Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
19: From Martyr to Vampire: The Figure of Mary Stuart in Drama from Vondel to Swinburne
-
Ritchie Robertson
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Foreword xi
- Acknowledgments xv
- List of Abbreviations xvii
- Introduction: Why Is This Schiller [Still] in the United States? 1
-
Part I: Schiller, Drama, and Poetry
- 1: Lenz und Schiller. Die erlebnissymptomatische Dramensprache 25
- 2: Melancholy in Schiller’s Dramas 37
- 3: Schillers Ästhetik der Trauer. Der Dichter als “elegischer” Lyriker und Dramatiker 55
- 4: Glühendes Wort zum Ideal über der versagenden Realität — zu Schillers Balladen 69
- 5: Zwischen Max Piccolomini und Buttler. Wallensteins Orts- und Zeitverluste 81
-
Part II: Schiller, Aesthetics, and Philosophy
- 6: Die Moralphilosophie des jungen Schiller. Ein ,Kantianer ante litteram‘ 99
- 7: Aesthetic Humanism and Its Foes: The Perspective from Halle 116
- 8: Zur kulturpolitischen Dynamik des ästhetischen Spiels in Schillers Briefen Ueber die ästhetische Erziehung des Menschen 133
- 9: Die Empfänglichkeit für den ästhetischen Schein ist das a priori des Schönen in Kants Kritik der Urteilskraft. Das Orientierende in Schillers Forderung der ästhetischen Erziehung des Menschen 147
- 10: Energy and Schiller’s Aesthetics from the “Philosophical” to the Aesthetic Letters 165
- 11: “Making Other People’s Feelings Our Own”: From the Aesthetic to the Political in Schiller’s Aesthetic Letters 187
-
Part III: Schiller, History, and Politics
- 12: Schiller und die Demokratie 205
- 13: God’s Warriors, Mercenaries, or Freedom Fighters? Politics, Warfare, and Religion in Schiller’s Geschichte des Dreyßigjährigen Kriegs 217
- 14: Who Is This Black Knight? Schiller’s Maid of Orleans and (Mythological) History 236
- 15: Religion and Violence in Schiller’s Late Tragedies 247
- 16: So Who Was Naive? Schiller as Enlightenment Historian and His Successors 271
-
Part IV: Schiller Reception — Reception and Schiller
- 17: Schiller and the Gothic — Reception and Reality 287
- 18: Schiller’s Plays on the British Stage, 1797–1825 302
- 19: From Martyr to Vampire: The Figure of Mary Stuart in Drama from Vondel to Swinburne 321
- 20: A Chapter of Schiller in America: The First World War and Volume 3 of Kuno Francke’s Edition of The German Classics 340
- 21: The Reluctant Recruit? Schiller in the Trenches, 1914–1918 351
- 22: Schiller — Kommerell — George. Eine Konstellation der Moderne 367
- 23: Was sagte dieser Schiller (damals)? Schillers Antworten auf seine Kritiker nach 1945 383
-
Part V: Schiller Now
- 24: Maria Stuart Adaptations in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries: From “Classical” Parodies to Contemporary Politics 403
- 25: Whose Schiller Is This? Das Fremde und das Eigene in US Auslandsgermanistik 425
- 26: Schiller’s Political Ideas: Who Cares? 438
- 27: Where Is This Schiller Now? 451
- Notes on the Contributors 467
- Index 473
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Foreword xi
- Acknowledgments xv
- List of Abbreviations xvii
- Introduction: Why Is This Schiller [Still] in the United States? 1
-
Part I: Schiller, Drama, and Poetry
- 1: Lenz und Schiller. Die erlebnissymptomatische Dramensprache 25
- 2: Melancholy in Schiller’s Dramas 37
- 3: Schillers Ästhetik der Trauer. Der Dichter als “elegischer” Lyriker und Dramatiker 55
- 4: Glühendes Wort zum Ideal über der versagenden Realität — zu Schillers Balladen 69
- 5: Zwischen Max Piccolomini und Buttler. Wallensteins Orts- und Zeitverluste 81
-
Part II: Schiller, Aesthetics, and Philosophy
- 6: Die Moralphilosophie des jungen Schiller. Ein ,Kantianer ante litteram‘ 99
- 7: Aesthetic Humanism and Its Foes: The Perspective from Halle 116
- 8: Zur kulturpolitischen Dynamik des ästhetischen Spiels in Schillers Briefen Ueber die ästhetische Erziehung des Menschen 133
- 9: Die Empfänglichkeit für den ästhetischen Schein ist das a priori des Schönen in Kants Kritik der Urteilskraft. Das Orientierende in Schillers Forderung der ästhetischen Erziehung des Menschen 147
- 10: Energy and Schiller’s Aesthetics from the “Philosophical” to the Aesthetic Letters 165
- 11: “Making Other People’s Feelings Our Own”: From the Aesthetic to the Political in Schiller’s Aesthetic Letters 187
-
Part III: Schiller, History, and Politics
- 12: Schiller und die Demokratie 205
- 13: God’s Warriors, Mercenaries, or Freedom Fighters? Politics, Warfare, and Religion in Schiller’s Geschichte des Dreyßigjährigen Kriegs 217
- 14: Who Is This Black Knight? Schiller’s Maid of Orleans and (Mythological) History 236
- 15: Religion and Violence in Schiller’s Late Tragedies 247
- 16: So Who Was Naive? Schiller as Enlightenment Historian and His Successors 271
-
Part IV: Schiller Reception — Reception and Schiller
- 17: Schiller and the Gothic — Reception and Reality 287
- 18: Schiller’s Plays on the British Stage, 1797–1825 302
- 19: From Martyr to Vampire: The Figure of Mary Stuart in Drama from Vondel to Swinburne 321
- 20: A Chapter of Schiller in America: The First World War and Volume 3 of Kuno Francke’s Edition of The German Classics 340
- 21: The Reluctant Recruit? Schiller in the Trenches, 1914–1918 351
- 22: Schiller — Kommerell — George. Eine Konstellation der Moderne 367
- 23: Was sagte dieser Schiller (damals)? Schillers Antworten auf seine Kritiker nach 1945 383
-
Part V: Schiller Now
- 24: Maria Stuart Adaptations in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries: From “Classical” Parodies to Contemporary Politics 403
- 25: Whose Schiller Is This? Das Fremde und das Eigene in US Auslandsgermanistik 425
- 26: Schiller’s Political Ideas: Who Cares? 438
- 27: Where Is This Schiller Now? 451
- Notes on the Contributors 467
- Index 473