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The guiding theme of these essays is the fate of the imagination
and the condition of art in the modern world, where both appear to
be enfeebled by scientific hubris, undermined by psychological
self-questioning and compromised by political disaster. Erich
Heller traces this predicament with subtlety and profundity, from
Hegel's and Nietzsche's diagnoses to the various truces and
manoeuvres through which remarkable victories have nonetheless been
achieved - such as the comic triumphs of Wilhelm Busch. As
elsewhere in Professor Heller's work, Thomas Mann's attempt to
outwit and redeem his circumstances through art - 'despite' them,
as he said himself - occupies a central place. Three of the present
essays are devoted to him. Others consider Kleist, Fontane, Hamsun,
Karl Kraus and the crucial figures of Holderlin (who plays such a
central role in Heidegger's later philosophical writings) and
Rilke. Written with feeling, and the distinctive elegance and wit
that have characterized all of Professor Heller's work, the essays
here reaffirm the vital interdependence of literature and human
values.
In this book, which was first published in 1958 and reissued in
1981, Professor Heller sees Mann as the late heir of the central
tradition of modern German literature and also as one of the most
ironic writers within that tradition. He offers a detailed study of
the major works of fiction, Buddenbrooks, Tonio Kroeher, Death in
Venice, The Magic Mountain, Joseph and His Brothers, Doctor Faustus
and Felix Krull, as well as a discussion of Mann's most significant
political essay, 'Meditations of a Non-Political Man'. Beyond this,
Heller's book is a profound commentary on Mann by a mind attuned to
(and mouded by) precisely the intellectual and cultural traditions
which are so much part of Mann's creative make-up.
In this book, one of the most distinguished scholars of German
culture collects his essays on a figure who has long been one of
his chief preoccupations. Erich Heller's lifelong study of modern
European literature necessarily returns again and again to
Friedrich Nietzsche.
Nietzsche prided himself on having broken with all traditional ways
of thinking and feeling, and once even claimed that he would
someday be recognized for having ushered in a new millennium. While
acknowledging Nietzsche's radicalism, Heller also insists on the
continuity of the story in which he does indeed occupy a central
place. By considering Nietzsche in relation to Goethe, Rilke,
Wittgenstein, Yeats, and others, Heller shows the philosopher's
ambivalence toward the tradition he inherited as well as his
profound effect on the thought and sensibility of those who
followed him. It is hardly an exaggeration to say, as Heller does
in his first essay, that Nietzsche is to many modern writers and
thinkers--including Mann, Musil, Kafka, Freud, Heidegger, Jaspers,
Gide, and Sartre--what St. Thomas Aquinas was to Dante: the
categorical interpreter of a world, which they contemplate
imaginatively and theoretically without ever much upsetting its
Nietzschean structure.
Thus it is Nietzsche's thought, so pervasively present in the
themes of modernity, that gives coherence and unity to Heller's
essays. What emerges from them is that, despite his iconoclastic
declarations and unorthodox philosophical practices, Nietzsche
deals with the human spirit's persistent concerns. His questions
remain urgent, and even the answers, in all their
contradictoriness, possess the commanding force of his inquiry. An
example is the incompatibility of the famous extremes, the teaching
of the "Ubermensch" and the Eternal Recurrence of All Things. These
cancel each other out and yet grow from the same intellectual and
spiritual roots, as is shown lucidly and cogently by one of
Heller's most forceful essays, "Nietzsche's Terrors: Time and the
Inarticulate." In fathoming the depth of this contradiction, Heller
at the same time reveals the importance of Nietzsche for those who
seek to understand the wellsprings of the epoch's disquiet,
turmoil, " and" creativity.
Studies In Modern European Literature And Thought.
Studies In Modern European Literature And Thought.
Additional Author Is Hans Egon Holthusen.
Heller examines the sense of values embodied in the works of key
German writers and thinkers from Goethe to Kafka, particularly the
consciousness of life's depreciation.
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