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River and stream as images of time and fate are as ancient as
spring and stream as metaphors of inspiration and song. Processes
of crossing and dissolving boundaries, of transmission and exchange
are visualised in different images of fluidity. At the sixth
Colloquium of the International Arnim Society held in Burg
SchAnburg (Oberwesel), the participants discussed this complex of
images and metaphors, from the flowing Rhine via cash flows to the
flow of a text and energy flows in the body a " using too the
context of a oeRomantic Sciencea . Novalisa (TM) conception of
poetry as a oeby its nature fluida is opposed by Goethea (TM)s
lines a oeWater drawn by bards whosefame /Pure is, may be roundeda
.
The Romantic mode and representations of emotion would seem to be a
perfect fit. By focusing on the esthetics of emotions, their
genre-typical enactments and representation in the works of Arnim,
Gunderrode, Goethe, Heine, Hoffmann, Schiller, Tieck and others,
the book presents a broad-based examination of this interaction.
The articles in this volume examine how the literature of the
Romantic deals with or represents emotions."
At the fourth colloquium of the international Arnim Society in
Glasgow, the central issues were biographical and national
identity, culture- and socio-political codification, and
marginalization and communality. Alongside comparative studies
concentrating on intertextuality, there were also a number of
interdisciplinary contributions largely concerned with the
historical, political, social, and cultural contexts. Among the
Romantics, the crisis occasioned by the Napoleonic wars
strengthened the recourse to their own literary traditions and the
highly problematic (from a 20th century viewpoint) reception
accorded to those traditions. Experience of other cultures (Arnim's
image of England, Jews and gypsies in Arnim's works) differentiated
the formation of identity on the national, communitarian, and
individual plane. There is also discussion of the reasons for a
shift to aesthetic identifications (as opposed to philosophical
and/or political alternatives). Other case studies are devoted to
the narrative construction of artistic, social, amicable, and
gender-based identity.
The articles in this volume live up to their declared aim to
squarely approach the works of Jeremias Gotthelf (1797-1854) from
the perspective of literary scholarship. They take an international
angle on aesthetic, genre typological, theological, political and
socio-historical aspects of his oeuvre. Outdated and erroneous
verdicts are refuted, Gotthelf is regarded against the aesthetic
and cultural-historical backdrop of his age and compared with other
European authors. The major insight gleaned from this is that his
work is not merely the expression of an effort to contribute to the
popular education and the politics of his day but can stand as the
literary achievement of a major realistic narrator. The volume
rounds off with a bibliography and detailed indexes of persons,
works and subjects.
Fur Leibniz standen China und Europa in unterschiedlichen Bereichen
auf der gleichen kulturellen bzw. zivilisatorischen Stufe. In der
Gegenwart pragen trotz Postkolonialismus und Globalisierung (die
auch koloniale Elemente hat) Krisenhaftigkeit, Asymmetrie und
Ungleichzeitigkeit die gegenseitigen Annaherungen und
Veranderungen. Die Beitrage des Bandes erforschen zentrale
europaisch-chinesische Debatten und Fragestellungen: Sprache,
Literatur und Kultur, Wissenschaftstraditionen, Rechtsauffassungen,
wirtschaftliche, soziale und politische Konstellationen, Werte und
philosophische Grundlagen.. Es wird gezeigt, wie Missverstandnisse
entstehen und was, neben den sozialen, kulturellen und sprachlichen
Differenzen, dafur verantwortlich ist. Bei den Rechtskonzepten
zeigen sich im Kulturvergleich uberraschende Einsichten in das
hoechst komplexe chinesische Rechtssystem. Auch die Thematisierung
der universitaren und wissenschaftlichen Zusammenarbeit tragt dazu
bei, dass die Beitrage des Bandes auch Perspektiven einer kunftigen
chinesisch-deutschen Zusammenarbeit vorstellen.
The third colloquium of the International Arnim Society situates
Achim von Arnim in the political, culture-political, and literary
context of Prussia in the 1810-1820 period. The profusion of
literary and journalistic production justifies regarding Arnim's
Berlin years (1809-1814) as the zenith of his career. Political and
educational issues are addressed alongside the specifically
'Romantic' context of Arnim's Berlin period (Berlin art, Dorothea
Veit-Schlegel, Kleist, Eichendorff, Tieck). The volume closes with
three emphatically text-analytic studies on Arnim and Brentano and
the discussion of a surprising reading of Arnim's 'Wunderhorn' by
Rahel Levin.
Around 1800 there is a new symbolisation and narration of a
~internal spacesa (TM), spiritual and psychic processes, states or
relationships which do not lend themselves to direct observation.
This volume focuses on the narrated a ~reala (TM) spaces of
Romanticism; it deals with the cultural encoding of houses and
rooms, castles and towers, but also of open spaces a " the vastness
of the sea, riverscapes and distant lands. The analyses are to be
understood as a contribution within the currently proclaimed
spatial or topographical turn to a new dimensioning of a complex of
central importance for both narrative and representational
techniques and for cultural anthropology.
The fifth colloquium of the International Arnim Society in
Heidelberg (2004) revolved around the imminent 200th anniversary of
the publication of ADes Knaben WunderhornA in 2006. For Heidelberg
romanticism and for Volkspoesie in general, issues concerned with
performance, the relationship between the oral and the written,
citation, and intertextuality have always been central concerns.
Alongside other works by Arnim and the Heidelberg romantics
discussed here, Arnim and Brentano's ADes Knaben WunderhornA is an
especially grateful subject for the discussion of these issues.
Goethe himself stressed the performative aspect: ABy right, this
little book should be found in every house where fresh-minded
people live, on the window-sill, under the mirror, or wherever
hymn-books and cook-books normally lie, to be opened whenever the
mood (good or bad) should take us, and we are in search of
something like-minded or stimulating.A
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