Goethe Rousseau From Goethe This book brings together specially commissioned essays on twelve canonical male writers from the later Enlightenment to the beginnings of Modernism – six F Schilletor Gide r French and six German. o m Working with the tools of feminist criticism, leading G Stendhal o specialists in Britain and North America demonstrate how e feminist readings of key works by Rousseau, Goethe, t Feminism, Aesthetics h Schiller, Hoffmann, Stendhal, Baudelaire, Flaubert, e Baudelaire Heine, Fontane, Zola, Kafka, Gide illuminate far more t and the French o than attitudes to women. The volume raises fundamental G aesthetic questions regarding creativity, genre, realism i and German Literary d and canonicity and shows how feminist criticism can e Eta Hoffmann Canon 1770–1936 revitalize debate on these much-read writers. It therefore foregrounds the major authors who shaped the dominant aesthetics, philosophy and bourgeois culture of European Flaubert literature between 1770 and 1936. Heine Zola Orr and Sharpe Fontane ISBN 0-85989-722-2 edited by Mary Orr and Lesley Sharpe Kafka ISBN 0 85989 722 2 Gide UNIVERSITY OF EXETER PRESS www.exeterpress.co.uk 9 780859 897228 From Goethe to Gide Feminism, Aesthetics and the French and German Literary Canon 1770–1936 This collection of essaysprovides amajorreassessmentof thoseliteraryfigures from the later Enlightenment to the beginnings of Modernism who are most studied on FrenchandGermancourses in Britainand aroundtheworldtoday. By investigating the works of these canonical maleFrench and German writers through the optic of feminist criticism, the contributors lay bare some of the fundamental aesthetic questions raised by these works: the function of art and of the artist; the limits of Realism; the relation of gender and genre. Readers new to French and German can study one author in depth or engage in comparative analysis, while specialists will find much to stimulate their critical thinking. Editors: Mary Orr is Professor of French at the University of Southampton. Lesley Sharpe is Professor of German at the University of Exeter. Both have published major monographs on canonical writers of French and German literatureaswellasworkingonwomenwritersandfeministcriticism.MaryOrr is one of the General Editors of Forum for Modern Language Studies and Lesley Sharpewasforsix yearsGermanicEditoroftheModernLanguageReview. From Goethe to Gide Feminism, Aesthetics and the French and German Literary Canon 1770–1936 edited by Mary Orr and Lesley Sharpe Firstpublishedin2005by UniversityofExeterPress Reed Hall, StreathamDrive ExeterEX44QR UK www.exeterpress.co.uk ©MaryOrr,LesleySharpeandtheindividualcontributors2005 TherightofMaryOrrandLesley Sharpetobeidentifiedasauthors ofthisworkhasbeenassertedbythemin accordance withtheCopyright,DesignsandPatentsAct1988. British LibraryCataloguing in Publication Data Acataloguerecordforthisbookisavailable fromtheBritishLibrary. HardbackISBN0859897214 PaperbackISBN0859897222 Typesetin10½/13ptPlantinLight byKestrelData,Exeter,Devon PrintedinGreatBritainby AthenæumPressLtd,Gateshead Contents Preface vii List of Contributors ix Introduction 1 1 Errant Strivings: Goethe, Faust and the Feminist Reader 7 Gail K. Hart 2 Hospitality and Sexual Difference in Rousseau’s Confessions 22 Judith Still 3 Gender and Genre: Schiller’s Drama and Aesthetics 34 Lesley Sharpe 4 Male Foibles, Female Critique and Narrative Capriciousness: On the Function of Gender in Conceptions of Art and Subjectivity in E.T.A. Hoffmann 49 Ricarda Schmidt 5 Varieties of Female Agency in Stendhal 65 Ann Jefferson 6 Heine’s ‘Mädchen und Frauen’: Women and Emancipation in the Writings of Heinrich Heine 80 Robert C. Holub 7 Mundus Muliebris: Baudelaire’s World of Women 97 Rosemary Lloyd 8 Flaubert’s Cautionary Tales and the Art of the Absolute 113 Mary Orr 9 Manly Men and Womanly Women: Aesthetics and Gender in Fontane’s Effi Briest and Der Stechlin 129 Patricia Howe 10 Bodies in Crisis: Zola, Gender, and the Dilemmas of History 145 Jann Matlock 11 Karl Rossmann, or the Boy who Wouldn’t Grow Up: The Flight from Manhood in Kafka’s Der Verschollene 168 Elizabeth Boa 12 André Gide and the Making of the Perfect Child 184 Naomi Segal Postscript 199 Notes 205 Bibliography of Secondary Literature 1. General Works 236 2. Works on Specific Authors 240 Index 256 Preface The twelve essays in this volume are designed to stimulate debate on what we the editors consider a vital issue in contemporary criticism: the extent and value of the contribution of feminist criticism to scholarly analysis of canonical male writers and the potential of such criticism to enrich and diversify scholarly debates in the future. The project was born of our sense of the need to take stock of the impact of an enormously varied and sometimes incompatible set of feminist critical approaches that had often been only sporadically applied to major canonical writers in the French and German traditions. These approaches and their interpretative possibilities had, moreover, often been marginalized in mainstream critical debate. In harnessing the rich critical tools of feminist criticism and by foregrounding its usefulness, our aim was also to demonstrate the increasing sophistication of those approaches and hence their potential to probe not only received interpretations of canonical texts but also the aesthetic assumptions underpinning them and their reception. Our hope is that the essays in this volume will encourage further dialogue within feminist criticism and, by demonstrating that criticism’s flexibility and productiveness, help in questioning assumptions about the formation of literary values and traditions. All the contributors to the volume are experts in their fields. They present original work and an immense background of accumulated scholarly expertise in a manner accessible to the undergraduate and yet challenging to the specialist. All would have liked more space for notes in order to indicate where further material on their subject could be vii From Goetheto Gide found. Our solution to the problem of length was to restrict full bibliographical references in the notes to each chapter to the secondary literature whose arguments were specifically alluded to, and to refer readers by author to additional titles listed in full in the bibliography at the end of the volume. In this way the notes to each chapter provide a compact source of references for those, particularly students, who want to read further on specific texts, while the main bibliography has become an extensive, and we hope useful, research tool for those engaged in longer-term scholarly work in these fields. Those interested in applying feminist critical methods to other canons will also find useful pointers in the bibliography. We are immensely grateful to our contributors for their participation in this project, which involved not only producing the essays in this volume but also taking part in a two-day conference in November 2003 that gave us a very necessary opportunity to exchange ideas and approaches. We should like to acknowledge the generous support of the British Academy, which gave us a British Conference Grant of £2,000 towards the cost of bringing our US contributors to the UK for this event. We should also like to thank the Institute of Romance Studies and the Institute of Germanic Studies (at that time still separate institutes in the University of London’s School of Advanced Studies) for providing two excellent venues for the conference and for their administrative support. Julie Crocker of the School of Modern Languages at the University of Exeter lent her computing skills to the task of formatting the chapters and bibliography, and the School also provided for the services of an indexer. Finally, we are grateful to the University of Exeter Press for the confidence they have shown in the project and the practical advice and professional support they have given us throughout. Mary Orr Lesley Sharpe Exeter, December 2004 viii Contributors Elizabeth Boa is Emeritus Professor of German, University of Nottingham. Her publications include The Sexual Circus: Wedekind’s Theatre of Subversion (Blackwell, 1987), Kafka: Gender, Class, Race in the Letters and Fictions (OUP, 1996), ‘Die Geschichte der O oder die (Ohn-)Macht der Frauen. Die Wahlverwandtschaften im Kontext des Geschlechterdiskurses um 1800’, Goethe-Jahrbuch 118 (2001). Gail K. Hart is Professor of German at the University of California, Irvine, where she also directs the Interdisciplinary Humanities Program. She has published books on Gottfried Keller’s fiction and on German bourgeoistragedyand articleson Germanand comparative literature ofthe eighteenth and nineteenth century. Her new book, Friedrich Schiller: Crime, Aesthetics, and thePoetics of Punishment, appeared in 2005. Robert C. Holub teaches in the German Department at the University of California at Berkeley. He has written numerous books and essays in the area of eighteenth- to twentieth-century literary, cultural, and intellectual history. His current research deals with Friedrich Nietzsche, situating his writings in the context of nineteenth-century scientific, social and political discourses. Patricia Howe is Senior Lecturer in German at Queen Mary College, University of London.Herresearchinterestsarenarrativefictionand travel writing in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. She has written on Fontane, Saar, Storm, Hofmannsthal and Schnitzler, and on women writers. Ann Jefferson is Fellow and Tutor in French at New College, Oxford. Her publications include Reading Realism in Stendhal (CUP, 1988). She is currently working on a project entitled ‘Writing Lives and Making Literature in France: 1750 to the present’. ix
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