Literature and Religion in the German-Speaking World: From 1200 to the Present Day
Cambridge University Press, 9/26/2019
EAN 9781108418102, ISBN10: 1108418104
Hardcover, 354 pages, 23.8 x 16.6 x 2.5 cm
Language: English
The relationship between literature and religion in German is unique in the European tradition. It is essential to the definition of German, Austrian and Swiss cultural identity in both the Protestant and Catholic traditions, and is crucial to our understanding of what has been called the 'special path' of German intellectual life. Offering in-depth essays by leading scholars, Literature and Religion in the German-Speaking World analyses this relationship from the beginnings of vernacular literature in German, via the Reformation, early-modern and Enlightenment periods, to the present day. It shows how such fundamental concepts as 'subjectivity', 'identity' and 'modernity' itself arise from the interrelation between religious and secular modes of understanding, and how this interrelation is inseparable from its expression in literature.
Introduction
literature and religion in the German-speaking world, 1200 to the present Ian Cooper and John Walker
1. Pagan, Christian, secular
German writing until 1450 Almut Suerbaum
2. Literature and religion in the Holy Roman Empire, 1450–1700 Helen Watanabe-O'Kelly
3. German literature and religion, 1700–1770
the shock and normalization of the infinite John H. Smith
4. Literature and religion in Germany, 1770–1830 Ian Cooper
5. Culture, society and secularization
literature and religion in the German-speaking world, 1830–1900 John Walker
6. Religion in German modernism, 1900–1945 Carolin Duttlinger
7. German literature and religion, 1945 to the present day Daniel Weidner
Index.