Committed aestheticism : the poetic theory and practice of Günter Eich

Bibliographic Information

Committed aestheticism : the poetic theory and practice of Günter Eich

Larry L. Richardson

(American university studies, Series I, Germanic languages and literatures ; vol. 21)

P. Lang, c1983

  • pbk.

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Note

Revision of the author's thesis (doctoral)--University of Washington, 1975 under title: The function of lyric poetry

Bibliography: p. 220-238

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This study investigates the antithetical functions of aestheticism and political commitment in Guenter Eich's poetic theory and poetry, from the nature poetry of the 1930s to the anti-poetry of the 1960s. In an analysis of selected poems and of all known speeches, essays, book reviews, and notes on poetry, Dr. Richardson closely examines an important controversial issue in Eich scholarship and criticism: Was Guenter Eich a poetic aesthete, aloof from the social and political turmoil of his time, or was he really an engaged poet who struggled against the reactionary politics of German society and the dehumanizing forces of the modern world? This study concludes that Eich is neither a pure nor a political poet, but an advocate of committed aestheticism, in which pure art is cultivated to counteract politics and power.

Table of Contents

Contents: Guenter Eich - Poetry and poetic theory - Aestheti- cism - Political literature - German literature of the twentieth century.

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