Byron and Weltliteratur

Halmi N
Edited by:
Lennartz, N

The ageing Goethe was fascinated with Byron whom he called the greatest poetic talent. Though suspicious of Byron’s Philhellenism, Goethe found in Byron an openness to encounter non-English cultures, an attentiveness to national histories and in interest in the relationship of the individual to social life. Byron’s self-contextualising, self-historicising narrative poems constitute a parallel to Goethe’s own literary campaigns for cross-cultural engagement in the 1810s and 1820s and, despite Byron’s alienation from England, offer hope for the prospects of what Goethe was to call “world literature”.

Keywords:

Hellenism

,

cultural exchange

,

English Romantic poetry

,

Philhellenism

,

world literature

,

Biedermeierzeit

,

German Romanticism

,

Faust

,

Lord Byron

,

historicism

,

cosmopolitanism

,

Johann Wolfgang Goethe

,

paratexts

,

European Romanticism

,

Romanticism