In:
Romantisme, PERSEE Program, Vol. 28, No. 101 ( 1998), p. 7-16
Abstract:
Heine was, already when he were still alive, an object of persistent rejection on the part of the Germons. Was it due to the « cross-cutting of a jew and Germon » of which he was himself quite aware ? Having come to France in being deceaved by a Germany considered as too submissive to those in power, to the « Obrigkeit », Heine finds his place in between those french writers who denounced any « servitude ». And in fact, as well as his belonging to the to sides had made him very sensitive to germon defaults, the perceptiveness and insolence he had acquired in France let him make out what should be in a Germany to which he stayed tragically tied the final and criminal result of total submission.
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
0048-8593
DOI:
10.3406/roman.1998.4318
Language:
French
Publisher:
PERSEE Program
Publication Date:
1998
detail.hit.zdb_id:
2375342-0
detail.hit.zdb_id:
7061-0
SSG:
7,30
SSG:
7,12
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