemology of Goethe's West-östlicher Divan and Cavellian Skepticism
- Im flüßgen Element bin und wieder schweifen: Development and Return in Goethe's Poetry and Hegel's Philosophy
- Goethe's Historical Particularism and the “Right Hand” of History: Early Modern State Building, Nobility, and the Feud in Götz von Berlichingen
- Where Are the Mountains?: Johann Jacob Bodmer and the “Pre-Kantian Sublime”
- The Politics of Aesthetic Humanism: Schiller's German Idea of Freedom
- Romanticism's Old German as Stepping-Stone to Goethe's World Literature
- Book Reviews
Goethe's Historical Particularism and the “Right Hand” of History: Early Modern State Building, Nobility, and the Feud in Götz von Berlichingen
from Special Section on Goethe's Lyric Poetry
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Special Section on Goethe's Lyric Poetry
- Introduction: New Approaches to Goethe's Lyric Poetry
- Intimacy, Morality, and the Inner Problematic of the Lyric
- Beyond the Poem: Strategies of Metapoetic Reflection in Goethe's Erster Weimarer Gedichtsammlung
- Meistersänger als Beruf: The Maieutics of Poetic Vocation in “Erklärung eines alten Holzschnittes …”
- Song or Narration?: Goethe's Mignon
- The Sucking Subject: Structural Ambiguities of Goethe's “Auf dem See” in Literary and Linguistic Perspective
- “Höhere Begattung,” “höhere Schönheit”: Goethe's Homoerotic Poem “Selige Sehnsucht”
- Poetry after Faust
- Forms of Knowledge/Knowledge of Forms: The Epistemology of Goethe's West-östlicher Divan and Cavellian Skepticism
- Im flüßgen Element bin und wieder schweifen: Development and Return in Goethe's Poetry and Hegel's Philosophy
- Goethe's Historical Particularism and the “Right Hand” of History: Early Modern State Building, Nobility, and the Feud in Götz von Berlichingen
- Where Are the Mountains?: Johann Jacob Bodmer and the “Pre-Kantian Sublime”
- The Politics of Aesthetic Humanism: Schiller's German Idea of Freedom
- Romanticism's Old German as Stepping-Stone to Goethe's World Literature
- Book Reviews
Summary
In what sense can we say that Goethe's Götz von Berlichingen is an historical drama? How do the historical and poetic dimensions of the play fit together? Until recently, questions of this sort found less than satisfactory answers in scholarship on Goethe's 1773 play. For much of the twentieth century, critics viewed Goethe's treatment of history in the play as secondary, anachronistic, or even false. To the extent that history came into focus, it was seen as a backdrop for the Charakterdrama that pitted a natural, authentic hero against an inauthentic courtly culture. However, once critics began to develop a more nuanced understanding of the play's hero, revealing that the idealized image of Götz foundered on his “verstümmelte” subjectivity, it was no longer possible to read the play in such straightforward terms. Yet critics who spearheaded this revaluation of Götz continued to approach history in the play as either secondary to the Charakterdrama or as a reflection of Goethe's eighteenth-century class concerns. Only in the mid-1980s did scholars begin to undertake a serious revaluation of history as a dimension of the play itself, showing how the dramatic conflict and the hero's downfall are rooted in the historical transformations of the period the play depicts. In two of the most notable interpretations to date, Mariane Willems and Horst Lange have argued that Götz depicts the tragedy of a character who clings to a premodern feudal order that is being displaced by the modern state.
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- Goethe Yearbook 20 , pp. 179 - 198Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2013