Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jkksz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-24T09:52:40.241Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

German Romanticism and Political Thought

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2009

Extract

TheRetreat from liberalism and the rise of fascist totalitarianisms in the interwar period occasioned widespread inquiry into the intellectual sources of the phenomenon. Writers have frequently discovered the “roots,” to use the fashionable metaphor, in romanticism, particularly, German romanticism. Sharp controversies have arisen over the propriety and validity of attributing modern political lunacy ultimately to the romantic mind. A prior question may well be asked, what exactly are the elements of romantic thought which have political significance. This paper seeks to identify and analyze these elements.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Notre Dame 1959

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Kluckhohn, Paul in Deutsche Literatur, Reihe Romantik (Leipzig, 1931), I, IntroductionGoogle Scholar.

2 Herder, , Ideen zur Philosophie der Geschichte der Menschheit in Werke, IV, Klassiker-Ausgaben, Meyers (Leipzig und Wien, n.d.), 169Google Scholar.

3 Ibid., 166.

4 Novalis, , Die Christenheit oder Europa, Samliche Werke (München, 1924), 111, 17Google Scholar.

5 Burke, , Reflections on the Revolution in France, Works (London, 18151827), V, 78, 36, 90Google Scholar.

6 Saitschick, R., Joseph Görres, (Freiburg in Breisgau, 1953), 152Google Scholar.

7 Müller, Adam, Die Elemente der Staatskunst (Wien, Leipzig, 1922), I, 20Google Scholar.

8 Ibid., 6.

9 Ibid., 16.

10 von Gerlach, Ernst Ludwig, Denkwiirdigkeiten (Schwerin, 1903), I, 234Google Scholar.

11 Lemberg, E., Geschichte des Nationalismus in Europa (Stuttgart, 1950), 270Google Scholar.

12 Müller, , Die Elemente, 26Google Scholar.

13 Herder, , Ideen, 169, 170Google Scholar.

14 Burke, , Reflections, 79Google Scholar.

15 Mohler, A., Die Konservative Revolution in Deutschland (Stuttgart, 1950), 104 ffGoogle Scholar.

16 Herder, , Ideen, 107Google Scholar.

17 Ibid., 459.

18 Eichendorff, , Über die Folgen von der Aufhebung der Landeshoheit der Bischöfe und der Klöster in Deutschland in Deutsche Literatur, Reihe Romantik, X, 37Google Scholar.

19 Müller, Adam, Friederich der Grosse und Preussen, in Kohler, R., ed., Adam Müller Schriften zur Staatsphilosphie (Munchen, n.d.), 107Google Scholar.

20 From Troeltsch's essay on Natural Law and Humanity which occurs as an appendix in Barker, E., Natural Law and the Theory of Society (Cambridge, 1934), 204Google Scholar.

21 Müller, , Die Elemente, 40.Google Scholar

22 Schlegel, F., Über die neuere Geschichte in Deutsche Literatur, Reihe Romantik, X, 30Google Scholar.

23 Schnabel, F., Deutsche Geschichte im Neuhnzehten Jahrhundert (Freiburg in Breigau, 19291937), I, 243, 244Google Scholar.

24 Kluckhohn, P., Persönlichkeit und Gemeinschaft (Halle, 1925), 2Google Scholar.

25 Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship (Carlyle translation, Boston, 1883), 261Google Scholar.

26 Kluckhohn, , Persönlichkeit, 5Google Scholar.

27 Schleiermacher, , Monologen in Deutsche Literatur, Reihe Romantik, IV, 33Google Scholar.

28 Ibid., 40.

29 Müller, , Die Elemente, 98, 99Google Scholar.

30 Kohler, v.vi.

31 Fichte, , Werke (Medicus edition, Leipzig, n.d.), I, 20Google Scholar.

32 Ibid., 18.

33 Baxa, J., Einfiihrung in die romantische Staatswissenschaft (Jena, 1923), 17, 28Google Scholar.

34 Fichte, , Werke, II, 212Google Scholar.

35 Müller, , Die Elemente, 37Google Scholar.

36 Baxa, , Einführung, 159, 160Google Scholar.

37 ibid., 7.

38 Novalis, , Die Christenheit, 10Google Scholar.

39 Schnabel, , Deutsche Geschichte, I, 240, 243Google Scholar.

40 Novalis, , Fragmente in The German Classics, ed., Francke, Kuno (New York, 1913), IV, 188Google Scholar.

41 Müller, Adam, Friederich der Grosse, 100Google Scholar.