Friedrich Schlegel's Lucinde : A Case Study in the Relation of Religion to Romanticism
1985; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 38; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1017/s0036930600030349
ISSN0036-9306
Autores Tópico(s)Psychoanalysis and Social Critique
ResumoIn 1799 a small book called Lucinde was published in Berlin. Written by the brilliant young literary critic Friedrich Schlegel it celebrated his (adulterous) affair with Dorothea Veit, daughter of the eminent Jewish philosopher Moses Mendelssohn. Though not widely read and still less widely understood the book provoked a considerable, and largely hostile, reaction among the reading public. It became to its generation what Lady Chatterley's Lover was to a more recent age: the quintessential embodiment of an obscene book. The author's mother gave utterance to the popular consensus when she wrote that ‘through his novel Fritz has shown himself to me as one who has no religion and no good principles’.
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