Gefühlte Freiheit? Zum Verhältnis von Sinnlichkeit und Individualität im Sturm und Drang – Herders mystischer Monismus in Vom Erkennen und Empfinden der menschlichen Seele

Author(s):  
Leonhard Herrmann
Keyword(s):  
2003 ◽  
Vol 76 (3) ◽  
pp. 332
Author(s):  
Karin A. Wurst ◽  
Andreas Meier ◽  
Hans-Gerd Winter

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Günter Peters

Mit dem vorliegenden Buch liegt die erste Gesamtdarstellung der Rezeptions- und Wirkungsgeschichte des Prometheusmythos in deutscher Sprache vor. Nicht durch die Ausbreitung beliebiger Fülle wird die bis heute ungebrochene Signifikanz dieses Mythos anschaulich gemacht, vielmehr zeigt der Autor in Lektüren, Analysen und Interpretationen modellbildender Texte aus seiner Geschichte und an verblüffend aktuellen Inanspruchnahmen im Alltag der Gegenwart, wie sich aufgrund der Nachhaltigkeit und Novellierbarkeit des Prometheus-Mythos Figuren der Erkenntnisbildung und Methoden der Wirklichkeitsreflexion im Bereich von Literatur, Kunst, Philosophie, Wissenschaft und Kritik scharf und differenziert ausprägen. Von den Anfängen der kulturellen Überlieferung bis in die unmittelbare Gegenwart reicht die ›Arbeit am Mythos‹ von Prometheus. Hesiod, Aischylos, Platon, Aristophanes und Lukian führen ihn als Schlüsselfigur in den mythologischen, literarischen und philosophischen Diskurs ein. Im Agon des Titanen mit dem Gott Zeus formieren sich die Grundstrukturen des menschlichen Daseins. Die Verknüpfung mit Gestalten wie Epimetheus, Pandora oder Herakles steigert die Vielbezüglichkeit des Mythos und setzt ein Bilder-Denken in Polaritäten und Konstellationen in Gang. In Renaissance und Barock, Aufklärung und Romantik artikulieren Autoren wie Boccaccio, Bacon, Calderón, Voltaire und Rousseau Reichweite und Kritik neuzeitlicher Wissenschaftskonzepte und Gesellschaftsentwürfe durch Auslegung und Umarbeitung seines Mythos. Zur Identifikationsfigur für das rebellische Künstlergenie geworden, verkünden Goethe, Herder und der ›Sturm und Drang‹ in Prometheus antiabsolutistisches Freiheitsbegehren, schöpferischen Autonomieanspruch und klassische Humanitätsidee. Am Feuer des Prometheus entzündet sich die technologische Phantasie in Wissenschaft wie Science Fiction, gleichzeitig leiten technikkritische Stimmen ihre Argumente aus seinem Mythos ab. Auf Prometheus berufen sich Apologeten und Kritiker sozialistischer wie marktliberaler Gesellschaftsentwürfe.


1960 ◽  
Vol 64 (595) ◽  
pp. 395-398 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander M. Lippisch

The Revival of interest in flight by man's own muscle power brings back to me some early attempts to solve this problem some 30 years ago.Needless to say I was—and still am—sold on this idea ever since reading Lilienthal's famous book as a youngster in school. Then came the Wright Brothers and the early years of flying and the years of the First Great War at the end of which I found myself as an Aerodynamicist, designing wing sections and calculating induced drag according to Prandtl's newly discovered wing theory.The end of the war found us meditating about gliding and the possibility of soaring flight. And so came the Rhoen, and the “Sturm und Drang” of the years on the Wasserkuppe.


2000 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 255-265
Author(s):  
Lukas Erne

Britain began making Shakespeare her national poet early in the eighteenth century, and Germany followed suit a few decades later, progressively turning ‘unser Shakespeare’ into one of three national poets, with Goethe and Schiller. As early as 1773, Johann Gottfried Herder included his essay on ‘Shakespear’ in a collection entitled Von Deutscher Art und Kunst. The drama of the ‘Sturm und Drang’, which Herder's collection programmatically inaugurated, appropriated what Goethe (Götz von Berlichingen), Schiller (The Robbers) and their contemporaries (mis)understood to be Shakespeare's dramatic technique. By the end of the century, the assimilation had advanced far enough for August Wilhelm von Schlegel, the famous translator of seventeen of Shakespeare's plays, to indulge in no slight national chauvinism: ‘I am eager’, he writes in a letter to his cotranslator Ludwig Tieck, ‘to have your letters on Shakespeare.… I hope you will prove, among other things, that Shakespeare wasn't English. I wonder how he came to dwell among the frosty, stupid souls on that brutal island? … The English critics understand nothing about Shakespeare.’ Even though Tieck failed to prove that Shakespeare was not of English birth, the conviction that Shakespeare was best understood by German rather than by English critics only grew in the course of the nineteenth century. Appropriately, it was in Germany that the first periodical devoted exclusively to Shakespeare, the Jahrbuch der Deutschen Shakespeare-Gesellschaft, was founded in 1865. Fifty years later, the German novelist Gerhart Hauptmann could still claim that ‘there is no people, not even the English, that has the same right to claim Shakespeare as the German. Shakespeare's characters are a part of our world, his soul has become one with ours: and though he was born and buried in England, Germany is the country where he truly lives.’


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Freeden Blume Blume Oeur

While originally referring to the use of material objects to convey abstract ideas, “object lesson” took on a second meaning at the turn of the twentieth century. This particular connotation—denoting a person and leader as moral exemplar—reveals fault lines between the thinking of W. E. B. Du Bois and G. Stanley Hall on young people. Through his own adoption of the German ideals of sturm und drang and bildungsroman, as well as “aftershadowing”—a recalibration of ideas and reflections on his own family genealogy, childhood, and intellectual lineages—Du Bois made ideological claims that were a counter-narrative to Hall’s recapitulation theory.


2013 ◽  
Vol 9 (S303) ◽  
pp. 395-398
Author(s):  
Brian C. Lacki

AbstractThe Galactic center central molecular zone (GCCMZ) bears similarities with extragalactic starburst regions, including a high supernova (SN) rate density. As in other starbursts like M82, the frequent SNe can heat the ISM until it is filled with a hot (∼ 4 × 107 K) superwind. Furthermore, the random forcing from SNe stirs up the wind, powering Mach 1 turbulence. I argue that a turbulent dynamo explains the strong magnetic fields in starbursts, and I predict an average B ∼70 μG in the GCCMZ. I demonstrate how the SN driving of the ISM leads to equipartition between various pressure components in the ISM. The SN-heated wind escapes the center, but I show that it may be stopped in the Galactic halo. I propose that the Fermi bubbles are the wind's termination shock.


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