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The Art of Recollection in Jena Romanticism by Laurie Ruth Johnson

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The Art of Recollection in Jena Romanticism

Memory, History, Fiction, and Fragmentation in Texts by Friedrich Schlegel and Novalis

Laurie Ruth Johnson

De Gruyter · Print & ebook · December 3, 2002

Reading lane: German Literary Criticism

This study examines the ways in which memory is understood and aestheticized in Romantic texts, and argues that these works reveal serious doubt about the explanatory ability of the philosophical, psychological and aesthetic discourses against which modern thought is constructed.

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Who It's For

Reading lane: German Literary Criticism.Publisher: De Gruyter.

Book Details

Authors
Laurie Ruth Johnson
Publisher
De Gruyter
Published
December 3, 2002
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
German Literary Criticism
Reading lane
German Literary Criticism

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Publisher Categories

  • German Literary Criticism

About This Book

This study examines the ways in which memory is understood and aestheticized in Romantic texts, and argues that these works reveal serious doubt about the explanatory ability of the philosophical, psychological and aesthetic discourses against which modern thought is constructed. The Jena Romantics represent the experience and presentation of memory as privileged and creative, but also as not always capable of giving reliable information about the actual past. But rather tha...

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This study examines the ways in which memory is understood and aestheticized in Romantic texts, and argues that these works reveal serious doubt about the explanatory ability of the philosophical, psychological and aesthetic discourses against which modern thought is constructed. The Jena Romantics represent the experience and presentation of memory as privileged and creative, but also as not always capable of giving reliable information about the actual past. But rather than depicting signifiers with no stable referents, their portrayal of memory and remembering as creative displays a belief that meaning is accessible through its representations. This belief results in an emphasis on originality over imitation, but also blurs distinctions between memory and historiography. The form of the fragment embodies the dilemmas and possibilities that the Romantics associate with memory. The book includes a survey of theories of memory and how they contribute to a specifically Romantic model for memory that can lead to new interpretations of Romantic fragments; chapters on eighteenth-century aesthetic and psychological theories of memory that precede and influence Romantic texts, and on understandings of memory in critical and idealist philosophy; interpretations of the poetic and philosophical production of Novalis and Friedrich Schlegel; and a conclusion that demonstrates the persistence of the Romantic model for memory in contemporary memory theory and cultural production.

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