Skip to product information
1 of 1

The Birth of Novalis

Regular price £72.50
Sale price £72.50 Regular price £72.50
Sale Sold out
A frank and candid glimpse into the early life of the maturing poet.Friedrich von Hardenberg, who later became known as the poet Novalis, kept a journal between April and July 1797 that captured hi...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 08 February 2007
View Product Details

A frank and candid glimpse into the early life of the maturing poet.

Friedrich von Hardenberg, who later became known as the poet Novalis, kept a journal between April and July 1797 that captured his moods, thoughts, and observations following the death of his fifteen-year-old fiancée Sophie von Kühn and his dearly loved younger brother Erasmus. The journal's short, day-to-day entries allow a frank and candid glimpse into the inner life of the maturing poet, and are complemented by selections from Hardenberg's letters. Taken together, and read in conjunction with the fragments written before, during, and shortly after this period of time, the journal and letters shed light on a process of self-discovery during which Hardenberg became convinced of his poetic vocation and acknowledged this conviction in an act of self-christening, as the poet Novalis.

files/i.png Icon
Price: £72.50
Pages: 166
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series, Intersections: Philosophy and Critical Theory
Publication Date: 08 February 2007
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780791469699
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

REVIEWS Icon

"The Birth of Novalis … the title of which recalls the outworn image, actually dismantles the Novalis legend. This invaluable biographical collection concentrates on the engagement to Sophie von Kühn, from the poet's meeting with the twelve-year-old to her excruciating death at just fifteen. … The diaries are filled with references to social events, to conversations, meals, walks, and so on. There are also some fairly frank notes on his sexual activity, what Novalis calls 'the satisfaction of my fantastical desires.'" — The Times Literary Supplement

"This book offers, for the very first time, a reliable and lucid translation into English of the most important primary sources pertaining to the biography of the German Romantic poet-philosopher Novalis. Here we glimpse the inner workings of a now legendary event: the transformation of the mining student Friedrich von Hardenberg into the romantic poet Novalis. The idea to gather letters and supporting biographical material from precisely this period and unite them into a single volume is both a masterly and welcome enterprise. It finally allows an English-speaking audience direct access to one of the most fascinating and enduring love relationships in literary history—that of Sophie von Kühn and Friedrich von Hardenberg. Donehower's insightful introduction and thoroughly readable commentary interspersed between the letters does a great deal to separate the fact from the fiction and myth in Hardenberg's biography." — David W. Wood, University of Paris IV, Sorbonne

"Making this material available in English is a great service and long overdue. It offers the materials to contextualize Novalis' other writings, showing how his work responds to his particular biographical context (unavoidable, given the strong mythmaking surrounding Novalis' personal losses and their fictionalizations)." — Katherine Arens, author of Empire in Decline: Fritz Mauthner's Critique of Wilhelminian Germany

Introduction

"Reading" Novalis

The Meeting with Sophie von Kühn

The Journal of 1797 and Selected Letters

Selected Letters and Documents: 1792–1797

Journal: April 18–July 6, 1797

Autobiographical and Biographical Testimonies

Friedrich von Hardenberg: Excerpt from a Letter to Finance Minister von Oppel, 1800

Karl von Hardenberg: Biography of His Brother Novalis, 1802

August Cölestin Just: Friedrich von Hardenberg, Assessor of Salt Mines in Saxony and Designated Department Director in Thuringia, 1805

Ludwig Tieck: "Biography of Novalis," 1815

Timeline of Events

Notes
Select Bibliography
Index