Schiller: National Poet – Poet of Nations A M S T E R D A M E R B E I T R Ä G E 61 6 0 G 0 Z U R N E U E R E N E R M A N I S T I K 2 Herausgegeben von Gerd Labroisse Gerhard P. Knapp Norbert Otto Eke Wissenschaftlicher Beirat: Christopher Balme (Universiteit van Amsterdam) Lutz Danneberg (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin) Martha B. Helfer (Rutgers University New Brunswick) Lothar Köhn (Westf. Wilhelms-Universität Münster) Ian Wallace (University of Bath) Schiller: National Poet – Poet of Nations A Birmingham Symposium Herausgegeben von Nicholas Martin Amsterdam - New York, NY 2006 Die 1972 gegründete Reihe erscheint seit 1977 in zwangloser Folge in der Form von Thema-Bänden mit jeweils verantwortlichem Herausgeber. Reihen-Herausgeber: Prof. Dr. Gerd Labroisse Sylter Str. 13A, 14199 Berlin, Deutschland Tel./Fax: (49)30 89724235 E-Mail: [email protected] Prof. Dr. Gerhard P. Knapp University of Utah Dept. of Languages and Literature, 255 S. Central Campus Dr. Rm. 1400 Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA Tel.: (1)801 581 7561, Fax (1)801 581 7581 (dienstl.) bzw. Tel./Fax: (1)801 474 0869 (privat) E-Mail: [email protected] Prof. Dr. Norbert Otto Eke Universität Paderborn Fakultät für Kulturwissenschaften, Warburger Str. 100, D - 33098 Paderborn, Deutschland, E-Mail: [email protected] Friedrich Schiller, Hermenbüste von Johann Heinrich Dannecker, 1805. Deutsches Literaturarchiv, Marbach am Neckar. All titles in the Amsterdamer Beiträge zur neueren Germanistik (from 1999 onwards) are available online: See www.rodopi.nl Electronic access is included in print subscriptions. The paper on which this book is printed meets the requirements of “ISO 9706:1994, Information and documentation - Paper for documents - Requirements for permanence”. ISBN-10: 90-420-2003-2 ISBN-13: 978-90-420-2003-0 ©Editions Rodopi B.V., Amsterdam – New York, NY 2006 Printed in The Netherlands Inhalt/Contents Nicholas Martin:Introduction: Schiller After Two Centuries 7 T.J.Reed:Wie hat Schiller überlebt? 23 Lesley Sharpe: A National Repertoire: Schiller and the Theatre of his Day 35 Norbert Oellers:Schiller, der “Heros”. Mit ergänzenden Bemerkungen zu einigen seiner Dramen-Helden 53 Jochen Golz: Monumente zu Lebzeiten? – Schiller als Herausgeber seiner Werke 73 K.F.Hilliard:“Nicht in Person sondern durch einen Repräsentanten”: Problematik der Repräsentation bei Schiller 89 David Hill:Lenz and Schiller: All’s well that ends well 107 Steffan Davies: Schiller’s Egmont and the Beginnings of Weimar Classicism 123 John Guthrie:Language and Gesture in Schiller’s Later Plays 139 Francis Lamport: Virgins, Bastards and Saviours of the Nation: Reflections on Schiller’s Historical Dramas 159 Ritchie Robertson:Schiller and the Jesuits 179 Alexander Kosˇenina:Schiller’s Poetics of Crime 201 Jeffrey L.High:Schiller, “merely political Revolutions”, the personal Drama of Occupation, and Wars of Liberation 219 Maike Oergel: The German Identity, the German Querelle and the Ideal State: A Fresh Look at Schiller’s Fragment “Deutsche Größe” 241 David Pugh:Schiller and the Crisis of German Liberalism 257 Nicholas Martin:Images of Schiller in National Socialist Germany 275 Paul Bishop:The “Schillerbild” of Werner Deubel: Schiller as “Poet of the Nation”? 301 Anhang/Appendix: Schillerjahr 2005. Selected Events and Publications 321 Personenregister/Index of Names 333 Register der Werke Schillers/Index of Schiller’s Works 339 6 Anschriften der Autorinnen und Autoren/List of Contributors Prof. Dr. Paul Bishop Dr. Nicholas Martin University of Glasgow, School of University of Birmingham, Dept. of Modern Languages and Cultures German Studies UK – Glasgow, G12 8QL UK – Birmingham, B15 2TT Mr. Steffan Davies Prof. Dr. Norbert Oellers University of Oxford, St. Hugh’s Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms- College Universität Bonn, Germanistisches UK – Oxford, OX2 6LE Seminar Am Hof 1d Dr. Jochen Golz, Direktor D – 53113 Bonn Goethe- und Schiller-Archiv Hans-Wahl-Straße 4 Dr. Maike Oergel D – 99425 Weimar University of Nottingham, Dept. of German Dr. John Guthrie UK – Nottingham, NG7 2RD University of Cambridge, New Hall UK – Cambridge, CB3 0DF Prof. Dr. David Pugh Queen’s University, Dept. of German Prof. Dr. Jeffrey L. High Language & Literature California State University, Kingston Long Beach CA – Ontario, K7L 3N6 Dept. of Romance, German, Russian Languages and Literatures Prof. T. J. Reed USA – Long Beach, CA 90840 University of Oxford, The Queen’s College Prof. Dr. David Hill UK – Oxford, OX1 4AW University of Birmingham, Dept. of German Studies Prof. Dr. Ritchie Robertson UK – Birmingham, B15 2TT University of Oxford, St John’s College Dr. K. F. Hilliard UK – Oxford, OX1 3JP University of Oxford, St Peter’s College Prof. Dr. Lesley Sharpe UK – Oxford, OX1 2DL University of Exeter, Dept. of German Prof. Dr. Alexander Kosˇenina UK – Exeter, EX4 4QH University of Bristol, Dept. of German UK – Bristol, BS8 1TE Mr. Francis Lamport University of Oxford, Worcester College UK – Oxford, OX1 2HB Nicholas Martin Introduction: Schiller After Two Centuries* The third version of Goethe’s public lament for Schiller includes an emphatic wish that posterity should celebrate Schiller and thereby not only fill the void left by his untimely death but also in some sense complete his unfulfilled life: “So feiert ihn! Denn was dem Mann das Leben / Nur halb erteilt, soll ganz die Nachwelt geben”.1The wish was granted, though had Goethe known precisely what posterity had in store for Schiller, he might perhaps have been more care- ful in what he wished for. Even before the onset of the physical afflictions that would eventually kill him, Schiller himself had commented in rather different terms on the nature of his fame. In a letter to a friend in 1789 he wrote: “Wenn mich je das Unglück oder Glück träfe, sehr berühmt zu werden […], so seyen Sie mit Ihrer Freundschaft gegen mich vorsichtiger. Lesen Sie alsdann meine Schriften, und lassen den Menschenübrigens laufen” (NA 25. 209).2By 1789 Schiller was already very famous, of course, and his fame was to increase steadily until his death on 9 May 1805 at the age of forty-five. His posthumous fame – the “Schiller legend” in the various guises it has assumed over the past two hundred years – has dwarfed the fame he enjoyed during his relatively short life. It is the nature of this posthumous fame that Schiller appears to be hinting at in his remarks; for it is precisely in the elevation or mythologisation of the man at the expense of his writings that Schiller’s reputation has suffered much harm. Arguably, still more harm has been done over the years by the periodic emphasis on alleged political and national(ist) messages in Schiller’s writings to the near exclusion of reflections on his achievement as a dramatist and poet. The two-hundredth anniversary of Schiller’s death was an important cultural event yet it had to jostle for attention on a crowded stage, because 2005 was an *Schiller’s texts are quoted from Schillers Werke. Nationalausgabe. Ed. by Julius Petersen, Gerhard Fricke et al. Weimar: Hermann Böhlaus Nachf. 1943ff. Quotations from Schiller’s verse plays are identified by line number, others by NA with volume and page numbers. 1Johann Wolfgang Goethe: Epilog zu Schillers “Glocke” [1805/10/15]. In: Goethes Werke. Ed. by Erich Trunz. 14 vols. Munich: Beck 12th edn 1981. Vol. 1. Pp. 256–259. Lines 95–96. 2To Caroline von Beulwitz. 25.2.1789. Schiller appears to have been in a particularly despondent and self-critical mood that day, writing to another friend, Christian Gottfried Körner: “[…] je mehr ich empfinde, wie viele und welche Talente oder Erfodernisse mir fehlten, so überzeuge ich mich desto lebhafter von der Realität und Stärke desjenigen Talents, welches, jenes Mangels ungeachtet, mich soweit gebracht hat, als ich schon bin” (NA 25. 212). 8 unusually busy year for round anniversaries. It saw the one-hundredth birth- days of Jean-Paul Sartre, Elias Canetti and Anthony Powell, the centenary of the publication of Einstein’s special theory of relativity, and the quatercenten- ary of the publication of the first part of Don Quijote. 12 August 2005 was the fiftieth anniversary of Thomas Mann’s death, and the 150th anniversary of Kierkegaard’s death was also commemorated in 2005. However, it was the bicentenaries which seemed the most numerous. In addition to Schiller’s two- hundredth “Todestag”, 2005 saw Hans Christian Andersen’s two-hundredth birth- day, as well as the bicentenaries of the battles of Trafalgar (21 October) and Austerlitz (2 December), and of the first performance of Beethoven’s Fidelio (20 November). Anniversaries of Schiller’s birth or death have usually been celebrated at fifty-year intervals.3The“Schillerjahr 2005” was the seventh of these, after 1855, 1859, 1905, 1909, 1955 and 1959. In May 2005, the Austrian public television channel Ö1 attempted to explain to its audience the signifi- cance of the Schiller anniversary: “Jedes Jubiläum – ein runder Geburtstag oder Todestag – wurde schon immer zum Anlass genommen, die jeweils aktuelle Sicht auf Person oder Werk eines Künstlers in Publikationen aller Art zu ver- breiten. Jetzt ist Friedrich Schiller dran”.4This is quite correct, of course, but tells only half the story. As important as the views expressed on Schiller is what these views tell us about the individuals and cultures expressing them. The major“Schillerfeiern” of the past two hundred years offer not only a picture of the vicissitudes of the poet’s fame but also revealing snapshots of German intellectual, political and popular culture. In the context of the present volume, it seems appropriate to provide a brief sketch of Schiller’s reception as seen through the prism of these formal celebrations and commemorations. The high tides in Schiller’s reputation since his death have occurred during the Wars of Liberation of 1813–14, the ensuing period up to and including the 1848 revolutions, and the anniversaries of 1859 and 1905. Periods during which Schiller has tended to be out of favour include the years immediately following his death (1805–12), the “Gründerjahre” of the Wilhelmine Reich, the disillusioned anniversary of 1909, the First World War, as well as much of the second half of the twentieth century.5 For better or worse, the Schiller we know today is still to some extent the product of the 1859 centenary celebra- tions which set the tone for both the form and the rhetorical content of many 3A glaring exception to this rule was 1934, when the Nazis thought it politically expe- dient to celebrate Schiller’s 175th birthday. 4Anschreiben gegen Klischees. Friedrich Schiller zum 200. Todestag. (cid:2)http:// oe1.orf. at/highlights/36500.html(cid:3). 5An authoritative guide to the history of Schiller reception in Germany is Schiller – Zeitgenosse aller Epochen. Dokumente zur Wirkungsgeschichte Schillers in Deutschland. Ed. by Norbert Oellers. 2 vols. Frankfurt/M.: Athenäum 1970. Munich: Beck 1976. 9 events in subsequent “Schillerjahre”. In 1859 countless “Festredner” became unsolicited marketing men for a certain idea of Schiller. This idea had three aspects: Schiller the spiritual and, above all, political idealist; Schiller the moral- ist; and Schiller the patriot. Schiller’s humane cosmopolitanism was largely ignored and this was to remain a feature of “Schillerjahre” until the 1950s. Looking back, one commentator in 1959 observed: “Weil gewisse Richtungen den Kosmopoliten nicht wollten, feierte man den nationalen Dichter der Deutschen in Schiller”.6 Much of the rhetoric surrounding the extraordinary celebrations of 1859, which tended to identify Schiller with not only a spirit of national unity but also a particular self-image of the German “Bürgertum”, helped to shape the image of Schiller as an idealised and politically malleable figure. The Austrian writer Franz Grillparzer was one of very few at the time to recognise the dangers of this approach: “Meine Herren! Lassen Sie uns Schiller feiern als das, was er war: als großen Dichter, als ausgezeichneten Schriftsteller und ihn nicht bloß zum Vorwand nehmen für weiß Gott was für politische und staatliche Ideen”.7 By the time of the next major “Schillerjahr”, the centenary of his death in 1905, a change in attitudes appeared to have taken place. In the years leading up to the centenary, two impressive editions were published: Fritz Jonas’s critical edition of Schiller’s letters, which appeared between 1892 and 1896 and, on the eve of the centenary, Eduard von der Hellen’s sixteen-volume “Säkularausgabe” of Schiller’s works.8Monumental scholarly achievements though both editions are, they reveal that by 1905 Schiller had become more of an object of academic study than of popular enthusiasm or literary engagement, though the “patriotic” Schiller was still very much in evidence. In the words of Hans Mayer: Das Schiller-Jahr 1905 stand weitgehend im Zeichen offizieller Feiern des wil- helminischen Deutschland. Die literarischen Naturalisten und Impressionisten hiel- ten sich zurück. […] Die Schiller-Feier von 1905 stand nach außen hin im Zeichen der Behörden und der Universitätsprofessoren für neuere deutsche Philologie, nicht der Schriftsteller.9 6Rudolf Hagelstange: Friedrich Schiller und die Deutschen. In: Schiller. Reden im Gedenkjahr 1959. Ed. by Bernhard Zeller. Stuttgart: Klett 1961 (Veröffentlichungen der Deutschen Schillergesellschaft 24). Pp. 53–75, here p. 74. 7Franz Grillparzer: Sämtliche Werke. Ed. by Moritz Necker. 16 vols. Leipzig: Hesse 1903. Vol. 14. Pp. 79–80. 8Schillers Briefe. Kritische Gesamtausgabe. Ed. by Fritz Jonas. 7 vols. Stuttgart – Leipzig – Berlin – Vienna: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt 1892–96. Schillers Sämtliche Werke. Säkular-Ausgabe. Ed. by Eduard von der Hellen. 16 vols. Stuttgart – Berlin: Cotta 1904–05. 9Hans Mayer: Schillers Nachruhm. In: Etudes Germaniques14 (1959). Pp. 374–385, here p. 383.