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From Eros to Thanatos: Hiking and Spelunking in Ludwig Tieck's Der Runenberg

from Part II - Beckoning Heights: Summits Near and Far in the Nineteenth Century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2013

Peter Arnds
Affiliation:
Trinity College Dublin
Sean Ireton
Affiliation:
University of Missouri
Caroline Schaumann
Affiliation:
Emory University
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Summary

As Michel Foucault tells us, “the disciplinary space is always basically cellular” as “solitude [is] necessary to both body and soul, according to a certain asceticism.” Martin Heidegger was well aware of this as he took refuge in his mountain hut in Todtnauberg, whose solitude far away from the city was deeply connected to the harmony of his work world and essential to his roots in the Alemannic-Swabian soil. Heidegger saw the link between the German Volk and its home soil as deeply rooted in the autochthony, the Bodenständigkeit, of ancient Greece. To his mind, these chthonic roots of Greek antiquity constituted the very being of its people in the city of Athens. He understood Athens, the polis, as etymologically derived from pelein, being. He also regarded his own roots and those of Germany as connected specifically with the Black Forest. In this regard he differed substantially from Greek perceptions of places outside the city (especially the mountains) as a locus daemonis, an uncivilized space in which the Sein (pelein) of human Dasein loses its contours.

In the wake of German Enlightenment and its various forms of bourgeois self-constraint based on rationality and rationalism, the mountains are a terrain in which subconscious, repressed (verborgene) desires are unearthed (geborgen) and come to the surface. This occurs especially in Romantic literature, where the repressed emerges from the subterranean domain of the mountains, their cavernous interior, mineshafts, and caves.

Type
Chapter
Information
Heights of Reflection
Mountains in the German Imagination from the Middle Ages to the Twenty-First Century
, pp. 176 - 192
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2012

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