The Case of Literature: Forensic Narratives from Goethe to Kafka

In The Case of Literature, Arne Höcker offers a radical reassessment of the modern European literary canon. His reinterpretations of Goethe, Schiller, Büchner, Döblin, Musil, and Kafka show how literary and scientific narratives have determined each other over the past three centuries, and he argues that modern literature not only contributed to the development of the human sciences but also established itself as the privileged medium for a modern style of case-based reasoning.

The Case of Literature deftly traces the role of narrative fiction in relation to the scientific knowledge of the individual from eighteenth-century psychology and pedagogy to nineteenth-century sexology and criminology to twentieth-century psychoanalysis. Höcker demonstrates how modern authors consciously engaged casuistic forms of writing to arrive at new understandings of literary discourse that correspond to major historical transformations in the function of fiction. He argues for the centrality of literature to changes in the conceptions of psychological knowledge production around 1800; legal responsibility and institutionalized forms of decision-making throughout the nineteenth century; and literature's own realist demands in the early twentieth century.

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The Case of Literature: Forensic Narratives from Goethe to Kafka

In The Case of Literature, Arne Höcker offers a radical reassessment of the modern European literary canon. His reinterpretations of Goethe, Schiller, Büchner, Döblin, Musil, and Kafka show how literary and scientific narratives have determined each other over the past three centuries, and he argues that modern literature not only contributed to the development of the human sciences but also established itself as the privileged medium for a modern style of case-based reasoning.

The Case of Literature deftly traces the role of narrative fiction in relation to the scientific knowledge of the individual from eighteenth-century psychology and pedagogy to nineteenth-century sexology and criminology to twentieth-century psychoanalysis. Höcker demonstrates how modern authors consciously engaged casuistic forms of writing to arrive at new understandings of literary discourse that correspond to major historical transformations in the function of fiction. He argues for the centrality of literature to changes in the conceptions of psychological knowledge production around 1800; legal responsibility and institutionalized forms of decision-making throughout the nineteenth century; and literature's own realist demands in the early twentieth century.

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The Case of Literature: Forensic Narratives from Goethe to Kafka

The Case of Literature: Forensic Narratives from Goethe to Kafka

by Arne Höcker
The Case of Literature: Forensic Narratives from Goethe to Kafka

The Case of Literature: Forensic Narratives from Goethe to Kafka

by Arne Höcker

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Overview

In The Case of Literature, Arne Höcker offers a radical reassessment of the modern European literary canon. His reinterpretations of Goethe, Schiller, Büchner, Döblin, Musil, and Kafka show how literary and scientific narratives have determined each other over the past three centuries, and he argues that modern literature not only contributed to the development of the human sciences but also established itself as the privileged medium for a modern style of case-based reasoning.

The Case of Literature deftly traces the role of narrative fiction in relation to the scientific knowledge of the individual from eighteenth-century psychology and pedagogy to nineteenth-century sexology and criminology to twentieth-century psychoanalysis. Höcker demonstrates how modern authors consciously engaged casuistic forms of writing to arrive at new understandings of literary discourse that correspond to major historical transformations in the function of fiction. He argues for the centrality of literature to changes in the conceptions of psychological knowledge production around 1800; legal responsibility and institutionalized forms of decision-making throughout the nineteenth century; and literature's own realist demands in the early twentieth century.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501749377
Publisher: Cornell University Press and Cornell University Library
Publication date: 06/15/2020
Series: Signale: Modern German Letters, Cultures, and Thought
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 252
File size: 717 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Arne Höcker is Assistant Professor of German Studies at the University of Colorado Boulder.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Unfelt Affect
1. Philosophy: Affective Nonconsciousness
2. Fiction: Unfelt Engagement
3. Historiography: Insensible Revolutions
4. Epilogue: Insensible Embrace

What People are Saying About This

Fritz Breithaupt

A brilliant book on the important genre of the literary case study. Arne Höcker shows how administrative decision-making, at the very moment in the 19th century when it seems to function flawlessly, gives birth to its uncanny other, the individual case study.

Judith Ryan

The Case of Literature lucidly unfolds a history of the literary case study in German literature from Goethe to the modernists Döblin and Musil, with a concluding postscript on Kafka. This well written book uses original analyses of important texts to persuasively make the case for a three-phase contribution of German narrative to our understanding of the literary case study as a genre.

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