The German Tradition of Self-Cultivation: 'Bildung' from Humboldt to Thomas Mann


Price:
Sale price$77.92

Description

In a lecture in 1923, Thomas Mann said that the ordinary middle-class German had never considered culture to include an interest in politics, and still did not do so. The idea of the true freedom which comes to the man who lives as much as possible in the invisible world of culture and accepts as a kind of fate his social, political and material circumstances was indeed at the heart of the German idealism of Goethe's day, and unworldliness went along with very great achievements in literature, scholarship and philosophy. Bildung, self-cultivation, came to be as natural a requirement of educated, middle-class life as sport was in England. In this book, originally published in 1975, Professor Bruford provides a sequel to Culture and Society in Classical Weimar 1775-1806 and shows how the ideal of self-cultivation entered into the thought of a number of highly individual German philosophers, theologians, poets and novelists, each in his own corner of the rapidly changing world of the nineteenth century.

Author: W. H. Bruford
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 02/04/2010
Pages: 304
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.85lbs
Size: 8.50h x 5.51w x 0.68d
ISBN13: 9780521129008
ISBN10: 0521129001
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Criticism | European | General

This title is not returnable