Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction: Sadness and Melancholy in German-Language Literature from the Seventeenth Century to the Present: An Overview
- Tears That Make the Heart Shine? “Godly Sadness” in Pietism
- Poetry of the Heart as Complicity with the Logos? Female Articulations of Sadness in Goethe's Lila and Der Triumph der Empfindsamkeit
- Produktive Negativität: Traurigkeit als Möglichkeitssinn um 1800
- Die Schwester Lenaus? Betty Paoli und der Weltschmerz
- “Immer wieder kehrst du, Melancholie”: Plotting Georg Trakl's Poetic Sadness
- Die Lust am Unendlichen: Melancholie und Ironie bei Robert Walser
- Melancholy Echo and the Case of Serenus Zeitblom
- Melancholy in Wilhelm Genazino's Novels and Its Construction as Other
- The Past is Another Country and the Country Is Another Past: Sadness in East German Texts by Jakob Hein and Julia Schoch
Poetry of the Heart as Complicity with the Logos? Female Articulations of Sadness in Goethe's Lila and Der Triumph der Empfindsamkeit
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 April 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction: Sadness and Melancholy in German-Language Literature from the Seventeenth Century to the Present: An Overview
- Tears That Make the Heart Shine? “Godly Sadness” in Pietism
- Poetry of the Heart as Complicity with the Logos? Female Articulations of Sadness in Goethe's Lila and Der Triumph der Empfindsamkeit
- Produktive Negativität: Traurigkeit als Möglichkeitssinn um 1800
- Die Schwester Lenaus? Betty Paoli und der Weltschmerz
- “Immer wieder kehrst du, Melancholie”: Plotting Georg Trakl's Poetic Sadness
- Die Lust am Unendlichen: Melancholie und Ironie bei Robert Walser
- Melancholy Echo and the Case of Serenus Zeitblom
- Melancholy in Wilhelm Genazino's Novels and Its Construction as Other
- The Past is Another Country and the Country Is Another Past: Sadness in East German Texts by Jakob Hein and Julia Schoch
Summary
EXCESSIVE SADNESS IS the distinguishing feature of the heroines Lila and Mandandane in Goethe's Lila (1777, 1778, 1788) and Der Triumph der Empfindsamkeit (1778). Although these plays are usually described as Singspiele (often translated as musical comedies), both lack the entertaining appeal which, in the eighteenth century, made this genre so popular amongst all strata of society. The numerous arias and duets in Lila and Der Triumph der Empfindsamkeit are not intended as pure entertainment for the audience, but as a means to articulate the heroines’ solitude, lamentations, and death wishes. In addition, Der Triumph der Empfindsamkeit contains farcical elements, a rather unorthodox ingredient for a Singspiel. As a consequence, none of the three different musical settings of Lila by Johann Friedrich Reichardt, Carl Siegmund von Seckendorff, and Friedrich Ludwig Seidel succeeded in making the play a popular choice for theatre productions. Seckendorff also set Der Triumph der Empfindsamkeit to music, with a similar lack of success.
Goethe used the Singspiel-genre to illustrate a particularly female reaction to the metaphysical upheavals of the late Enlightenment. While the repressed desires and unfulfilled longings of men tend to attain philosophical dignity, they are invariably endowed with the stigma of madness when attributed to women. Accordingly, they require treatment, not tolerance. Lila and Der Triumph der Empfindsamkeit set out two psychological case histories, something that places them at the heart of fairly recent debates in literary criticism.
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- Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2012