ABSTRACT

Memory in German Romanticism treats memory as a core element in the production and reception of German art and literature of the Romantic era. The contributors explore the artistic expression of memory under the categories of imagination, image, and reception. Romantic literary aesthetics raises the subjective imagination to a level of primary importance for the creation of art. It goes beyond challenging reason and objectivity, two leading intellectual faculties of eighteenth-century Enlightenment, and instead elevates subjective invention to form and sustain memory and imagination. Indeed, memory and imagination, both cognitive functions, seek to assemble the elements of one’s own experience, either directed toward the past (memory) or toward the future (imagination), coherently into a narrative. And like memories, images hold the potential to elicit charged emotional responses; those responses live on through time, becoming part of the spatial and temporal reception of the artist and their work. While imagination generates and images trigger and capture memories, reception creates a temporal-spatial context for art, organizing it and rendering it "memorable," both for good and for bad. Thus, through the categories of imagination, image, and reception, this volume explores the phenomenon of German Romantic memory from different perspectives and in new contexts.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

Memory in German Romanticism: Imagination, Image, Reception

part I|71 pages

Imagination

chapter 1|25 pages

Amnesia, Chaos, Trauma

Kleist's Memory Games

chapter 3|22 pages

Memory, Fact, and Fiction

Imaginative Biographical Representation in the Novels of E.T.A. Hoffmann

part II|88 pages

Image

part III|77 pages

Reception

chapter 9|23 pages

Urban Palimpsests and Contentious Memorials

Cultural Memory and Heinrich Heine

chapter 10|25 pages

No Mass or Kaddish

The Forgotten Poet in Heinrich Heine's Late Poetry