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BETWEEN 1933 AND 1945 MEMBERS OF THREE GROUPS-THE Nazi fascists,
Inner Emigration, and Exiles-fought with equal fervor over who
could definitively claim to represent the authentically "great
German culture," as it was culture that imparted real value to both
the state and the individual. But when authorities made
pronouncements about "culture" were they really talking about high
art? This book analyzes the highly complex interconnections among
the cultural-political concepts of these various ideological groups
and asks why the most artistically ambitious art forms were viewed
as politically important by all cultured (or even semi-cultured)
Germans in the period from 1933 to 1945, with their ownership the
object of a bitter struggle between key figures in the Nazi fascist
regime, representatives of Inner Emigration, and Germans driven out
of the Third Reich.
"This volume epitomizes Jost Hermand's inimitable talent of
synthesizing wide-ranging disciplines in an accessible and
compelling style, bringing to life the experiences of musicians and
their public in the context of their own times. These essays also
give us a glimpse into how his own life experiences created the
hunger for culture that defined his long and illustrious career."
(Pamela M. Potter, Professor of German and Musicology, University
of Wisconsin-Madison) "Jost Hermand's final book is an enormously
rich gift to posterity. The fifteen essays on musical culture that
constitute this collection contain brief but illuminating glimpses
of the whole glorious parade of serious music and those who
composed, cultivated, and commented on it in the German lands, from
Buxtehude to Stockhausen and beyond. His insight and well-observed
contextualization reveals a lifetime of scholarship and
experience." (Celia Applegate, Professor of History, Vanderbilt
University) In contrast to the writings of many other
musicologists, this book is not primarily concerned with the
biographies of certain composers or a structural analysis of their
major compositions, but rather with the stands they took in the
ideological struggles during their lifetimes and how these affected
some of their most important works. Beginning with the late
seventeenth century, special emphasis is thereby given to Pietism,
orthodox Lutheranism, the impact of the French Revolution, the
restrictive measures of the Metternich period, the Wilhelminian
era, Expressionism, the New Objectivity and the materialist
aesthetics of the Weimar Republic, fascism, exile and the modernism
of the early Federal Republic of Germany.
Das vorliegende Buch bietet hermeneutische und phanomenologische
Reflexionen uber das Kunstwerk aus der Sicht sowohl des Kunstlers -
als Schaffendem - als auch des Rezipienten. Eroertert werden die
Materialitat des Kunstwerks, Bronze, Marmor, Farbe und Klang sowie
die Frage nach Nietzsches Artistenmetaphysik. In einem Kernkapitel
wird eine neue Lesart von Nietzsches Zarathustra und dessen
plastischem Begriff des Erhabenen vorgestellt. Auf Basis von
Elementen der klassischen kritischen Theorie werden wiederum
Nietzsche und Marx gegeneinander gelesen. Die letzten Kapitel
zeigen ein nahezu erotisches Spannungsverhaltnis auf zwischen
Nietzsche und Georges Batailles " Wille zur Chance " sowie der
Erfindung der Frau bei Simone de Beauvoir. Die UEberlegungen
schliessen mit einem esoterischen Blick auf Nietzsches Lehre von
der Ewigen Wiederkunft.
This multidisciplinary collection of readings offers new
interpretations of Richard Wagner's ideological position in German
history. The issues discussed range from the biographical - the
reasons for Wagner's travels, his political life - to the aesthetic
and ideological, regarding his re-creation of medieval Nuremberg,
his representations of gender and nationality, his vocal
iconography, his anti-Semitism, his vegetarian and Christian
arguments, and, finally, his musical heirs. The essays avoid
journalistic or iconoclastic approaches to Wagner, and depart from
the usual uncritical admiration of earlier scholars in an attempt
to develop a stimulating and ultimately cohesive collection of new
perspectives.
BETWEEN 1933 AND 1945 MEMBERS OF THREE GROUPS-THE Nazi fascists,
Inner Emigration, and Exiles-fought with equal fervor over who
could definitively claim to represent the authentically "great
German culture," as it was culture that imparted real value to both
the state and the individual. But when authorities made
pronouncements about "culture" were they really talking about high
art? This book analyzes the highly complex interconnections among
the cultural-political concepts of these various ideological groups
and asks why the most artistically ambitious art forms were viewed
as politically important by all cultured (or even semi-cultured)
Germans in the period from 1933 to 1945, with their ownership the
object of a bitter struggle between key figures in the Nazi fascist
regime, representatives of Inner Emigration, and Germans driven out
of the Third Reich.
This book traces the development of the monist world-view in
Germany from the Age of Goethe to the 1920s. Originally a core idea
in the philosophy of Spinoza, monism, the idea of a universe of one
substance that is both mind and matter, inspired many German
thinkers from Goethe to Fechner, especially the infamous social
Darwinist Ernst Haeckel. This study contrasts Haeckel's monism with
the more benign monist world-views of his predecessors and of his
socialist and left-liberal contemporaries and followers, above all
Bruno Wille and Wilhelm Bolsche.
Focusing on the ideological contradictions inherent in the German
alliance with Japan during World War II, this book analyses German
discourse about Japan from the distinct yet intricately connected
standpoints of the German-Japanese historical relationship, the
scientific and pseudo-scientific presentation of Japan in Germany,
and German fictional depictions of Japan. The volume examines the
historical relationship between Germany and Japan in the light of
their alliance. It also traces the origins and development of the
image of Japan in Nazi Germany. Through non-fiction texts, the
points of emphasis, friction, and outright contradiction are
discovered between Nazi ideology and an alliance with Japan as they
were discussed both publicly and privately in Germany at the time.
Finally, by examining fictional depictions of Japan and the
Japanese under the Nazis, the work reveals the means by which
fiction addressed these ideological issues and incorporated the
historical and non-fictional arguments of its contemporaries. This
book looks carefully at its connection to other historical,
political, racial, and ideological thought of the time.
The rich conceptual and experiential relays between music and
philosophy--echoes of what Theodor W. Adorno once called
"Klangfiguren," or "sound figures"--resonate with heightened
intensity during the period of modernity that extends from early
German Idealism to the Critical Theory of the Frankfurt School.
This volume traces the political, historical, and philosophical
trajectories of a specifically German tradition in which thinkers
take recourse to music, both as an aesthetic practice and as the
object of their speculative work.
The contributors examine the texts of such highly influential
writers and thinkers as Schelling, Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, Bloch,
Mann, Adorno, and Lukacs in relation to individual composers
including Beethoven, Wagner, Schonberg, and Eisler. Their
explorations of the complexities that arise in conceptualizing
music as a mode of representation and philosophy as a mode of
aesthetic practice thematize the ways in which the fields of music
and philosophy are altered when either attempts to express itself
in terms defined by the other.
Contributors: Albrecht Betz, Lydia Goehr, Beatrice Hanssen, Jost
Hermand, David Farrell Krell, Ludger Lutkehaus, Margaret Moore,
Rebekah Pryor Pare, Gerhard Richter, Hans Rudolf Vaget, Samuel
Weber
Eight essays, two in German, revised from presentations at a
November 1998 workshop at the University of Wisconsin consider
whether the nearly total neglect of German painter, filmmaker,
essays, novelist, and dramatist Weiss (1916-ca.1982) since the end
of the Cold War can be and should be reversed. He was a committed
socialist who burst on the scene in 1964 with his film Marat/Sade
and dealt with many social and political themes during his career.
Newest volume of the central scholarly forum for discussion of
Brecht and aspects of theater and literature of particular interest
to him, especially the politics of literature and theater in a
global context. Now published for the International Brecht Society
by Camden House under the Society's editorship, the Brecht Yearbook
is the central scholarly forum for discussion of the life and work
of Bertolt Brecht and of aspects of theater and literature that
were of particular interest to him, especially the politics of
literature and theater in a global context. The Yearbook welcomes a
wide variety of perspectives and approaches, and, like Brecht
himself, it is committed to the use value of literature, theater,
and theory. Volume 40 features new research on Brechtian concepts
of temporality (Matthias Rothe) and the apparatus (Thomas Pekar),
as well as articles on the "Bilder aus der Kriegsfibel" (Arnold
Pistiak), the poem "Die Nachtlager" (Klaus-Dieter Krabiel), Brecht
and Peruvian theater (Carlos Vargas-Salgado), early Brecht
productions in Australia (Laura Ginters), and Brecht and Karl Kraus
(Jost Hermand). Biographically oriented pieces focus on Brecht and
the Chinese author Feng Zhi (Lin Cheng) and an unpublished letter
to Brecht from 1918 (Jurgen Hillesheim). Special contents include a
portfolio of drawings by DieterGoltzsche, with a brief introduction
by the artist, a tribute to Sara Joffre, a brief set of texts
related to the exchanges between Hanns Eisler and Hans Bunge,
introduced by Sabine Berendse, and an open letter to Brecht from
Hans-Thies Lehmann and Helene Varopoulou. Theodore F. Rippey is
Associate Professor of German at Bowling Green State University.
Explores the storytelling of Anna Seghers and other 20th-century
writers who faced the tensions between aesthetics and politically
conscious writing, between conformity and resistance. While Walter
Benjamin, in his famous essay "The Storyteller" (1936), lamented
the decline of the storytelling tradition in the age of the
modernist novel, Anna Seghers and other twentieth-century German
writers went on to chronicle the century's darkest days in creative
and compelling ways. This volume is at its heart a tribute to
Germanist Helen Fehervary, whose work, particularly on the prose of
Anna Seghers, continues to inspire scholars who examine narration
and storytelling. The subtitle quotation, "for once, telling it all
from the beginning," is a translation of the phrase "einmal alles
von Anfang an erzahlen," from Seghers's exile novel Transit, in
which she told notonly her own story but that of countless others
who faced existential challenges in their attempts to escape the
Nazi regime. This volume examines a number of such writers,
exploring the tensions between aesthetics and politically conscious
writing, as well as individual struggles involving conformity and
resistance in a totalitarian state. Contributors: Peter Beicken,
Hunter Bivens, Kristy R. Boney, Ute Brandes, Stephen Brockmann,
Sylvia Fischer, Jost Hermand, Kristen Hetrick, Robert C. Holub,
Weijia Li, Elizabeth Loentz, Michaela Peroutkova, Benjamin
Robinson, Christiane Zehl Romero, Marc Silberman, Andy Spencer,
Luke Springman, Amy Kepple Strawser, Jennifer Marston William.
Kristy R. Boney is Associate Professor of German at the University
of Central Missouri. Jennifer Marston William is Professor of
German and Head of the School of Languages and Cultures at Purdue
University.
New essays on the most prominent German dramatist and short-story
writer of the early 19th century. For over 150 years, Heinrich von
Kleist (1777-1811) has been one of the most widely read and
performed German authors. His status in the literary canon is
firmly established, but he has always been one of Germany's most
contentiously discussed authors. Today's critical debate on his
unique prose narratives and dramas is as heated as ever. Many
critics regard Kleist as a lone presager of the aesthetics and
philosophies of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century
modernism. Yet there can be no question that he responds in his
works and letters to the philosophical, aesthetic, and political
debates of his time. During the last thirty years, the scholarship
on Kleist's work and life has departed from the existentialist wave
of the 1950s and early 1960s and opened up new avenues for coming
to terms with his unusual talent. The present volume brings
together the most important and innovative of these newer scholarly
approaches: the essays include critically informed, up-to-date
interpretations of Kleist's most-discussed stories and dramas.
Other contributions analyze Kleist's literary means and styles and
their theoretical underpinnings. They include articles on Kleist's
narrative and theatrical technique, poetic and aesthetic theory,
philosophical and political thought, and insights from new
biographical research. Contributors: Jeffrey L. Sammons,Jost
Hermand, Anthony Stephens, Bianca Theisen, Hinrich C. Seeba,
Bernhard Greiner, Helmut J. Schneider, Tim Mehigan, Susanne Zantop,
Hilda M. Brown, and Sean Allan. Bernd Fischer is Professor of
German and Head of theDepartment of German at Ohio State
University.
New essays examining Goethe's relationship to the Jews, and the
contribution of Jewish scholars to the fame of the greatest German
writer. The success of Daniel Goldhagen's Hitler's Willing
Executioners(1997) and the heated debates that followed its
publication exposed once again Germany's long tradition of
anti-Semitism as a major cause of the Holocaust. Goldhagen, like
many before him, drew a direct and irresistible line from Luther's
pamphlets against the Jews to Hitler's attempted annihilation of
European Jewry. This collection of new essays examines the thesis
of a universal anti-Semitism in Germany by focussing on its
greatest author, Goethe, and seeing to what extent some scholars
are justified in accusing him of anti-Semitism. It places the
reception of Goethe's works in a broader historical context: his
relationship to Judaism and the Jews; the reception of his works by
the Jewish elite in Germany, the reception of the 'Goethe cult' by
Jewish scholars; and the Jewish contribution to Goethe scholarship.
The last section of the volume treats the Jewish contribution to
Goethe's fame and to Goethe philology since the 19th century, and
the exodus of many Jewish authors and scholars after 1933, when
they took their beloved Goethe into exile. When a few of them
returned to Germany after 1945, it was to a country that had lost
Goethe's most devoted audience, the German Jews. KLAUS L. BERGHAHN
and JOST HERMAND are professors of German at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison.
Das "gespenstische Nachleben" des Faschismus beklagt 1959 der
Philosoph Theodor W. Adorno; dass die "deutsche
Nachkriegsliteratur" ebendies zu ihrem Thema gemacht hat,
konstatiert wenig spater der Erzahler Heinrich Boell. Die mehr als
zwanzig Essays dieses Bandes, verfasst zwischen 1980 und 2012,
spuren diesem historischen, sozialpsychologischen und literarischen
Zusammenhang nach. Sie zeigen, wie die westdeutsche
"Nachkriegsliteratur" wegweisend und stellvertretend fur Staat und
Gesellschaft agierte, die sich dieser Aufgabe nur zoegerlich
stellten. Stand dabei zunachst die Kriegserfahrung im Vordergrund,
so ruckte Mitte der 1960er Jahre der spater so benannte Holocaust
in den Blick, und wieder sind es dann Literatur und Theater, die
der juristischen und wissenschaftlichen "Aufarbeitung der
Vergangenheit" wichtige Impulse geben und sie verstarken. Dieser
Band geht diesen Fragen im historischen UEberblick wie in
detaillierten Einzelanalysen nach; besonderes Interesse gilt
Klassikern der Nachkriegsliteratur wie Heinrich Boell und Peter
Weiss, aber auch Autoren der nachfolgenden Generation wie Bernward
Vesper, Christoph Meckel oder Uwe Timm. Die Studien fragen nach der
historischen Leistung der Nachkriegsliteratur, ihrem Beitrag zu
einer post- und nichtfaschistischen deutschen Identitat, aber auch
nach ihren Defiziten und Unzulanglichkeiten, und reflektieren
schliesslich ihre Abloesung durch vielfaltige neue Themen, Formen
und Schreibweisen seit Anfang der 1980er Jahre.
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Writings of German Composers: Bach, Mozart, Mendelssohn, Wagner, Brahms, Mahler, Strauss, Weill, and (Paperback)
Jost Hermand, James Steakley
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R1,504
Discovery Miles 15 040
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Gathers selections from letters, essays, criticism, and
autobiographies by Telemann, Handel, Bach, Haydn, Mozart,
Beethoven, Schubert, Schuman, Liszt, Wagner, Brahms, and Mahler.
Gathers lyric poems, satire, and essays about the German
countryside and literature, by the nineteenth-century romantic
poet.>
Up to the end of the nineteenth century, Germany largely perceived
itself as the nation of poets and philosophers. But with the
enormous popularity of Schubert and Wagner, this began to change.
Suddenly, composers also began to play a greater role in theories
of national identity, and music theory became and important element
of German thought. The essays in this volume reflect this, and are
by a range of writers: Adorno, Bloch, Thomas Mann, Wachenroder,
Herder, E. T. A. Hoffmann, Hegel, Bettina von Arnim, Nietzsche, Max
Weber, Brecht, and others.>
The German Library is a new series of the major works of German
literature and thought from medieval times to the present. The
volumes have forewords by internationally known writers and
introductions by prominent scholars. Here the English-speaking
reader can find the broadest possible collection of poetic and
intellectual achievements in new as well as great classic
translations. Convenient and accessible in format, the volumes of
The German Library will form the core of any growing library of
European literature for years to come.
This volume brings together the papers presented at a conference
entitled 'Experiencing the Garden in the Eighteenth Century', held
at the Institute of Romance Studies, Senate House, University of
London on 13 March 2004. Speakers came from Europe, the United
States and New Zealand, and each gave a very different perspective
on the eighteenth-century landscape garden in England, France and
elsewhere in Europe. The papers focused on the theme of experience,
an especially important aspect of eighteenth-century garden design.
Landscape gardens were created for visitors to move through on a
journey from one place to the next: the garden would not be seen
all at once, but would be experienced as a story unfolding. The
visitor would follow a circuit around the garden, moving from light
to shade, being given suggestive prompts with statues, temples and
viewpoints, as if on a sensory, emotional and intellectual journey.
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