Il lamento di Werther per gli alberi di noce

This paper aims to reread Goethe’s youthful epistolary novel The Sorrows of Young Werther, investigating in particular the role that trees play, both in the economy of the story and from the point of view of the alchemical-philosophical reflection of young Goethe. In particular, Paracelsus, the pal...

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Main Author: Silvia Ulrich
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Università degli Studi di Torino 2020-12-01
Series:RiCognizioni
Online Access:https://www.ojs.unito.it/index.php/ricognizioni/article/view/5418
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spelling doaj-93bb0772c4c94f0287bd4de503dd2edc2021-09-14T07:26:52ZdeuUniversità degli Studi di TorinoRiCognizioni2384-89872020-12-0171410.13135/2384-8987/5418Il lamento di Werther per gli alberi di noceSilvia Ulrich0Università degli Studi di Torino This paper aims to reread Goethe’s youthful epistolary novel The Sorrows of Young Werther, investigating in particular the role that trees play, both in the economy of the story and from the point of view of the alchemical-philosophical reflection of young Goethe. In particular, Paracelsus, the palingenesis of plants and the theory of signatures that make Werther not only an example of Goethe’s distance from the Sturm und Drang, but are the basis of the birth of a “classical” sensitivity. The latter will reach full maturity through the relationship of the Dichter and his character with nature (often erroneously understood as a pre-Romantic motif), specifically with trees, thanks also to the contribution of Spinoza’s philosophy. The walnut motif is exemplary in this sense, since it contrasts the human sense of the tragic with the calm evolution of nature, in which life, growth, reproduction and death follow one another without pathos. But Werther is also overcoming paracelsian alchemical studies, therefore the novel sublimates itself in the transition from nature to art, and in the latter field, it applies the theory of palingenesis to the regeneration of the Stoff. In this way Werther supports Goethe’s classicist turning point, as attested by the second edition of the novel of 1786, and his rebirth both in Goethes’s later works and in some of the 19th and 20th centuries. The role of trees in Werther ultimately shows an example of ecocritical thinking ante litteram.   https://www.ojs.unito.it/index.php/ricognizioni/article/view/5418
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Silvia Ulrich
spellingShingle Silvia Ulrich
Il lamento di Werther per gli alberi di noce
RiCognizioni
author_facet Silvia Ulrich
author_sort Silvia Ulrich
title Il lamento di Werther per gli alberi di noce
title_short Il lamento di Werther per gli alberi di noce
title_full Il lamento di Werther per gli alberi di noce
title_fullStr Il lamento di Werther per gli alberi di noce
title_full_unstemmed Il lamento di Werther per gli alberi di noce
title_sort il lamento di werther per gli alberi di noce
publisher Università degli Studi di Torino
series RiCognizioni
issn 2384-8987
publishDate 2020-12-01
description This paper aims to reread Goethe’s youthful epistolary novel The Sorrows of Young Werther, investigating in particular the role that trees play, both in the economy of the story and from the point of view of the alchemical-philosophical reflection of young Goethe. In particular, Paracelsus, the palingenesis of plants and the theory of signatures that make Werther not only an example of Goethe’s distance from the Sturm und Drang, but are the basis of the birth of a “classical” sensitivity. The latter will reach full maturity through the relationship of the Dichter and his character with nature (often erroneously understood as a pre-Romantic motif), specifically with trees, thanks also to the contribution of Spinoza’s philosophy. The walnut motif is exemplary in this sense, since it contrasts the human sense of the tragic with the calm evolution of nature, in which life, growth, reproduction and death follow one another without pathos. But Werther is also overcoming paracelsian alchemical studies, therefore the novel sublimates itself in the transition from nature to art, and in the latter field, it applies the theory of palingenesis to the regeneration of the Stoff. In this way Werther supports Goethe’s classicist turning point, as attested by the second edition of the novel of 1786, and his rebirth both in Goethes’s later works and in some of the 19th and 20th centuries. The role of trees in Werther ultimately shows an example of ecocritical thinking ante litteram.  
url https://www.ojs.unito.it/index.php/ricognizioni/article/view/5418
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