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Holderlin, Kleist, and Nietzsche
A01=Stefan Zweig
Author_Stefan Zweig
Bettina Von Arnim
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Contemporary Russian Politics
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Die Hermannsschlacht
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Fi Ctional World
German intellectual history
Goethe's Death
Goethe's Life
Good Life
Historical Architectural Styles
Hitler Youth Leader
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Jewish Literary Contemporaries
Jules Romains
Kindred Field
Kleist's Dramas
Kleist's Penthesilea
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Literary Infl Uences
literary modernism theory
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Mystical Utterance
nineteenth century European thought
philosophical psychology
poetic subjectivity
Robert Guiscard
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Selfl Ess Love
Strategic Conquest
Superb
Terrestrial Gravity
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Unending Warfare
Viennese Art
visionary artists in German literature
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Young Men
Product details
- ISBN 9781412811354
- Weight: 476g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 15 Sep 2010
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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This is the second volume in a trilogy in which Stefan Zweig builds a composite picture of the European mind through intellectual portraits selected from among its most representative and influential figures. In Hölderlin, Kleist, and Nietzsche, Zweig concentrates on three giants of German literature to portray the artist and thinker as a figure possessed by a powerful inner vision at odds with the materialism and scientific positivism of his time, in this case, the nineteenth century.Zweig's subjects here are respectively a lyric poet, a dramatist and writer of novellas, and a philosopher. Each led an unstable life ending in madness and/or suicide and not until the twentieth century did each make their full impact. Whereas the nineteenth-century novel is socially capacious in terms of subject and audience, the three figures treated here are prophets or forerunners of modernist ideas of alienation and exile. Hölderlin and Kleist consciously opposed the worldly harmoniousness of Goethe's classicism in favor of a visionary inwardness and dramatization of the subjective psyche. Nietzsche set himself as a destroyer and rebuilder of philosophy and critic of the degradation of the German spirit through nationalism and militarism.Zweig's choice of subjects reflects a division in his own soul. The image of Goethe recurs here as the ultimate upholder of Zweig's own ideals: scientist and artist, receptive to world culture, supremely rational and prudent. Yet Zweig was aware that Hölderlin, Kleist, and Nietzsche were more daring explorers of the dangerous and destructive aspects of man that needed to be seen and comprehended in the clarifying light of poetry and philosophy.
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