Schiller's Wallenstein, Maria Stuart, and Die Jungfrau von Orleans

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169 pages 2002

About This Book

"Changing perceptions about history necessarily color the critical reception of historical plays, not only in terms of expectations regarding historical accuracy, but also in judgments about the value and suitability of historical material for the stage.

The German playwright, poet, and philosopher Friedrich Schiller, often called the father of modern German drama, broke new ground with his late historical plays - the Wallenstein trilogy, Maria Stuart, and Die Jungfrau von Orleans - and they have thus generated a continuous stream of criticism since their appearance in the early nineteenth century. In this book Kathy Saranpa maps out three related strands: the reception history of Schiller's late historical plays; the changing view of history, from Herder's Universalgeschichte to the American New Historicism; and the changing status of the genre of the historical drama.

The juxtaposition of these three strands will interest scholars of German literature; readers from other fields will appreciate the book's value as an introduction to the work of an often misunderstood but vastly important figure in German belles-lettres and philosophy."--BOOK JACKET.

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