Patriotism, Cosmopolitanism, and National Culture : : Public Culture in Hamburg 1700-1933 / / edited by Peter Uwe Hohendahl.

The essays assembled in this volume grew out of a conference held at Cornell University in November 2001. The goal of the conference was to examine the claim that the city-state of Hamburg had a unique status in the cultural landscape of eighteenth and nineteenth-century Germany, a status based upon...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Internationale Forschungen zur Allgemeinen und Vergleichenden Literaturwissenschaft ; 69
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Leiden; , Boston : : BRILL,, 2003.
Year of Publication:2003
Language:English
Series:Internationale Forschungen zur Allgemeinen und Vergleichenden Literaturwissenschaft ; 69.
Physical Description:1 online resource (231 pages)
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Table of Contents:
  • Acknowledgements
  • Peter Uwe HOHENDAHL: Introduction
  • Mary LINDEMANN: Fundamental Values: Political Culture in Eighteenth-Century Hamburg
  • David YEARSLEY: The Musical Patriots of the Hamburg Opera: Mattheson, Keiser, and Masaniello furioso
  • Herbert ROWLAND: The Journal Der Patriot and the Constitution of a Bourgeois Literary Public Sphere
  • John A. McCARTHY: Lessing and the Project of a National Theater in Hamburg: "Ein Supplement der Gesetze"
  • Meredith LEE: Klopstock as Hamburg's Representative Poet
  • Annette RICHARDS: Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach and the Intimate Poetics of Public Music
  • Julia BERGER: In the Valley of the Kings: Classicist Architecture in Hamburg, Altona and the Elbvororte (1790-1840)
  • Jost HERMAND: The Jacobins of Hamburg and Altona
  • Katherine B. AASLESTAD: Old Visions and New Vices: Republicanism and Civic Virtue in Hamburg's Print Culture, 1790-1810
  • Bernd KORTLÄNDER: During the day a big accounting office and at night a huge bordello: Heine and Hamburg
  • Celia APPLEGATE: Of Sailors' Bars and Women's Choirs: The Musical Worlds of Brahms' Hamburg
  • Hans Rudolf VAGET: The Discreet Charm of the Hanseatic Bourgeoisie. Geography, History, and Psychology in Thomas Mann's Representations of Hamburg
  • Jennifer JENKINS: Of Parks and Theaters: Conceptions of Urban Space in Fritz Schumacher's Hamburg
  • List of Illustrations
  • Notes on Contributors
  • Index.