Genre, Race, and the Production of Subjectivity in German Romanticism

Genre, Race, and the Production of Subjectivity in German Romanticism

Hardback (30 Apr 2024)

  • $76.60
Add to basket

Includes delivery to the United States

5 copies available online - Usually dispatched within 72 hours

Publisher's Synopsis

Exposes German Romanticism's entanglements of aesthetic philosophy with racialized models of humanity

Late Enlightenment philosophers and writers like Herder, Goethe, and Schiller broke with conventions of form and genre to prioritize an idealized, and racially coded, universality. Newly translated literatures from colonial contexts served as the basis for their evaluations of how to contribute to a distinctly "German" national literary tradition, one that valorized modernity and freedom and thus fortified crucial determinants of modern concepts of whiteness. Through close readings of both canonical and less-studied Romantic texts, Stephanie Galasso examines the intimately entwined histories of racialized subjectivity and aesthetic theory and shows how literary genre is both symptomatic and generative of the cultural violence that underpinned the colonial project.

Poetic expression and its generic conventions continue to exert pressure on the framing and reception of the stories that can be told about interpersonal and structural experiences of oppression. Genre, Race, and the Production of Subjectivity in German Romanticism explores how white subjectivity is guarded by symbolic and material forms of violence.

Book information

ISBN: 9780810146808
Publisher: Northwestern University Press
Imprint: Northwestern University Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 830.9006
DEWEY edition: 23/eng/20231031
Language: English
Number of pages: cm
Weight: 426g
Height: 229mm
Width: 152mm
Spine width: 18mm