Critics have long sought to elucidate the multilayered texts of E. T. A. Hoffmann by applying to them a particular set of theories and ideas that Hoffmann himself subsumed under the heading of the "Serapiontic Principle." This principle, which Hoffmann expounded in his collection of tales Die Serapionsbr?der, involves a complex intersection of the artist's faculties of imagination and perception. However, Hoffmann's mode of presenting his theory presents an unusual problem: rather than the usual form of an essay or treatise, he adopts a fictional framework, complete with a set of "characters"; this in turn sets up a number of perspectives on the theory itself. This combination of literary and theoretical elements presents a severe challenge to critics, and not surprisingly there has been little agreement about what the "principle" actually entails or its wider relevance. With the principle as prime focus, this book provides detailed analysis of a broadly based selection of Hoffmann's texts, both theoretical and literary. It offers new perspectives on his narrative invention and the range of his theoretical interests, thus redefining his place at the forefront of German Romanticism. Hilda Meldrum Brown is professor of German at St Hilda's College, University of Oxford.
Author(s): Hilda M. Brown
Year: 2006
Language: English
Pages: 225
CONTENTS
......Page 8
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
......Page 9
PREFACE
......Page 10
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
......Page 12
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
......Page 14
Introduction: Approaches to the Serapiontic Principle......Page 16
Part 1......Page 34
1: Overture: Jacques Callot......Page 36
2: Der Einsiedler Serapion:
The Formulation of a Principle......Page 48
3: Der Dichter und Der Komponist:
Text and Music......Page 72
4: Alte und neue Kirchenmusik......Page 87
5: Prinzessin Brambilla: Callot Revisited......Page 107
6: Epilogue: Des Vetters Eckfenster......Page 121
Part 2......Page 132
7: Frame Narrative and the
Serapiontic Principle......Page 134
8: From Visual to Verbal: Three
Serapiontic Tales......Page 150
9: The “Nachtseite der Natur” and the
Serapiontic Principle......Page 172
10: The Märchen and the Serapiontic
Principle......Page 184
11: The Serapiontic Principle:
The Wider Critique......Page 200
CONCLUSION
......Page 212
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
......Page 216
INDEX
......Page 222