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Joshua, Eleoma
Friedrich Leopold Graf zu Stolberg and the German Romantics
Series: Britische und Irische Studien zur deutschen Sprache und Literatur / British and Irish Studies in German Language and Literature - Volume 36
Year of Publication: 2005
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2005. 206 pp., 1 ill.
ISBN 978-3-03910-257-0 pb.
(Softcover)
Weight: 0.320 kg, 0.705 lbs
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Discipline
Book synopsis
This study examines the life and works of the poet Friedrich Leopold Graf zu Stolberg (1750-1819). It begins with an analysis of Stolberg's essays on poetic expression in relation to Romantic thinking, and the impact of his poetic style on Novalis's early poetry. Stolberg's aesthetic education in Italy is examined as well as his challenge to the idea that classical sculpture was always the pinnacle of beauty and that the culture of antiquity was the highest form of humanity. The detection of melancholy in Greek sculpture, which arises from the transfer of anxieties about redemption from the artist to the artefact, affected his response and detracted from the beauty of the sculpture. This view amounted to an attack on Goethe and Schiller, as it identified the issue of salvation and death as a weakness in the classical paradigm. The picture of Italy that Stolberg offered was overshadowed by a crisis of confidence in the aesthetic insights both of Winckelmann and of Lessing and was also the basis for his reception of Raphael and Michelangelo. Stolberg arrived at a response to Renaissance art and artists that marginally predates the early German Romantic worship of artists in the 1790s. The book concludes with a discussion of Stolberg's support of Romantic politics and Romantic conversions.
Contents
Contents: Introduction: Friedrich Stolberg and the German Romantics - Stolberg's Theory of Poetry: The Heart, Poetry, Peace and Enthusiasm - Stolberg's Poetry: A Legacy for Early Romantics - Stolberg's Italian Journey: Landscape, Aesthetics and Art - Stolberg, Catholicism, and German Romantic Politics.
About the author(s)/editor(s)
The Author: Eleoma Joshua is a lecturer in German at the University of Edinburgh. She received her Ph.D. in German literature from the University of Manchester in 2000. Her research and teaching interests are German writers of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
Reviews
«Joshua makes a strong case for a reassessment of Stolberg and his works [...] She offers detailed descriptions of the texts in question and places them knowledgeably in context. The study should serve to draw attention to a significant writer whose contributions to literary and cultural developments in Germany have often been overlooked.» (Hilary Brown, The Modern Language Review)
Series
British and Irish Studies in German Language and Literature. Vol. 36
Edited by H.S. Reiss und W.E. Yates
