Delayed Endings: Nonclosure in Novalis and Holderlin
Delayed Endings: Nonclosure in Novalis and Holderlin
The works of the German Romantic authors Novalis (Friedrich von Hardenberg) and Friedrich H lderlin were profoundly affected by their loss of belief in endings and ultimacies. They wrote during an age of intellectual crisis, when apocalyptic expectations had reached their pitch and the volatile ideas generated by the French Revolution seemed to challenge even the passing of time itself.
In Delayed Endings, Alice A. Kuzniar demonstrates how Novalis and H lderlin exemplified the Romantics' new way of narrating time, and how their method of nonclosure, or the deliberate avoidance of resolution and the strategies that bring it about, united the narrative, semantic, and thematic strains of their work. Novalis's Heinrich von Ofterdingen not only lacks a conclusion but even has a ruptured and disoriented beginning. Sharing Novalis's obsession with deferred endings, H lderlin's late verse fragments and revisions reflect his questioning of ultimate human endings. Just as the persona in his hymn "Patmos" is within close proximity of friends but forever separated from them by treacherous alpine gorges, so too is God near yet incomprehensible. Novalis and H lderlin represent a generation of writers who no longer perceived themselves as participants in a world of meaningful temporal progression. Introducing Novalis and H lderlin as masters in the art of sustained deviation and displacement, Alice Kuzniar demonstrates how Romantic writers foreshadowed modern critical thought in their mistrust of completed artifice and their circumvention of the reader's desire for closure.Author: Alice a. Kuzniar
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Published: 04/01/2008
Pages: 264
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.75lbs
Size: 8.50h x 5.50w x 0.60d
ISBN: 9780820332444
About the Author
ALICE A. KUZNIAR is a professor of German and Comparative Literature at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. She is the author of Melancholia's Dog: Reflections on Our Animal Kinship and The Queer German Cinema and editor of Outing Goethe and His Age.