Image of the Orient in E. T. A. Hoffmann’s writing
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Authors
Neilly, Joanna Claire
Abstract
Although the field of German Romantic Orientalism has been growing in recent
years, the prolific writer E. T. A. Hoffmann has largely escaped critical attention.
This study of his oeuvre reveals, however, that it was shaped and influenced by both
the scholarly and popular orientalist discourses of his time. Furthermore, Hoffmann
satirises literary orientalist practices even as he takes part in them, and so his work
exposes the ambivalence of the apparent German veneration for the ‘Romantic’
Orient. While Hoffmann responds to the Romantic image of the Orient set up by his
predecessors (J.G. Herder, Novalis, Friedrich Schlegel), he does so in order to reveal
both the uses and the limits of this model for the Romantic artist in the modern
world. The Orient serves as an inspiration for Romantic art, and thus Edward Said’s
claim that the Romantics appropriated the East merely for the rejuvenation of
European literature must be acknowledged. Nevertheless, as an extremely self-aware
writer, Hoffmann does not utilise this approach uncritically. My thesis shows how
Hoffmann responded to the image of the Orient as it was produced by writers,
musicians, and scholars inside the German-speaking lands. The Orient resists
successful imitation, as his texts acknowledge when they turn a critical eye towards
German cultural production. Furthermore, Hoffmann’s famous criticism of
nineteenth-century society is enhanced by comparison of German and oriental
characters, with the latter often coming out more favourably. Hoffmann’s tales
therefore demand a reassessment of the view that the Romantics constructed the
Orient exclusively as a paradisaical land of poetic fulfilment. His (self-) reflective
response to the nineteenth-century treatment of the Orient in Germany marks him out
as an original – and essential – voice in Romantic Orientalism.
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