Goethe's Concept of the Daemonic: After the Ancients

Angus Nicholls

Goethe's Concept of the Daemonic: After the Ancients
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Country
United States
Published
1 May 2006
Pages
325
ISBN
9781571133076

Goethe’s Concept of the Daemonic: After the Ancients

Angus Nicholls

For Plato, the daemonic is a sensibility that brings individuals into contact with divine knowledge; Socrates was also inspired by a divine voice known as his daimonion. Goethe was introduced to this ancient concept by Hamannand Herder, who associated it with the aesthetic category of genius. This book shows how the young Goethe depicted the idea of daemonic genius in works of the Storm and Stress period, before exploring the daemonic in a series of later poetic and autobiographical works. Reading Goethe’s works on the daemonic through theorists such as Lukacs, Benjamin, Gadamer, Adorno, and Blumenberg, Nicholls contends that they contain arguments concerning reason, nature, and subjectivity that are central to both European Romanticism and the Enlightenment.

Angus Nicholls is Claussen-Simon Foundation Research Lecturer in German and Comparative Literature at the Centre for Anglo-German Cultural Relations in the Department of German, Queen Mary, University of London.

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