German Literature

From Eric's Brain
Revision as of 20:07, 28 September 2016 by Eric (Talk | contribs) (Old High German Period (800-1050))

Jump to: navigation, search

A Timeline of the History of German Literature (Eine Zeittafel der Geschichte der deutschen Literatur)

This was my final project for GER 454 - German Literature II in 1998, and represents a general survey of the history of German literature. It was cobbled together at a time when the web was in its infancy, so there were not nearly as many resources available online as there are now, so it served as a reference for many students and researchers. It's likely a bit dated now, but I'm making it available in this wiki, after many years of not being available due to the university removing students' personal websites, in the hopes that some may continue to find it useful.


Old High German Period (800-1050)

The first of the great German works during this period was "Hildebrandslied", a heroic pagan ballad about conflict between father and son. Written using alliterative verse, it was sung by minstrels before exalted audiences. Unfortunately it only survived in fragments.

Though called the Old High German Period, one of the greatest works during this period, "Heliand" (see below), was written in in old low German. In fact, most of the works of this period were not written in old high German, rather in Latin due to pressure from the church to reject the paganism of the time. Therefore a majority of the works produced during this time were by clergy or people otherwise associated with the church.

The first attempts of Teutonic church poetry are biblical epics, and the leader of the Teutonic Christ-singers is the Anglo-Saxon monk Caedmon of Whitby (formerly a swineherd), about 680, who reproduced in alliterative verse, as by inspiration, the biblical history of creation and redemption, and brought it home to the imagination and heart of Old England. This poem, which was probably brought to Germany by Bonifacius and other English missionaries, inspired in the ninth century a similar production of an unknown Saxon (Westphalian) monk, namely, a poetic gospel harmony or life of Christ under the title "Heliand" (i.e., Heiland, Healer, Saviour). About the same time (c. 870), Otfrid of Weissenburg in the Alsace, a Benedictine monk, educated at Fulda and St. Gall, versified the gospel history in the Alemannian dialect, in fifteen hundred verses, divided into stanzas, each stanza consisting of four rhymed lines.

(Above paragraph from: http://www.bible.org/docs/history/schaff/vol7/schaf152.htm)

This period saw the the first German woman author of literature, a nun named Hrotsvit of the cloister of Gandersheim in Saxony. Another example of literature by clergy was the "Song of Walter the Strong-Handed" written by a 10th century monk named Ekkehardus I. A century later, another monk named Ekkehardus IV improved the Latin epic.

Middle High German Period (1050-1300)

Early Modern Period (1300-1550)

Baroque Style Predominates (1550-1700)

Age of Rationalism (1700-1775)

Age of Idealism (1775-1850)

Age of Realism (1850-World War II)

The Postwar Generation: A divided Germany (Post World War II)

Reunification/Modern Germany (November 9, 1989-Present)

Citations / References

NOTE: these are the original sources as used in 1998; if the reference is no longer available, I have linked to the [Archive.org] archived version.

Primary

  • Compton's Encyclopedia
  • Encarta
  • German Literature Links
  • Grolier 1997 Multimedia Encyclopedia (on CD-ROM)
  • Literatur Links
  • Online German Studies
  • Projekt Gutenberg
  • Western European Specialists Section

Other

  • bibliotheca Augustana
  • Luther's Hymns
  • German Literature
  • Medieval Literature
  • 19th Century German Lit
  • Olivers Links zur Literatur
  • Projeckt Alfred
  • The German Collection at the University of Virginia
  • DaDaism Online
  • German war poetry during WWI