Conjectures on world literature
暂无分享,去创建一个
'Nowadays, national literature doesn’t mean much: the age of world literature is beginning, and everybody should contribute to hasten its advent.’ This was Goethe, of course, talking to Eckermann in 1827; and these are Marx and Engels, twenty years later, in 1848: ‘National one-sidedness and narrow-mindedness become more and more impossible, and from the many national and local literatures, a world literature arises.’ Weltliteratur: this is what Goethe and Marx have in mind. Not ‘comparative’, but world literature: the Chinese novel that Goethe was reading at the time of that exchange, or the bourgeoisie of the Manifesto, which has ‘given a cosmopolitan character to production and consumption in every country’. Well, let me put it very simply: comparative literature has not lived up to these beginnings. It’s been a much more modest intellectual enterprise, fundamentally limited t o Western Europe, and mostly revolving around the river Rhine (German philologists working on French literature). Not much more.
[1] R. Rubenstein,et al. The rise of the Russian novel , 1973 .
[2] Ahmet Ö. Evin. Origins and development of the Turkish novel , 1987 .
[3] M. Weber. “Objectivity” in Social Science and Social Policy , 2017 .