Der deutsche Roman seit Goethe : Skizzen und Streiflichter by Martin Schian

(4 User reviews)   391
By Nathaniel Nelson Posted on Jan 9, 2026
In Category - Resilience
Schian, Martin, 1869-1944 Schian, Martin, 1869-1944
German
"Der deutsche Roman seit Goethe : Skizzen und Streiflichter" by Martin Schian is a collection of literary lectures written in the early 20th century. The work surveys the development of the German novel from Goethe onward, combining clear, accessible criticism with selective case studies rather than exhaustive cataloging. It aims to help educated r...
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problem-oriented fiction. The opening of the work sets its scope and purpose in a preface: these are adapted public lectures meant to present literary history lucidly to a wider audience, focusing only on the German novel since Goethe and favoring depth over completeness. The first chapter argues for the cultural weight of the novel, defines it as a complex narrative that furnishes a world-picture rooted in reality, and distinguishes modes (historical, contemporary, psychological, naturalistic, and tendentious), while warning against trivial or purely sensational fiction. A concise prehistory follows, from medieval verse narratives and Volksbücher through Reformation-era bourgeois tales, Grimmelshausen’s seventeenth-century satire, and the Enlightenment, critiquing Wieland’s Agathon as philosophically didactic yet dramatically thin, before declaring Goethe the true founder of the modern German novel. The subsequent, substantial analysis reads Werther as a gripping interior study of passion, Wilhelm Meister as a sprawling but idea-rich Bildungsroman, and The Elective Affinities as a model of unified idea and action centered on marriage; Wanderjahre is deemed a chain of novellas rather than a novel. The section closes by framing Goethe’s enduring importance—psychological depth, timely sensibility, and the fusion of thought with plot—and then pivots to Romantic prose: Novalis’s visionary, allegorical Heinrich von Ofterdingen, Eichendorff’s lyrical fairy-tale-like Taugenichts, Schlegel’s fragmentary and sensual Lucinde, and E. T. A. Hoffmann’s darkly fantastic, uncanny tales, exemplified by The Devil’s Elixir. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
Elizabeth Roberts
5 months ago

I didn't expect much, but it creates a vivid world that you simply do not want to leave. I'm sending the link to all my friends.

Lisa Wilson
2 months ago

It took me a while to start, but the author anticipates common questions and addresses them well. I couldn't put it down until the very end.

Lucas Young
3 months ago

During my studies, I found that the character development is subtle yet leaves a lasting impact. This felt rewarding to read.

Logan Nguyen
3 months ago

A fantastic discovery, it creates a vivid world that you simply do not want to leave. Time very well spent.

4
4 out of 5 (4 User reviews )

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