Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editors’ Preface
- Eclectic Dichotomies in K. P. Moritz's Aesthetic, Pedagogical, and Therapeutic Worlds
- Sturm und Drang Comedy and the Enlightenment Tradition
- Heaven Help Us! Journals! Calendars!: Goethe and Schiller's Xenien as Circulatory Intervention
- Between Nanjing and Weimar: Goethe's Metaphysical Correspondences
- Projection and Concealment: Goethe's Introduction of the Mask to the Weimar Stage
- Embarrassment and Individual Identity in Goethe’s Wahlverwandtschaften
- The Daisy Oracle: A New Gretchenfrage in Goethe’s Faust
- Goethes Der Zauberflöte zweyter Theil als Bruch: Zur Semantik des Zauberbegriffs im ausgehenden 18. Jahrhundert
- “Ächt antike Denkmale”?: Goethe and the Hemsterhuis Gem Collection
- Bestseller und Erlebniskultur: Neue medienästhetische Ansätze bei Gisbert Ter-Nedden und Robert Vellusig verdeutlicht an Romanadaptionen von Franz von Heufeld
- Papierdenken: Blasche, Fröbel, and the Lessons of Nineteenth-Century Paper Modeling
- The Men Who Knew Too Much: Reading Goethe’s “Erlkönig” in Light of Hitchcock
- Genius and Bloodsucker: Napoleon, Goethe, and Caroline de la Motte Fouqué
- Instrument or Inspiration? Commemorating the 1949 Goethe Year in Argentina
- Media Inventories of the Nineteenth Century: A Report from Two Workshops
- Forum: (New) Directions in Eighteenth-Century German Studies
- Medical Humanities and the Eighteenth Century
- Disability Studies and New Directions in Eighteenth-Century German Studies
- Goethe's Talking Books: Print Culture and the Problem of Literary Orality
- Three Observations and Three Possible Directions: Musical and Eighteenth-Century Studies
- Lessing and Kotzebue: A Black Studies Approach to Reading the Eighteenth Century
- Law and Literature: Codes as Colonizing Texts and Legal Ideas in Anthropocene Works
- Johann Wolfgang Goethe, Migrant? or Debunking the Myth of 1955
- “Goethe Boom” Films: Bildung Reloaded
- Book Reviews
Goethe's Talking Books: Print Culture and the Problem of Literary Orality
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 June 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editors’ Preface
- Eclectic Dichotomies in K. P. Moritz's Aesthetic, Pedagogical, and Therapeutic Worlds
- Sturm und Drang Comedy and the Enlightenment Tradition
- Heaven Help Us! Journals! Calendars!: Goethe and Schiller's Xenien as Circulatory Intervention
- Between Nanjing and Weimar: Goethe's Metaphysical Correspondences
- Projection and Concealment: Goethe's Introduction of the Mask to the Weimar Stage
- Embarrassment and Individual Identity in Goethe’s Wahlverwandtschaften
- The Daisy Oracle: A New Gretchenfrage in Goethe’s Faust
- Goethes Der Zauberflöte zweyter Theil als Bruch: Zur Semantik des Zauberbegriffs im ausgehenden 18. Jahrhundert
- “Ächt antike Denkmale”?: Goethe and the Hemsterhuis Gem Collection
- Bestseller und Erlebniskultur: Neue medienästhetische Ansätze bei Gisbert Ter-Nedden und Robert Vellusig verdeutlicht an Romanadaptionen von Franz von Heufeld
- Papierdenken: Blasche, Fröbel, and the Lessons of Nineteenth-Century Paper Modeling
- The Men Who Knew Too Much: Reading Goethe’s “Erlkönig” in Light of Hitchcock
- Genius and Bloodsucker: Napoleon, Goethe, and Caroline de la Motte Fouqué
- Instrument or Inspiration? Commemorating the 1949 Goethe Year in Argentina
- Media Inventories of the Nineteenth Century: A Report from Two Workshops
- Forum: (New) Directions in Eighteenth-Century German Studies
- Medical Humanities and the Eighteenth Century
- Disability Studies and New Directions in Eighteenth-Century German Studies
- Goethe's Talking Books: Print Culture and the Problem of Literary Orality
- Three Observations and Three Possible Directions: Musical and Eighteenth-Century Studies
- Lessing and Kotzebue: A Black Studies Approach to Reading the Eighteenth Century
- Law and Literature: Codes as Colonizing Texts and Legal Ideas in Anthropocene Works
- Johann Wolfgang Goethe, Migrant? or Debunking the Myth of 1955
- “Goethe Boom” Films: Bildung Reloaded
- Book Reviews
Summary
OVER THE PAST TWO DECADES, there has been an upswing in scholarship on literary orality in the long eighteenth century, focusing in particular on the recitation and declamation of poetry. Much of this research takes as its starting point the reassessment of the “ear” and a related concern with the “tones” of language in Herder and Klopstock's poetics. In an analysis of Klopstock's 1774 Gelehrtenrepublik (The Republic of Letters), Karl-Heinz Göttert summarizes this shift:
Nicht das—aufklärerische—Auge, sondern das Ohr wird das entscheidende Organ der sinnlichen Wahrnehmung, und nicht auf die “körperliche” Unterstützung der Sprache z.B. durch hohe oder tiefe Stimmlage kommt es an, sondern der Ton hat ein eigenes Leben, deren Zeichenhaftigkeit gerade keinen Regeln folgt.
Not the—Enlightened—eye, but rather the ear becomes the decisive organ of sensual perception; at stake here is not the “physical” supporting of language, for example, by pitching the voice high or low, but rather tone has its own life, whose semiotic character does not follow any rules.
As Göttert and others have shown, the revaluation of the ear in the eighteenth century was by no means limited to poetological theory, but also provided the impetus for a wide spectrum of acoustic performance and composition practices, which, in turn, inspired thousands of pages of commentary in instructional handbooks, journals, and correspondences. In his 2004 monograph Ins Ohr geschrieben. Lyrik als akustische Kunst von 1750 bis 1800 (Written Into the Ear. Lyric Poetry as Acoustic Art from 1750 to 1800), Joh. Nikolaus Schneider draws on this enormous wealth of primary source material to show how the acoustic dimensions of language informed the composition and reception of German-language lyric poetry from 1750 to 1800. Meanwhile, the impact of popular literary reading practices around 1800 has been central to my own research as well as that of scholars such as Reinhart Meyer-Kalkus, Hans-Joachim Jakob, and Martin Danneck. For example, Meyer-Kalkus's Geschichte der literarischen Vortragskunst (History of Literary Elocution, 2020) integrates popular practices of literary declamation and recitation into a broader history of oral reading that encompasses the reading practices of Goethe, Tieck, and Kleist.
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- Goethe Yearbook 28 , pp. 315 - 322Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2021