Reconsiders the role played by mimesis – and by Goethe’s Wilhelm Meister as a mimetic work – in the novels of Early German Romanticism.
Mimesis, or the imitation of nature, is one of the most important concepts in eighteenth-century German literary aesthetics. As the century progressed, classical mimeticism came increasingly under attack, though it also held its position in the works of Goethe, Schiller, and Moritz. Much recent scholarship construes Early German Romanticism’s refutation of mimeticism as its single distinguishing trait: the Romantics’ conception of art as the very negationof the ideal of imitation. In this view, the Romantics saw art as production (
poiesis): imaginative, musical, transcendent. Mattias Pirholt’s book not only problematizes this view of Romanticism, but also shows that reflections on mimesis are foundational for the German Romantic novel, as is Goethe’s great pre-Romantic novel
Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship. Among the novels examined are Friedrich Schlegel’s
Lucinde, shown to be transgressive in its use of the aesthetics of imitation; Novalis’s
Heinrich von Ofterdingen, interpreted as an attempt to construct the novel as a self-imitating world; and Clemens Brentano’s
Godwi, seen to signal the endof Early Romanticism, both fulfilling and ironically deconstructing the self-reflective mimeticism of the novels that came before it.
Mattias Pirholt is a Research Fellow in the Department of Literature at Uppsala University, Sweden.
Daftar Isi
Introduction
Romanticism, Mimesis, and the Novel
Double-Entry Imagery: Johann Wolfgang Goethe’s Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre
Imitation and Indolence: Friedrich Schlegel’s Lucinde
Imitation and Simulation: Novalis’s Heinrich von Ofterdingen
Beyond Romantic Representation: Clemens Brentano’s Godwi
Conclusions: Mimesis and the Critical Politics of Romanticism