The Merchant in German Literature of the Enlightenment
Abstract
John Van Cleve analyzes the influence of the merchant class on what Leo Balet termed the 'Verburgerlichung' (the 'becoming middle-class') of German literature during the eighteenth century. He describes the origins and development of the class and examines its successive images in works by Haller, Schnabel, Borkenstein, Luise Gottsched, J. E. Schlegel, Gellert, and Lessing. Between the years 1729 and 1750, merchants were better able to lend financial support to the literary world than were civil servants and professionals. Although merchants were central in the cultural life of the German states, they were usually less educated than other members of their social stratum and therefore less disposed to literature. Tradition has cast the merchant class in a highly unflattering light as ethically indefensible. Van Cleve's in-depth analysis traces the evolution of attitudes toward merchants from negative, underdeveloped images to positive, heroic portrayals.
Keywords
German Studies; LiteratureDOI
10.5149/9781469656878_ClevePublisher
University of North Carolina PressPublisher website
https://uncpress.org/Publication date and place
Chapel Hill, 1986Grantor
Series
UNC Studies in the Germanic Languages and Literatures, 105Classification
Literature: history and criticism