Women and Writing in the Works of Novalis: Transformation beyond Measure?

Women and Writing in the Works of Novalis: Transformation beyond Measure?

by James R Hodkinson
Women and Writing in the Works of Novalis: Transformation beyond Measure?

Women and Writing in the Works of Novalis: Transformation beyond Measure?

by James R Hodkinson

Hardcover

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Overview

A balanced study of gender in Novalis as expressed in his literary, political, and scientific writings and in his letters.

The great poet and polymath Friedrich von Hardenberg, known as Novalis, was long seen as representing a particular brand of German Romanticism, embodying a predilection for the mystical and the irrational and a longing for death.Yet 20th-century scholars debunked that myth and arrived at a view of the poet as one who produced a unified, precociously modern body of work in which human systems of individual and collective being as well as knowledge and itsdisciplines exist as fictional structures, as represented possibility rather than fixed truth. As such, all being and knowledge could and should be subjected to the ironic play of Romantic poetry, which sought to renew the individual and the world it inhabited. Hardenberg's work has come in for particular criticism for idealizing women, thus denying the living, expressive female subject; the conservative social roles it ascribes to women are also cited. Although more recent critics have discerned an empowered female subject in Novalis, this is the first balanced, book-length study of gender in Novalis in English. It concludes that Hardenberg's Romantic writing began to be successful in reinventing the "fiction" of female identity, and goes further to reveal his extensive interaction with women as intellectual equals.

James R. Hodkinson is Assistant Professor of German at the University of Warwick, UK.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781571133762
Publisher: BOYDELL & BREWER INC
Publication date: 12/03/2007
Series: Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture , #17
Pages: 286
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

James Hodkinson is Reader in German at Warwick University.

Table of Contents

Introduction
Writing in Context: Romanticism, Gender, and the Case of Novalis
Writing about Women, 1795-99
Esteem and the Epistolary: Hardenberg and Women of Letters
Music and the Manifold of Voices: The Subject and the Theory of Polyphony, 1797-99
From Music to Metamorphosis: Women's Role and Writing in Heinrich von Ofterdingen, 1798-1801
"Freyes Fabelthum": The Poetic Construction of Gender in Hardenberg's Religious Writing
Conclusion: Progression, Reaction, and Tension in Hardenberg's Gender Writing
Works Consulted
Index
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