The Look of Things: Poetry and Vision around 1900
Examining the relationship between German poetry, philosophy, and visual media around 1900, Carsten Strathausen argues that the poetic works of Rainer Maria Rilke, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, and Stefan George focused on the visible gestalt of language as a means of competing aesthetically with the increasing popularity and "reality effect" of photography and film. 

Poetry around 1900 self-reflectively celebrated its own words as both transparent signs and material objects, Strathausen says. In Aestheticism, this means that language harbors the potential to literally present the things it signifies. Rather than simply describing or picturing the physical experience of looking, as critics have commonly maintained, modernist poetry claims to enable a more profound kind of perception that grants intuitive insights into the very texture of the natural world.

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The Look of Things: Poetry and Vision around 1900
Examining the relationship between German poetry, philosophy, and visual media around 1900, Carsten Strathausen argues that the poetic works of Rainer Maria Rilke, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, and Stefan George focused on the visible gestalt of language as a means of competing aesthetically with the increasing popularity and "reality effect" of photography and film. 

Poetry around 1900 self-reflectively celebrated its own words as both transparent signs and material objects, Strathausen says. In Aestheticism, this means that language harbors the potential to literally present the things it signifies. Rather than simply describing or picturing the physical experience of looking, as critics have commonly maintained, modernist poetry claims to enable a more profound kind of perception that grants intuitive insights into the very texture of the natural world.

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The Look of Things: Poetry and Vision around 1900

The Look of Things: Poetry and Vision around 1900

by Carsten Strathausen
The Look of Things: Poetry and Vision around 1900

The Look of Things: Poetry and Vision around 1900

by Carsten Strathausen

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Overview

Examining the relationship between German poetry, philosophy, and visual media around 1900, Carsten Strathausen argues that the poetic works of Rainer Maria Rilke, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, and Stefan George focused on the visible gestalt of language as a means of competing aesthetically with the increasing popularity and "reality effect" of photography and film. 

Poetry around 1900 self-reflectively celebrated its own words as both transparent signs and material objects, Strathausen says. In Aestheticism, this means that language harbors the potential to literally present the things it signifies. Rather than simply describing or picturing the physical experience of looking, as critics have commonly maintained, modernist poetry claims to enable a more profound kind of perception that grants intuitive insights into the very texture of the natural world.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781469658452
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Publication date: 05/01/2020
Series: University of North Carolina Studies in Germanic Languages and Literature , #126
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 344
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Carsten Strathausen is assistant professor of German at the University of Missouri at Columbia.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsxi
Introduction1
Part I
1.The Speaking Gaze of Modernity35
2.Intuition and Language73
Excursus
Methods of Reading107
Part II
3.Aestheticism, Romanticism, and the Body of Language137
4.Hofmannsthal and the Voice of Language146
5.Rilke's Stereoscopic Vision190
6.Other as Same: The Politics of the George Circle237
Notes275
Works Cited297
Index311

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

The Look of Things provides a vivid, lucid account of the intellectual-historical contexts of visual aesthetics as embodied in the poem and in poetic prose, from Stefan George's Teppich des Lebens to Rainer Maria Rilke's poetry and Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge. Strathausen's analysis demonstrates the emergence of pre-cinematic modes of perception in literary language and brings the reader into the eye of the social, aesthetic, and intellectual storm of German modernity in the early twentieth century.—Neil H. Donahue, author of Forms of Disruption: Abstraction in Modern German Prose



An ambitious and learned study. . . . A complex revisioning of literary categories from which the present proliferation of work in visual studies will undoubtedly also profit.—German Quarterly



Carsten Strathausen's discerning analysis of the emergence of two competing visual paradigms (the disembodied, cold gaze of the camera, and the subjective, corporeal vision) at the beginning of the twentieth century will be of interest to scholars and students of photography, painting, and modern poetry alike. This is a book to be contemplated, a welcome addition to the growing field of visual studies, and a sensitive reading of some of the major poetic voices of European modernity. —Ulrich Baer, author of Spectral Evidence: The Photography of Trauma

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