Magnificent rebels The first Romantics and the invention of the self

Andrea Wulf

Book - 2022

"From the best-selling author of The Invention of Nature comes an exhilarating story about a remarkable group of young rebels-poets, novelists, philosophers-who, through their epic quarrels, passionate love stories, heartbreaking grief, and radical ideas launched Romanticism onto the world stage, inspiring some of the greatest thinkers of the time. When did we begin to be as self-centered as we are today? At what point did we expect to have the right to determine our own lives? When did we first ask the question, How can I be free? It all began in a quiet university town in Germany in the 1790s, when a group of playwrights, poets, and writers put the self at center stage in their thinking, their writing, and their lives. This brilliant... circle included the famous poets Goethe, Schiller, and Novalis; the visionary philosophers Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel; the contentious Schlegel brothers; and, in a wonderful cameo, Alexander von Humboldt. And at the heart of this group was the formidable Caroline Schlegel, who sparked their dazzling conversations about the self, nature, identity, and freedom. The French revolutionaries may have changed the political landscape of Europe, but the young Romantics incited a revolution of the mind that transformed our world forever. We are still empowered by their daring leap into the self, and by their radical notions of the creative potential of the individual, the highest aspirations of art and science, the unity of nature, and the true meaning of freedom. We also still walk the same tightrope between meaningful self-fulfillment and destructive narcissism, between the rights of the individual and our responsibilities toward our community and future generations. At the heart of this inspiring book is the extremely modern tension between the dangers of selfishness and the thrilling possibilities of free will"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Andrea Wulf (author)
Edition
First American edition
Item Description
"This is a Borzoi book"
Physical Description
xi, 494 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), maps ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 453-471) and index.
ISBN
9780525657118
9781984897992
  • Dramatis Personae
  • Maps
  • Prologue
  • Part I. Arrival
  • 1. 'A happy event'
  • Summer 1794: Goethe and Schiller
  • 2. 'I am a priest of truth'
  • Summer 1794: Fichte's Ich-philosophy
  • 3. 'The nation's finest minds'
  • Winter 1794-Spring 1795: Where All Paths Lead
  • 4. 'Electrified by our intellectual friction'
  • 1795-1796: Love, Life and Literature
  • 5. 'Philosophy is originally a feeling'
  • Summer 1796: Novalis in Love
  • 6. 'Our splendid circle'
  • Summer-Winter 1796: The Schlegels Arrive
  • Part II. Experiments
  • 7. 'Our little academy'
  • Spring 1797: Goethe and Alexander von Humboldt
  • 8. 'Grasp, then, a handful of darkness'
  • Summer-Winter 1797: Novalis's Death Wish
  • 9. 'Sublime impertinence'
  • Winter 1797-Spring 1798: The Dawn of Romanticism
  • 10. 'Symphilosophy is our connection's true name'
  • Summer 1798: A Vacation in Dresden and Schelling Arrives
  • Part III. Connections
  • 11. 'To be one with everything living'
  • Autumn 1798-Spring 1799: Schelling's Naturphilosophie
  • 12. 'Idol worshippers, atheists, liars'
  • 1799: Scandals Part One. Fichte's Dismissal
  • 13. 'You lose yourself in a dizzy whirl'
  • 1799: Scandals Part Two. Divorce, Women and Sex
  • 14. 'The Schlegel clique'
  • Autumn 1799: Work and Play
  • 15. 'Solemnly calling a new confederation of minds'
  • November 1799: A Meeting in Leutragasse
  • Part IV. Fragmentation
  • 16. 'The republic of despots'
  • Winter 1799-Summer 1800: Estrangements
  • 17. 'O what a black fog'
  • Summer 1800-Spring 1801: Darkness Falls
  • 18. 'When philosophers start eating one another like starving rats'
  • Spring 1801-Spring 1803: Separations
  • 19. 'The current exodus'
  • 1804-1805: Jena Abandoned
  • 20. 'The French are in town!'
  • October 1806: The Battle of Jena
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgements
  • Picture Credits
  • Notes
  • Bibliography and Sources
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Wulf's quest "to understand why we are who we are" inspired her highly awarded, best-selling The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt's New World (2015), which led her to the small German university town of Jena. There, in the 1790s, in the shuddering aftermath of the French Revolution as France and Germany were at war, an extraordinary group of radical thinkers and poets questioned the Enlightenment's emphasis on reason and considered the significance of the individual. Philosopher Fichte's emphasis on the primacy of the self inspired the Jena Set to elevate the imagination, define nature as a living "interconnected whole," assert that art is as important for navigating life as science, transform literature, and claim personal freedom. Wulf anchors every evolving aspect of this new paradigm to exceptionally well-informed and vital profiles of the "First Romantics," including the protean Goethe, poets Schiller and Novalis, the literary-critic Schlegel brothers, the von Humboldt brothers (Wilhelm a linguist and diplomat), and philosopher Schelling, chronicling their complex personalities, accomplishments, "intellectual symbiosis," and often-contentious relationships within remarkably detailed settings and social and cultural contexts. Wulf is particularly attuned to Caroline Böhmer-Schlegel-Schelling, a "writer, translator, literary critic and muse" of exceptional magnetism and intellectual power. An extensively researched, gorgeously written, vibrant, multifaceted, and richly elucidative portrait of a group that "changed our world."

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Historian Wulf (The Invention of Nature) delivers an engrossing group biography of the late-18th-century German intellectuals whose "obsession with the free self" initiated the Romantic movement and led to the modern conception of self-determination. The group, which came together in the German university town of Jena, included poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe; philosopher Johann Gottlieb Fichte, who promulgated the idea of the Ich, or self, as the center of free will; Friedrich Schiller, whose breakout play, The Robbers, "showed how a good person could become a criminal as a result of experiencing injustice"; and philosopher Friedrich Schelling, who promoted "being in nature" as a means to self-discovery. Known as the Young Romantics, their lives and work embodied the "wild, raw, mysterious, chaotic, and alive," according to group member August Wilhelm Schelling. Wulf pays particular attention to the cohort's oft-overlooked female members, including Caroline Böhmer-Schlegel-Schelling, a free-spirited intellectual with a "core of steel" whose "refus to be restricted by the role that society had intended for women" landed her in prison, among other controversies. Wulf also delves into the influence of the French Revolution and the Napoleonic wars on the group and explains heady philosophical concepts in clear prose ("Is the tree that I'm seeing in my garden the tree-as-it-appears-to-us or the tree-in-itself?"). The result is a colorful and page-turning intellectual history. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Author of The Invention of Nature, a New York Times best seller that grabbed 15 literary awards worldwide, Wulf looks back at the German poets, philosophers, and intellectuals who launched Romanticism (think Goethe, Schiller, and Hegel, not to mention the influential Caroline Schlegel) to understand our absorption with the self today. Not just for the philosophizing set.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A spirited re-creation of the world of the German founders of the post-Enlightenment movement. Following on her excellent biography of Alexander von Humboldt, The Invention of Nature, Wulf reconstructs the intellectual circle of the German town of Jena, which Caroline Böhmer-Schlegel-Schelling, a local "translator, literary critic and muse," called "the Kingdom of Philosophy." The reigning spirit of that circle was, perhaps arguably, the eminent writer Johann Wolfgang von Goethe--arguably because his pals played snarky games behind his back, one calling him an "old worn-out demigod," and because his real home was nearby Weimar, not Jena. "The Jena Set" would do their squabbling English romantic successors proud: A new argument or schism was always brewing, sometimes over matters of philosophy and sometimes over personality, as with the split between the Schlegel and Schiller clans. "As her dislike grew, Charlotte Schiller began to advise others to fumigate their rooms once Caroline Schlegel had left," writes Wulf of one episode in the feud, while August Wilhelm Schlegel wrote in a letter to a friend, "People hate us--good! They curse us--even better! They make the sign of the cross to ward us off like blasphemers, Jacobins, and corrupters of youth--God be praised!" For all the rancor, Wulf notes, the productivity of the Jena circle was astounding: dozens of philosophical tomes (especially Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit), natural-history treatises, poems, and, from Goethe, long-in-the-making works such as Faust. Indeed, "The Jena Set's ideas rippled out from the small town in the Duchy of Saxe-Weimar to the wider world," championed in Britain by Coleridge and Carlyle and by Thoreau and Emerson in the U.S. Many of their fruitful ideas remain: nature as a living thing, art as a way of uniting humans with nature, and, against the background of the Napoleonic Wars, their insistence on individual rights. An illuminating exploration of the life of the mind and the sometimes-fraught production of art. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

PART I Arrival Now at last we've overcome all the obstacles in our path, and left them behind us too, on rails as smooth as the ones you've been on for so long. And alongside yours, too. I'm unspeakably happy . . . and this valley is already a dear friend. Caroline Schlegel to Luise Gotter, 11 July 1796 1 'A happy event' Summer 1794: Goethe and Schiller On 20 July 1794 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe heaved himself into the saddle and rode from his house in the centre of Weimar to Jena, where he planned to attend a botanical meeting of the recently founded Natural History Society. It was a hot summer that would soon turn into a glorious autumn - long sun-baked months during which pears, apples, sweet melons and apricots ripened four weeks early and the vineyards produced one of the century's greatest vintages. On the fifteen-mile ride from Weimar to Jena, Goethe passed farmers scything wheat in golden fields and great haystacks awaiting storage as winter fodder in the barns. After a couple of hours of riding through flat farmland, the countryside began to change. Little villages and hamlets snuggled into gentle dips, and then the forest closed in and the fields disappeared. The land became more hilly. Shell-bearing limestone cliffs rose to the left, exposing the geological memory of the region when this part of Germany had been a landlocked sea some 240 million years ago. Just before he reached Jena, Goethe crossed the so-called Snail, the steep hill named after the serpentine road that wound up to its top. Then, finally, he saw Jena beneath him, nestled in a wide valley and held in the elbow of the Saale River with the jagged outline of the forested mountains behind. These were more hills than mountains, perhaps, but the views were spectacular - and the reason why Swiss students in Jena lovingly called the surrounding area 'little Switzerland'. Then, finally, he saw Jena beneath him, nestled in a wide valley and held in the elbow of the Saale River with the jagged outline of the forested mountains behind. These were more hills than mountains, perhaps, but the views were spectacular - and the reason why Swiss students in Jena lovingly called the surrounding area 'little Switzerland'. his fortunes, collected books and art, and educated his children. Though a lively and bright child, Goethe had not shown any excep-tional talents. He loved to draw, was proud of his immaculate handwriting and enjoyed the theatre. When the French had occupied Frankfurt in 1759 during the Seven Years War and their commander had been billeted at the Goethes' house, young Goethe had made the best of it by learning French from the occupying forces. He had studied law in Leipzig and worked as a lawyer, but also began to write. In the mid-1770s he had been thrust into the public eye with the publication of his novel The Sorrows of Young Werther- the story of a forlorn lover who commits suicide. Goethe's protag-onist is irrational, emotional and free. 'I withdraw into myself and find a world there,' Werther declares. The novel captured the senti-mentality of the time and became the book of a generation. A huge international bestseller, it was so popular that countless men, including Carl August, the ruler of the small Duchy of Saxe-Weimar, had dressed like Werther - wearing a yellow waistcoat and breeches, blue tailcoat with brass buttons, brown boots and a round grey felt hat. Chinese manufacturers even produced Werther porcelain for the European market. It was said that Werther had caused a wave of suicides, and forty years after its publication the British poet Lord Byron joked with Goethe that his protagonist 'has put more individuals out of this world than Napoleon himself '. The Sorrows of Young Werther had been Goethe's most vivid contribution to the so-called Sturm und Drang - the Storm and Stress movement - which had elevated feelings above the rationalism of the Enlightenment. In this period, which had celebrated emotion in all its extremes, from passionate love to dark melancholy, from suicidal longings to frenzied delight, Goethe had become a literary superstar. The eighteen-year-old Duke Carl August had been so enraptured by the novel that he had invited Goethe to live and work in the duchy in 1775. Goethe was twenty-six when he moved to Weimar; and he knew how to make an entry, arriving dressed in his Werther uniform. During those early years the poet and the young duke had roistered through the streets and taverns of the town. They had played pranks on unsuspecting locals and flirted with peasant girls. The duke loved to gallop across the fields and to sleep in hay barns or camp in the forest. There had been drunken brawls, theatrical declarations of love, naked swimming and nightly tree climbing - but those wild years were long gone and Goethe had turned his back on his Sturm und Drang phase. In time, both poet and ruler calmed down, and Goethe had become part of the duchy's government. The small state had just over a hundred thousand inhabitants - tiny in comparison to the five million people of nearby Prussia, or other powerful states such as Saxony, Bavaria or Württemberg. With a mostly agrarian economy - grain, fruit, wine, vegetable gardens as well as sheep and cattle - the Duchy of Saxe-Weimar had little trade and manufacturing, yet it maintained a bloated court of two thousand courtiers, officials and soldiers, all of whom had to be paid. The town of Weimar itself had a provincial feel. Most of the seven hundred and fifty houses had only one storey and such small windows that they felt gloomy and cramped inside. The streets were dirty, and there were only two busi-nesses in the market square that sold goods which could be classed as luxury items - a perfumery and a textile shop. There wasn't even a stagecoach station. Goethe became Carl August's confidant and his privy councillor - so trusted that it was rumoured that the duke didn't decide anything without the poet's advice. In time, Goethe took charge of the royal theatre and of rebuilding the burned-down castle in Weimar, in addition to several other well-paid administrative positions, including the control of the duchy's mines. He also worked closely with his colleague in the Weimar administration, minister Christian Gottlob Voigt. A diligent worker, Goethe was never idle - 'I never smoked tobacco, never played chess, in short, I never did anything that would have wasted my time.' In 1794, Goethe was forty-four and no longer the dashing Apollo of his youth. He had put on so much weight that his once beautiful eyes had disappeared into the flesh of his cheeks and one visitor compared him to 'a woman in the last stages of pregnancy'. His nose was aquiline, and like so many contemporaries, his teeth were yellowed and crooked. He had a penchant for stripy and flowery long waist-coats, which he buttoned tightly over his round belly. Unlike the younger generation, who often wore fashionable loose-fitting trou-sers, Goethe preferred breeches. He wore boots with turned-down tops and always his tricorne. He kept his hair coiffed and powdered, with two carefully pomaded curls over his ears and a long, stiff ponytail. Knowing that everybody was watching him, he always made sure to be properly dressed and groomed when he went out. Ennobled by the duke in 1782, he was now Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and lived in a large house in Weimar, where he often tried and failed to work amid a constant stream of strangers knocking on his door to gawp at the famous poet. He loathed these disruptions almost as much as he hated noise, in particular the rattling of his neighbour's loom and the skittle alley in a nearby tavern. Goethe might have turned his back on the Sturm und Drang era, but it seemed as if his creativity had done the same to him. For years he had failed to produce anything remarkable and his plays were no longer widely staged. He fussed over his writings for years. More than two decades earlier, he had begun to work on his drama Faust but only a few scenes had been published. He had rewritten and changed his tragedy Iphigenia in Tauris so many times - from prose to blank verse, back to prose, to its final version in classical iambic verse - that he called it his 'problem child'. And though he was the director of the Weimar theatre, he preferred to stage popular plays by his contemporaries rather than his own. Botany was now Goethe's favourite subject, and the reason he often came to Jena. He was overseeing the construction of a new botanical garden and institute in Jena. Originally founded in 1548 as a medicinal garden, the university's existing botanical garden had been used to train physicians, but Duke Carl August had asked Goethe to extend and move it to a new location, just north of the old town walls. Goethe enjoyed every aspect of the project because it united his deep love of nature and beauty with scientific rigour. He was looking forward to the meeting of the Natural History Society. Excerpted from Magnificent Rebels: The First Romantics and the Invention of the Self by Andrea Wulf All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.