Book
The Poetry of Class
Romantic Anti-Capitalism and the Invention of the Proletariat
-
-
Translated by:
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2024
Purchasable on brill.com
Purchase Book
About this book
In the early 19th century, a new social collective emerged out of impoverished artisans, urban rabble, wandering rural lower classes, bankrupt aristocrats and precarious intellectuals, one that would soon be called the proletariat. But this did not yet exist as a unified, homogeneous class with affiliated political parties. The motley appearance, the dreams and longings of these figures, torn from all economic certainties, found new forms of narration in romantic novellas, reportages, social-statistical studies, and monthly bulletins. But soon enough, these disorderly, violent, nostalgic, errant, and utopian figures were denigrated as reactionary and anarchic by the heads of the labour movement, since they did not fit into their grand linear vision of progress. In this book, Patrick Eiden-Offe tells their story, tracing the making of the proletariat in Vörmarz Germany (1815–1848) through the writings of figures like Ludwig Tieck, Moses Hess, Wilhelm Weitling, Georg Weerth, Friedrich Engels, Louise Otto-Peters, Ernst Willkomm, and Georg Büchner, and in so doing, revealing a striking similarity to the disorderly classes of today.
Author / Editor information
Patrick Eiden-Offe, Ph.D. (1971), is a permanent research associate at the Leibniz-Zentrum für Literatur- und Kulturforschung in Berlin. He has published three books in German, Das Reich der Demokratie. Hermann Brochs “Der Tod des Vergil” (Fink, 2011), Die Poesie der Klasse (Matthes & Seitz, 2017) and Hegels Logik Lesen (Matthes & Seitz, 2021), and is currently writing an intellectual biography of Georg Lukács.
Topics
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
September 25, 2023
eBook ISBN:
9789004685536
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
306
eBook ISBN:
9789004685536
Keywords for this book
Class; Vormärz; Marx; Engels; Romanticism; Early Worker’s Movements; 19th century Germany; Poetry; Germany; 19th century; Worker’s Movements; Workers Movements; Literature; Culture; Proletariat; Luddites; Romantic Anticapitalism; Anticapitalism
Audience(s) for this book
Universities, students, graduates, social and cultural historians, literary scholars, philosophers, labour history, European history, German history, socialism, romanticism, industrialisation, guilds.