Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Note on Translations and the Use of German Texts
- Introduction: The Success and Failure of Johannes Scherr
- 1 Scherr’s Liminality: Between Nations and Academic Cultures
- 2 The Cultural Historian as Mediator
- 3 Worlding German Literature
- 4 Weltschmerz and Pessimism—Scherr’s Old-Age Style
- Conclusion: Where Next for Scherr?
- Appendix: Overview of Essays in the Menschliche Tragikomödie
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Conclusion: Where Next for Scherr?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 March 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Note on Translations and the Use of German Texts
- Introduction: The Success and Failure of Johannes Scherr
- 1 Scherr’s Liminality: Between Nations and Academic Cultures
- 2 The Cultural Historian as Mediator
- 3 Worlding German Literature
- 4 Weltschmerz and Pessimism—Scherr’s Old-Age Style
- Conclusion: Where Next for Scherr?
- Appendix: Overview of Essays in the Menschliche Tragikomödie
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
THIS STUDY OF Johannes Scherr is not a biography. Any future biographer of Scherr will be struck by the contrast between the vast and varied body of Scherr's published work and the scarcity of drafts, manuscripts, letters, and other handwritten traces. The official home of the historian's Nachlass, the Deutsches Literaturarchiv in Marbach, contains just thirty-four items in Scherr's hand, including fewer than twenty letters. A greater number of manuscript items, including some forty letters— most with identifiable addressees—is in the possession of the Stadtbibliothek Winterthur, where Scherr researched and wrote during the 1850s. The pickings at the ETH archive in Zurich are slim: Scherr's biographical dossier contains just seven items, four of them photocopies from published sources.
The scarcity of handwritten sources is no barrier to knowing Scherr's aims and intentions or to evaluating his success and failure. His historical significance is the legacy of his published work. It was through that work that he fulfilled the role of cultural mediator, introducing his readers to the cultural history of Germany and guiding them in the fields of German letters and world literature. The forceful and combative personality of the mediator often revealed itself, for Scherr was an impassioned and self-confessedly subjective and partisan writer who rejected Ranke's pose of historical objectivity. Partisanship manifested itself in Scherr's refusal of indifference and in his insistence on judging individual actors in the human tragicomedy and their deeds according to moral standards. It was this insistence that earned Scherr a posthumous reputation for moral zealotry and for an intemperate, scolding manner among many critics. We recall Richard M. Meyer's condemnation of Scherr's style, discussed in chapter 2.
Wie süß muß es den Machthabern von heute eingehen, wenn ihnen die neueste “geschichtewissenschaftliche” Mode Schwarz auf weiß beweis’t, daß all ihre dummen und schlechten Streiche nicht nur verzeihlich, sondern auch berechtigt und verdienstlich, weil naturproduktlich waren. Laster und Verbrechen mit ihren wirklichen Namen nennen—wie altfränkisch-unwissenschaftlich! Der Schmach ihr eigenes Bild zeigen, gekrönte Frevler und bediademte Dirnen brandmarken— überwundener Standpunkt! Die Geschichte ist nicht dazu da, zu belehren, zu warnen, zu strafen, sondern vielmehr dazu, den gemeinen Trieben und schlechten Leidenschaften zu schmeicheln, indem sie nachweis’t, daß diese im “Weltproceß” gerade so naturnothwendig seien wie die edeln und guten.
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- Johannes ScherrMediating Culture in the German Nineteenth Century, pp. 150 - 156Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2021