Carl Sternheim's aesthetics in theory and practice

<p>A brief introduction raises some of the methodological difficulties involved in a study of the relationship between a writer's literary theory and his practice. The use of the term "aesthetics" is justified, and some of the deficiencies in previous critical accounts of Sternh...

Mô tả đầy đủ

Chi tiết về thư mục
Tác giả chính: Williams, R
Định dạng: Luận văn
Được phát hành: 1974
_version_ 1826304191510872064
author Williams, R
author_facet Williams, R
author_sort Williams, R
collection OXFORD
description <p>A brief introduction raises some of the methodological difficulties involved in a study of the relationship between a writer's literary theory and his practice. The use of the term "aesthetics" is justified, and some of the deficiencies in previous critical accounts of Sternheim's theory are noted. The ambiguity in Sternheim's theoretical statements, it is argued, corresponds closely to the conflict inherent in his creative work between criticism and affirmation.</p> <p>The first chapter is devoted to a discussion of aspects of Sternheim's aesthetics up to 1906, his ideas being placed in a wider intellectual context. When Sternheim treats a conventional conflict between art and life in his early plays, his artist-hero does not come into serious conflict with society, it is the conflict between the artist's private life and the demands of his vocation which is central. Sternheim's treatment of the theme reflects the ambiguity inherent in the aesthetic itself. Secondly, neo-Romantic elements in his early work are isolated and it is shown that these continue to form one pole of his theory even after he has abandoned his early view of art as the expression of powerful feelings. Finally, his early efforts to evolve formal categories around 1904-1906 are recorded. These insights derived from his acquaintance with the work of Heinrich Wölfflin and applied largely to the visual arts fail to answer Sternheim's needs, but serve as a prelude to his encounter with Heinrich Rickert's philosophy.</p> [Please see pdf. for full abstract.]
first_indexed 2024-03-07T06:14:03Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:f080eb99-1da5-4e02-bb37-6d08b0e2f347
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-07T06:14:03Z
publishDate 1974
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:f080eb99-1da5-4e02-bb37-6d08b0e2f3472022-03-27T11:48:26ZCarl Sternheim's aesthetics in theory and practiceThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:f080eb99-1da5-4e02-bb37-6d08b0e2f347Polonsky Theses Digitisation Project1974Williams, R<p>A brief introduction raises some of the methodological difficulties involved in a study of the relationship between a writer's literary theory and his practice. The use of the term "aesthetics" is justified, and some of the deficiencies in previous critical accounts of Sternheim's theory are noted. The ambiguity in Sternheim's theoretical statements, it is argued, corresponds closely to the conflict inherent in his creative work between criticism and affirmation.</p> <p>The first chapter is devoted to a discussion of aspects of Sternheim's aesthetics up to 1906, his ideas being placed in a wider intellectual context. When Sternheim treats a conventional conflict between art and life in his early plays, his artist-hero does not come into serious conflict with society, it is the conflict between the artist's private life and the demands of his vocation which is central. Sternheim's treatment of the theme reflects the ambiguity inherent in the aesthetic itself. Secondly, neo-Romantic elements in his early work are isolated and it is shown that these continue to form one pole of his theory even after he has abandoned his early view of art as the expression of powerful feelings. Finally, his early efforts to evolve formal categories around 1904-1906 are recorded. These insights derived from his acquaintance with the work of Heinrich Wölfflin and applied largely to the visual arts fail to answer Sternheim's needs, but serve as a prelude to his encounter with Heinrich Rickert's philosophy.</p> [Please see pdf. for full abstract.]
spellingShingle Williams, R
Carl Sternheim's aesthetics in theory and practice
title Carl Sternheim's aesthetics in theory and practice
title_full Carl Sternheim's aesthetics in theory and practice
title_fullStr Carl Sternheim's aesthetics in theory and practice
title_full_unstemmed Carl Sternheim's aesthetics in theory and practice
title_short Carl Sternheim's aesthetics in theory and practice
title_sort carl sternheim s aesthetics in theory and practice
work_keys_str_mv AT williamsr carlsternheimsaestheticsintheoryandpractice