Idioms of Uncertainty: Goethe and the Essay

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Penn State Press, 15.09.1992 - 264 Seiten

Goethe's essays have been culled for their literary, aesthetic, and scientific content, by the textuality and their location at the nexus of genre and literary history have not received the critical attention they deserve. In Idioms of Uncertainty, Peter Burgard analyzes the rhetorical strategies, structure, and style of pivotal essays and relates them to the essay traditions as represented by Montaigne and Johnson. By formulating the critique of systematic philosophy inherent in the essays and by investigating their participation in the principal aesthetic dialogue of the age&—the Laoco&ön debate, which spanned nearly half a century&—Burgard situates them in the context of eighteenth-century critical discourse.

Furthermore, by disclosing the connection between the anti-systematic, dialogic impetus of Goethe's essayism and the theme of community in his literary works, Idioms of Uncertainty both draws out the broader social implications of the essay and shows how the analysis of Goethe's work in the genre can illuminate his entire oeuvre.

In the course of the study Burgard articulates a theory of the essay as a genre by drawing on twentieth-century theoretical perspectives for his exposition of Goethe's textual strategies: theories of the essay from Lukacs, Bense, and Adorno; the textual theories of Bakhtin, Kristeva, Barthes, and Derrida; and Rorty's notion of literary-philosophical conversation. Idioms of Uncertainty thus holds interest for those concerned with genre theory and literary theory in general; and through its challenging of clich&és about German literature at the time it assumed international significance, the book will be useful not only for Goethe scholars but also for scholars of the eighteenth century across disciplines and national boundaries.

 

Inhalt

III
25
IV
27
VI
36
VII
40
VIII
53
IX
56
X
60
XI
66
XXIII
118
XXIV
123
XXV
133
XXVI
140
XXVII
151
XXVIII
155
XXIX
159
XXX
170

XII
71
XIII
76
XIV
79
XVI
85
XVII
89
XVIII
101
XIX
103
XX
105
XXI
113
XXII
115
XXXI
189
XXXII
197
XXXIII
203
XXXIV
205
XXXV
210
XXXVI
215
XXXVII
229
XXXVIII
247
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Autoren-Profil (1992)

Peter J. Burgard is Assistant Professor of German at Harvard University.

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