SlideShare ist ein Scribd-Unternehmen logo
1 von 10
Downloaden Sie, um offline zu lesen
1
A Dead Poet’s Society
Henning TRÜPER
Ulrich Raulff studies Stefan George’s tempestuous afterlife and the controversial
interpretation of the poet’s political and aesthetic positions. He undertakes a group
biography of George’s circle of disciples and shows how they furtively created specific
focal points for German discussions about the Nazi past.
Reviewed: Ulrich Raulff, Kreis ohne Meister. Stefan Georges Nachleben, München: Beck, 2009
Ulrich Raulff’s biography d’outre-tombe of the poet Stefan George has been the object
of so many accolades on the part of previous reviewers that it seems almost awkward to add
another voice to the chorus. Accordingly, the voice of this review essay will be an awkward
one, adding the occasional dissonant remark, while by and large going along with the praise
the book has so deservedly harvested. No doubt, it is at once a triumph of archival research of
stylistic elegance, an incisive intellectual history and a sometimes exciting and sometimes
unsettling ghost story.
The Poet Encircled
Stefan George, one of the dominant figures in German poetry from the 1890s until his
death in 1933, famous for his formal perfectionism, his coldly elegant lyrical voice, his
aesthetic detachment from the mundane, spent a great deal of time to mutate into his own art.
A dazzling and arresting presence, he began collecting devout followers, the so-called
“circle”, before the turn of the century. The circle had a certain proximity to attempts at
reforming the stiff Lebenswelt of the bourgeoisie and often required members to leave behind
at least some aspects of their previous lives. The circle had no permanent base as George
maintained a perambulatory existence without a home, without noteworthy property, living as
a house guest with select admirers, mainly in Berlin, Munich, Heidelberg and the Ticino.
Since most followers did not actually move around with George, the circle was a continuously
changing arrangement. It attracted a surprisingly large number of great figures of German
2
intellectual life, the best known being the poet Karl Wolfskehl, the literary scholars Friedrich
Gundolf and Max Kommerell, and the historian Ernst Kantorowicz. The periphery of the
circle touched on the grand protagonists of the emerging social sciences, Georg Simmel and
Max Weber (whose ideas about “charisma” partly drew on the phenomenon of George’s
effect on his followers); and many other regulars of the intellectual sphere were, in some way
or other, affected by “the master” as George was universally addressed by his acolytes. The
circle was also a system of procuring young male lovers to George and entertained an often
ridiculed cult of male adolescence. Although the group included also a number of women –
and Raulff places a few of them in the limelight, innovatively if perhaps insufficiently – it was
boys and young men who were consistently privileged in the circle’s economy of attention.
Among the younger members at the time of George’s demise, the most prominent were the
three Stauffenberg brothers the most famous of whom, Claus, was to plant the bomb that
exploded next to Hitler on 20 July 1944. For the apologists and mythologists of the circle, the
genealogy of the 1944 plot has served as a source of political vindication. By contrast, critical
voices have stressed George’s ambiguous stance towards Nazism, maligning him as one of
the forces that helped establish a proto-fascist ideal of the political, of anti-democratic
authority and leadership, and hyper-nationalist imagination. Sure enough, the George circle
used the swastika as one of its semi-esoteric symbols; and when George decided to push for a
self-description of the circle as a quasi-political entity in the late 1920s, he embraced a
vocabulary in which the dream of a new Reich was a central component. Yet at the same time,
the “Third Reich”, when it actually came into being, was suspicious of the large number of
Jews in and around the circle and in the end decided to omit George from its invented
intellectual ancestry. In short: there is abundant material for a smashing group biography.
Unsurprisingly, the George circle has been a favorite among literary and intellectual historians
in and of Germany for some time. Their attention has consistently oscillated between
fascination and derision – an oscillation Raulff embraces.
Inheritance, Bickering and Political Theory
Raulff radically dismisses George’s actual biography. He begins (ch. 1) with the poet’s
funeral in December 1933 and the preceding months, after George’s ambiguous evasion to
Switzerland. Leisurely sailing across Lake Constance, the poet feigned merely to pursue a
more wholesome climate for the summer, yet never returned to Germany. Still, he carefully
avoided clarifying his opinions on the new regime since the circle was split between pro- and
anti-Nazi partisans (the latter being mainly his older, the former mainly his younger friends).
3
Arguably, George’s afterlife began precisely at the point at which, for fear of losing the circle,
he relinquished his own voice, leaving to his followers the decision as to how his silence was
to be interpreted. His actual death was only corroborative. Controversy began even before the
funeral when the pharmaceutics manager Robert Boehringer, George’s formal heir and
unrelenting protector of his posthumous integrity, had to push through the decision not to
transfer the corpse back to Germany against the resistance of other followers present. A few
days after the funeral, somebody cut the swastikas off the bows of the wreath the German
envoy to Switzerland, Ernst von Weizsäcker, had discreetly deposited. Clearly, here was a
corpse that was not to rest in peace.
Raulff is precise on the contestations of the less legitimate heirs. Conflict – about
memory, legitimate continuation of the “master’s” work, legitimate interpretation of his
political and aesthetic positions – is the leitmotif of the book. Raulff makes clear that George
himself had laid the groundwork for this tempestuous afterlife by his ever more pronounced
and ever more enigmatic interpretation of the circle as a political entity. In the 1920s, in
collaboration with one of his followers, the Marburg historian Friedrich Wolters (d. 1930), he
had developed a historical self-description of the circle that framed in terms of a “state” what
formerly had been imagined as a group of aesthetically like-minded friends. This was a
divisive move. It aestheticized politics as much as it politicized aesthetics; and more
importantly in terms of George’s afterlife, it politicized the circle. Raulff includes, in his
work, a number of highly interesting micro-studies of the patterns of actual political thought
which were informed by the politicization of the circle as much as they informed it. These
patterns were developed through a culture of references to great men of the distant past. The
intellectual heroes of choice were Plato and Dante. Raulff’s tracing of Dante motives in
particular is an engaging pursuit of oblique notions, especially in the work of Ernst
Kantorowicz, the implicit main character of the book. The idiosyncratic Platonism espoused
by George and some members of the group, notably the very contrary and very forgotten
philosophers Kurt Hildebrandt and Edith Landmann, recognized the Symposion as the most
important source text and proposed a bizarrely poeticized vision of the philosopher who had
so damningly denigrated the pursuits of poetry in Politeia. The unearthing of authors of such
obscurity, from the middle of the 20th
century, is a great achievement in the project of
disrupting the canon of thinkers on which so far most intellectual histories of German political
discourse in the 20th
century have been based. Raulff succeeds in restoring a strange and
4
bewildering density to the undergrowth of the familiar ideologies. The George circle, in his
presentation, becomes emblematic of these qualities.
After a steady flow of publications during the last fifteen years, the study of Ernst
Kantorowicz has grown into a sophisticated branch of biographical historiography. It receives
novel impulses by Raulff’s discussion of the continuities in the work of the German-Jewish
medievalist who emigrated to the U.S. and “secularized his Georgean Reich”, as the
philosopher Karl Löwith sarcastically wrote. Yet Raulff detects, in this “secularization”
marking Kantorowicz’s American oeuvre, a continuing commitment to an aesthetics and a
notion of history inherited from George and his followers. This was an ambiguous heritage,
and Kantorowicz took significant care to insulate himself and his ideas from the remainders of
the “circle”. Although Raulff’s is an attractive account of Kantorowicz’s life and thought, he
displays a certain propensity to think in terms of ideas as constituting biographical
continuities. He has a preference for regarding ideas as layered, proceeding to ever deeper
layers marked by ever greater continuities (thus also the procedure in his landmark biography
of Marc Bloch from 1995). It is perhaps possible to criticize this procedure as unquestioningly
assuming the priority of biography over the “intellectual”, or even discourse. At any rate,
Raulff does not offer an in-depth discussion of this methodical feature of his work. Decidedly
not a champion of explicit theory, he proceeds in a fashion that leaves aside much jargon of
present fashion. Decidedly a champion of implicit theory however, he theorizes George’s
ghostly existence as an “afterlife” along the lines of Aby Warburg’s thought, as the survival
of a peculiar set of formulae of pathos, of symbolic patterns shaping affective life. Yet
although this is an innovative and fascinating undertaking, it may also be pointed out that
Raulff’s study has a methodologically problematic bent where it stipulates rather than
demonstrates biographical continuities and stable ideas.
Haunting Historical Method
After Raulff has dissected the political philosophies (chapter 2), the formation of novel
sectarian circles among former Georgeans (chapter 3), and the trajectories of the exiles
(chapter 4), he moves into post-war territory. Particularly dazzling is his account of the
Stauffenbergs, the resistance of 1944 (he is the first to make use of newly found and highly
interesting letters by Claus von Stauffenberg from 1939), and its later representations (chapter
5). Raulff demolishes the widespread notion that Claus von Stauffenberg’s last words, in front
of the firing squad, had consisted of a reference to the political aesthetics of the George circle.
5
All eyewitness accounts stated that Stauffenberg had exclaimed the words: “Es lebe das
heilige Deutschland!” (i.e., “Long live the holy Germany”). Yet, post-war authors from the
ambit of the circle, in particular the exiled economist Edgar Salin, professor in Basle,
propagated that the witnesses must have misunderstood and that Stauffenberg had actually
yelled: “Es lebe das geheime Deutschland!” (“Long live the secret Germany”), a familiar
phrase of innuendo referring to the imaginary state invented and revered by the George circle.
Claus von Stauffenberg’s older brother Berthold, a jurist who was hanged three weeks after
the failed coup, had been one of George’s favourites and belonged to a triumvirate originally
in charge of the “master’s” literary estate (the other two were Boehringer and another
forgotten figure, the sculptor Frank Mehnert, George’s last companion, who died as a soldier
at the eastern front). The Stauffenbergs’ connections to the circle were tight. But Raulff, while
doing away with a teleological reading of the circle as a forerunner of Nazism, also destroys
the notion that the circle was a source of resistance during the war. Instead, George could be
deployed to legitimize whatever politics. Indeed, in 1933, the Stauffenbergs, along with
Mehnert and others, had belonged to the pro-Nazi group plotting to bury the poet in Germany.
Berthold von Stauffenberg and Mehnert had moreover pursued a strategy of monumentalizing
George’s memory, a strategy with which Boehringer, as Raulff ingeniously reconstructs,
fundamentally disagreed. Yet the remembrance of these conflicts, and of the shifting positions
of the Stauffenbergs, was to be purged after the war. The heilig-geheim semantic shift was the
most momentous event in this purging.
George’s ghost did not only haunt the commemoration of the Stauffenbergs. It was
also present at the Wilhelmstraßenprozess 1947-49, the second-last of the Nuremberg trials, in
which high-ranking former officials of the ministry of foreign affairs were prosecuted. Most
prominent among the accused was Ernst von Weizsäcker, indicted in particular for having
signed deportation orders for French Jews in his function as Staatssekretär in the Foreign
Office from 1938 to 43. Raulff, to be sure, is less interested in Weizsäcker than in the
improbable constellation of Georgeans and quasi-Georgeans at the trial, a constellation that
closely followed the lines of conflict that had emerged in the circle from the 1930s. The
prosecution was represented by Robert Kempner, a lawyer and brother of one Walter
Kempner, George’s doctor; both brothers had fled to the U.S. Weizsäcker’s defense was
staged by Hellmut Becker, the son of the orientalist and former Prussian minister of
education, Carl Heinrich Becker (1876-1933). The latter, while not part of the George circle,
had been its staunch supporter and was connected to it by numerous protégés of his own. It
6
was, as Raulff argues, mainly thanks to Becker père that a number of Georgeans had managed
to climb to professorships in the highly conservative ranks of German academia in the 1920s.
Becker fils, an early war invalid, had taught at the University of Strasbourg from 1941. After
the war, he had opened a law office that specialized in the whitewashing of tainted
representatives of the state elite. In Strasbourg he had befriended Weizsäcker’s oldest son, the
physicist Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker; and in Nuremberg, Becker was assisted by the
youngest of Weizsäcker’s sons, Richard, the future president of the Federal Republic. The
Weizsäcker boys had been brought to visit George around 1930 by Robert Boehringer, long-
time friend of the family. During the trial, Edgar Salin and his former student Marion Gräfin
Dönhoff, East Prussian aristocrat, founding editor of the renowned weekly Die Zeit and
monument of democratic journalism in the Federal Republic, contributed a widely resonating
press campaign based on Becker’s defense strategy. In the perception of the public, Ernst von
Weizsäcker became the center of the trial. Against rather solid evidence, Becker painted the
Württembergian aristocrat as a stalwart of active resistance. The prosecution prevailed, and
Weizsäcker received a sentence that, in part due to the vigorous media campaign in his favor,
was regarded as severe. He was pardoned after only one and a half years in prison. In a broad
German public, his name had already been cleared during the trial. Ironically, as in the case of
the Stauffenbergs, the internal divisions of the George circle, the rather peculiar
preoccupations of a self-proclaimed elitist-poetic network, had a profound and entirely
nontransparent impact on public political discourse. The motivation and the means to protect
Weizsäcker’s reputation derived entirely from his ties to a group of tarnished poetry lovers
who desired to maintain faith in their own integrity by marginalizing the memory of those
members of their group with better political judgment. For years, the George circle furtively
created specific focal points for German discussions about the Nazi past in which George
himself was never named.
Yet, the passages on the Wilhelmstraßenprozess constitute a turning point in the book:
here, Raulff moves from the actual members of the circle to a wider network of academics,
officials and journalists who where, thus his argument, nonetheless haunted by George. But at
the end of the day, their connections to the circle remained tenuous. While the research
presented here is interesting as a pioneering if sketchy study of interweaving elite biographies
in Nazi and post-war Germany, Raulff recognizes the problem himself and adds a lengthy
methodical digression to the following chapter (chapter 6) in which he focuses on reform
school movements in the Federal Republic. A good ghost does not actually leave traces; so
7
perhaps Raulff’s treatment is legitimate as an ironical extension to George’s afterlife.
Certainly, there were analogies between the George circle and the elitist and vitalist reform
ideas of the pedagogues of the fifties and sixties. Their awkward and subliminally violent
eroticization of the teacher-student relationship equally echoed Georgean motives. Moreover,
the network of educational reformism chillingly was a direct continuation of the group of
Ernst von Weizsäcker’s defenders. Hellmut Becker, energetically having turned himself into a
scholar of educational matters, became one of the leading academics in the field for decades
to come. Another semi-obliterated educator, the George admirer and free-time Plato scholar
Georg Picht, was a close family friend of the Weizsäckers, too. Connections to Dönhoff and
other figures from this milieu abounded, and everywhere, eerie evidence for impassioned
readings of George’s poetry can be dug up. And yet, and in full awareness, Raulff
overstretches his argument. This is partly the result of the narrative model of the book, which
the author ironically likens, not only to a ghost story, but also to the Book of Acts that reports
the deeds of the Apostles. Yet at this point in Raulff’s story, the Apostles have disappeared.
The transition is supposed to be one towards “a phenomenology of the subliminal afterlife”
(p. 435), as based on a loose web of biographical, prosopographical and discursive evidence.
But if one can demonstrate someone’s familiarity with George, one has not yet said anything
about what other gods the person in question may have worshipped. The problem with the
overall plotline is indeed that it treats the George circle as a group of Apostles that recognized
one god and only one. For some members this is more plausible than for others. Although it
concurs with the rhetoric of the circle, it does not necessarily concur with its reality. At times,
Raulff’s book seems to slide into a monotheism problem. Although there is potentially great
merit in revealing possible connections between monotheism and ghost stories, the historian
ought not to follow the commandment only to worship a single master explanatory context.
The Body Poetic
Then again, in defense of Raulff’s procedure it may be responded that the book
voluntarily crosses the border, not into fiction, but into artful literary form. The argumentative
overstretch can also be read as a deliberate element of hyperbole that has the merit of
highlighting the extent to which, possibly, elusively, the political culture of Germany even in
the 1960s was molded by the stale poetry of a bygone era. Or at least the stale aesthetic
enthusiasm of a bygone era, for Raulff is after archival treasures to such an extent that he
mostly omits talking about the actual poetry. This is not uncommon in the literature on
George; but it allows avoiding not only the crucial question of whether it is actually the poetry
8
that constitutes, for Raulff, the fascination of studying George (or, if not, what else?); but also
the even more crucial question as to the extent to which the political might, in mid-20th
-
century Germany, might be deciphered as code for the poetical; the extent to which the body
politic was a body poetic.
In the epilogue (chapter 7), Raulff suggests a course of argument – already envisioned
by his deceased teacher Gert Mattenklott – which connects fin de siècle aestheticism in
general and George in particular with the pop-cultural vitalism of the “live fast, die young”
crowd of the 1960s. 1968 also marked the centennial of George’s birth, formally the end point
of Raulff’s narration. At first glance, the pompous, monumental aesthetics and the
authoritarian lifeworld of the George circle seem utterly removed from the emancipation
narratives characteristic of the 1960s. Still, the idolization of (male) youth and rebellion was a
major shared theme. Perhaps it even travelled from the European fin de siècle to the U.S. and
back; and in Germany, it may in addition have trickled down the generations from the
bourgeois admirers of “the master” to their children and grandchildren. This imaginative
intersection illustrates Raulff’s pleasure in creating surprising connections. Yet the problems
touched upon in this respect reach further into territory the book marginalizes. A recurring
phrase of Raulff’s is that of “the dirty little secret of sex and the dirty big secret of politics” as
constituting the two arcane taboos of the George circle. Yet, wary that he might end up
reducing George to his sexual orientation, Raulff chooses not to discuss the way in which
these “secrets” interwove; perhaps also because this is too un-subtle an intersection. But let us
continue on a plainer and flatter note and point out that the George circle defined its departure
from mainstream morality and political sobriety precisely through the constant innuendo of
sexual difference. The circle created more or less ritualized moments of initiation. It was
generally a seductive group, and the act of seduction was symbolically, and at least sometimes
practically, sexual. However, the question as to what was to follow once one had been
seduced remained precariously unanswered. There was no further ritualized agenda. At most,
the circle offered a few vague notions of a freer, more festive, more poetical, generally
enhanced existence. As Raulff points out in one of his rare discussions of George’s poetry, the
arcane core of the circle was theatrical, empty and banal when the make-belief was exposed.
Those members of the circle who at some point in their lives broke away from George (most
prominently Gundolf and Kommerell) all appear to have done so at least partly because they
had come to resent the group in general and the “master” in particular as inhibiting their own
9
creative projects. In short, the circle was a dead end; which presumably accounts for all the
biographical dead ends haunted by the dead poet.
Perhaps one could say, using one of the abstract terms of reference Raulff so diligently
eschews, that the George circle was a makeshift heterotopy, a space defined by its carefully
instituted non-inclusion in the discursive and practical frameworks of surrounding society.
Whether within the circle sexuality expressed politics or vice versa is a moot question,
precisely because the distinction was one of surrounding society, and hence void to those
initiated in the circle. The dead end character of the group might be attributed precisely to its
status of non-inclusion and non-participation. The circle created a bizarre mixture of beauty
and hierarchy, gravity and mischief, violence and joy – and never declared an unambiguous
project. Instead of having rigid rules and laws it had poetry. George’s ambition, arguably, was
the creation of a corpus of poetry in the sense of an organically coherent oeuvre, an actual
body of work the perfect (and subtly sexualized) shape of which was to either mock or
educate or, eventually, supplant the Leviathan (be it that of the state or that of the church). In
a way, it was a logical step of escalation for George to reinvent the circle as a “state” once he
felt that his oeuvre had achieved the corporeal form he aimed at, sufficient for imitating or
replacing the theatrics of law. This was the theatrics of the recital. It required a system of
quotation, of verse to be rehearsed and repeated endlessly. The practice in which the
Georgeans engaged when throwing the master’s lines at each other imitated that of legal
citation. They acted as mock lawyers in a dead-serious political-historical charade. The most
generally deployed political topos in the entire literary output of the circle until 1933 was that
of the imminent reform and restoration of the German nation, albeit in strange disguises, as a
staged “secret Germany”, an enactment not merely of the nation state, but also of eschatology.
The heterotopian character of the circle was stabilized by a target, an internal teleology. This
target was provided by the play of the transformation of the nation. It was meaningful
primarily under the conditions of the circle; outside, it was not pursued in earnest. The poetics
and the enhanced notion of life cultivated by the Georgeans parodied not only the forms of the
political, but also those of the historical. But their politics and their history were unreal,
deliberately disconnected and self-enclosed. When the nation had transformed, prodded by
other “circles” and a different “master”, the game was up.
And yet, the game had an afterlife perhaps more powerful than its actual life, since it
molded at least some of the multiple Germanies of the 20th
century, including some of those
10
the émigrés carried abroad. This is what Raulff pursues. For the first time, his book explores
the mangled, fragmented, and distorted reprisals of the “secret Germany” in the Federal
Republic and the ways in which these reprisals shaped the political sphere of the post-war
period. Yet eschewing such abstractions (and others), he also leaves much to explore in the
history of German political culture in the 20th
century. We are accustomed to recognize
narrative as an indispensable category for understanding political history as shaped by literary
form. The attraction of George and his circle might well be that they extend an open invitation
to reconsider this habit and take seriously poetry as another literary form indispensable for the
historical understanding of political culture. And it is in the study of such phenomena that the
historical examination of the George circle might, in the future, find its actual prize.
Published in booksandideas.net 28 March 2011.
©booksandideas.net

Weitere ähnliche Inhalte

Ähnlich wie A Dead Poet s Society On Ulrich Raulff, Kreis ohne Meister, in La vie des id es Books Ideas, 28 March 2011.pdf

Henri roques from the gerstein affair to the roques affair - journal of his...
Henri roques   from the gerstein affair to the roques affair - journal of his...Henri roques   from the gerstein affair to the roques affair - journal of his...
Henri roques from the gerstein affair to the roques affair - journal of his...RareBooksnRecords
 
Main traits of modernism. final presentation
Main traits of modernism. final presentationMain traits of modernism. final presentation
Main traits of modernism. final presentationUniversity of Sargodha
 
Orest subtelny as historian revised may, 2020
Orest subtelny as historian revised may, 2020Orest subtelny as historian revised may, 2020
Orest subtelny as historian revised may, 2020Thomas M. Prymak
 
VOLTAIRE ON MAZEPA AND EARLY EIGHTEENTH CENTURY UKRAINE
VOLTAIRE ON MAZEPA AND EARLY EIGHTEENTH CENTURY UKRAINEVOLTAIRE ON MAZEPA AND EARLY EIGHTEENTH CENTURY UKRAINE
VOLTAIRE ON MAZEPA AND EARLY EIGHTEENTH CENTURY UKRAINEThomas M. Prymak
 
The occult roots of nazism
The occult roots of nazismThe occult roots of nazism
The occult roots of nazismBradley Lindsey
 
Ezra Pound: Anti-Semitism, Cantos and Confucianism
Ezra Pound: Anti-Semitism, Cantos and ConfucianismEzra Pound: Anti-Semitism, Cantos and Confucianism
Ezra Pound: Anti-Semitism, Cantos and ConfucianismAJHSSR Journal
 
anrs.ooseve tHarvard scholar MARY ANN GLEN.docx
anrs.ooseve tHarvard scholar MARY ANN GLEN.docxanrs.ooseve tHarvard scholar MARY ANN GLEN.docx
anrs.ooseve tHarvard scholar MARY ANN GLEN.docxrossskuddershamus
 
James b. whisker gnostic origins of alfred rosenberg's thought - journal of...
James b. whisker   gnostic origins of alfred rosenberg's thought - journal of...James b. whisker   gnostic origins of alfred rosenberg's thought - journal of...
James b. whisker gnostic origins of alfred rosenberg's thought - journal of...RareBooksnRecords
 
Beat poetry & Howl
Beat poetry & HowlBeat poetry & Howl
Beat poetry & Howltrevornorris
 
The Stereoscopic Photo Album as Nazi Propaganda
The Stereoscopic Photo Album as Nazi PropagandaThe Stereoscopic Photo Album as Nazi Propaganda
The Stereoscopic Photo Album as Nazi PropagandaDouglas Klahr
 
Michael West: The Artist was a Woman
Michael West: The Artist was a WomanMichael West: The Artist was a Woman
Michael West: The Artist was a Womansplendidremorse91
 
Alexander Weheliye on desiring for a different world
Alexander Weheliye on desiring for a different worldAlexander Weheliye on desiring for a different world
Alexander Weheliye on desiring for a different worldYHRUploads
 
4. From Literature To Politics How Rousseau Has Come To Symbolize Totalitari...
4. From Literature To Politics  How Rousseau Has Come To Symbolize Totalitari...4. From Literature To Politics  How Rousseau Has Come To Symbolize Totalitari...
4. From Literature To Politics How Rousseau Has Come To Symbolize Totalitari...Amy Isleb
 
Anecdote And History
Anecdote And HistoryAnecdote And History
Anecdote And HistoryMary Calkins
 

Ähnlich wie A Dead Poet s Society On Ulrich Raulff, Kreis ohne Meister, in La vie des id es Books Ideas, 28 March 2011.pdf (20)

Civilization
CivilizationCivilization
Civilization
 
Henri roques from the gerstein affair to the roques affair - journal of his...
Henri roques   from the gerstein affair to the roques affair - journal of his...Henri roques   from the gerstein affair to the roques affair - journal of his...
Henri roques from the gerstein affair to the roques affair - journal of his...
 
Main traits of modernism. final presentation
Main traits of modernism. final presentationMain traits of modernism. final presentation
Main traits of modernism. final presentation
 
Orest subtelny as historian revised may, 2020
Orest subtelny as historian revised may, 2020Orest subtelny as historian revised may, 2020
Orest subtelny as historian revised may, 2020
 
VOLTAIRE ON MAZEPA AND EARLY EIGHTEENTH CENTURY UKRAINE
VOLTAIRE ON MAZEPA AND EARLY EIGHTEENTH CENTURY UKRAINEVOLTAIRE ON MAZEPA AND EARLY EIGHTEENTH CENTURY UKRAINE
VOLTAIRE ON MAZEPA AND EARLY EIGHTEENTH CENTURY UKRAINE
 
The occult roots of nazism
The occult roots of nazismThe occult roots of nazism
The occult roots of nazism
 
Turkey famous scientists
Turkey   famous scientistsTurkey   famous scientists
Turkey famous scientists
 
Ezra Pound: Anti-Semitism, Cantos and Confucianism
Ezra Pound: Anti-Semitism, Cantos and ConfucianismEzra Pound: Anti-Semitism, Cantos and Confucianism
Ezra Pound: Anti-Semitism, Cantos and Confucianism
 
Lit mov booklet part-4
Lit mov booklet part-4Lit mov booklet part-4
Lit mov booklet part-4
 
History of the renaissance
History of the renaissanceHistory of the renaissance
History of the renaissance
 
anrs.ooseve tHarvard scholar MARY ANN GLEN.docx
anrs.ooseve tHarvard scholar MARY ANN GLEN.docxanrs.ooseve tHarvard scholar MARY ANN GLEN.docx
anrs.ooseve tHarvard scholar MARY ANN GLEN.docx
 
James b. whisker gnostic origins of alfred rosenberg's thought - journal of...
James b. whisker   gnostic origins of alfred rosenberg's thought - journal of...James b. whisker   gnostic origins of alfred rosenberg's thought - journal of...
James b. whisker gnostic origins of alfred rosenberg's thought - journal of...
 
Beat poetry & Howl
Beat poetry & HowlBeat poetry & Howl
Beat poetry & Howl
 
The Stereoscopic Photo Album as Nazi Propaganda
The Stereoscopic Photo Album as Nazi PropagandaThe Stereoscopic Photo Album as Nazi Propaganda
The Stereoscopic Photo Album as Nazi Propaganda
 
Michael West: The Artist was a Woman
Michael West: The Artist was a WomanMichael West: The Artist was a Woman
Michael West: The Artist was a Woman
 
Alexander Weheliye on desiring for a different world
Alexander Weheliye on desiring for a different worldAlexander Weheliye on desiring for a different world
Alexander Weheliye on desiring for a different world
 
4. From Literature To Politics How Rousseau Has Come To Symbolize Totalitari...
4. From Literature To Politics  How Rousseau Has Come To Symbolize Totalitari...4. From Literature To Politics  How Rousseau Has Come To Symbolize Totalitari...
4. From Literature To Politics How Rousseau Has Come To Symbolize Totalitari...
 
Veronika
VeronikaVeronika
Veronika
 
Anecdote And History
Anecdote And HistoryAnecdote And History
Anecdote And History
 
Historians or hoaxers
Historians or hoaxersHistorians or hoaxers
Historians or hoaxers
 

Mehr von Jill Brown

Aquatic Ecosystem, Biodiversity, Free Resume, Definitions, Samp
Aquatic Ecosystem, Biodiversity, Free Resume, Definitions, SampAquatic Ecosystem, Biodiversity, Free Resume, Definitions, Samp
Aquatic Ecosystem, Biodiversity, Free Resume, Definitions, SampJill Brown
 
History 2 Essay. Online assignment writing service.
History 2 Essay. Online assignment writing service.History 2 Essay. Online assignment writing service.
History 2 Essay. Online assignment writing service.Jill Brown
 
003 Explanatory Essay Examples Example Sample Expository Fra
003 Explanatory Essay Examples Example Sample Expository Fra003 Explanatory Essay Examples Example Sample Expository Fra
003 Explanatory Essay Examples Example Sample Expository FraJill Brown
 
Starting Sentence Of An Essay. Online assignment writing service.
Starting Sentence Of An Essay. Online assignment writing service.Starting Sentence Of An Essay. Online assignment writing service.
Starting Sentence Of An Essay. Online assignment writing service.Jill Brown
 
How To Write Journal Paper.. Online assignment writing service.
How To Write Journal Paper.. Online assignment writing service.How To Write Journal Paper.. Online assignment writing service.
How To Write Journal Paper.. Online assignment writing service.Jill Brown
 
Data Analysis Report Sample Template - Templates For
Data Analysis Report Sample Template - Templates ForData Analysis Report Sample Template - Templates For
Data Analysis Report Sample Template - Templates ForJill Brown
 
Learn To Write Your Name - He. Online assignment writing service.
Learn To Write Your Name - He. Online assignment writing service.Learn To Write Your Name - He. Online assignment writing service.
Learn To Write Your Name - He. Online assignment writing service.Jill Brown
 
Can Anyone Help Me Salary Somebody To Pr
Can Anyone Help Me Salary Somebody To PrCan Anyone Help Me Salary Somebody To Pr
Can Anyone Help Me Salary Somebody To PrJill Brown
 
How To Write A Linking Sentence For An Essay
How To Write A Linking Sentence For An EssayHow To Write A Linking Sentence For An Essay
How To Write A Linking Sentence For An EssayJill Brown
 
002 Essay For Students My Life Story Example Sca Pa
002 Essay For Students My Life Story Example Sca Pa002 Essay For Students My Life Story Example Sca Pa
002 Essay For Students My Life Story Example Sca PaJill Brown
 
Analytical Essay Sample Structure. Analytical Essay Example. 2022-
Analytical Essay Sample Structure. Analytical Essay Example. 2022-Analytical Essay Sample Structure. Analytical Essay Example. 2022-
Analytical Essay Sample Structure. Analytical Essay Example. 2022-Jill Brown
 
Essay Writing Service In Australia - Essay Writing Servi
Essay Writing Service In Australia - Essay Writing ServiEssay Writing Service In Australia - Essay Writing Servi
Essay Writing Service In Australia - Essay Writing ServiJill Brown
 
Project Proposal 11 Making A Business Proposal Sampl
Project Proposal 11 Making A Business Proposal SamplProject Proposal 11 Making A Business Proposal Sampl
Project Proposal 11 Making A Business Proposal SamplJill Brown
 
Amazon.Co.Uk Pens To Write On Black Paper
Amazon.Co.Uk Pens To Write On Black PaperAmazon.Co.Uk Pens To Write On Black Paper
Amazon.Co.Uk Pens To Write On Black PaperJill Brown
 
Types Of Research Papers What Is A Research Paper
Types Of Research Papers  What Is A Research PaperTypes Of Research Papers  What Is A Research Paper
Types Of Research Papers What Is A Research PaperJill Brown
 
Democracy Essay Democracy Liberty. Online assignment writing service.
Democracy Essay  Democracy  Liberty. Online assignment writing service.Democracy Essay  Democracy  Liberty. Online assignment writing service.
Democracy Essay Democracy Liberty. Online assignment writing service.Jill Brown
 
How To Write A Hypothesis Statem. Online assignment writing service.
How To Write A Hypothesis Statem. Online assignment writing service.How To Write A Hypothesis Statem. Online assignment writing service.
How To Write A Hypothesis Statem. Online assignment writing service.Jill Brown
 
Antique Images Distressed Tattered Background Old
Antique Images Distressed Tattered Background OldAntique Images Distressed Tattered Background Old
Antique Images Distressed Tattered Background OldJill Brown
 
Write My A Paper Write My Paper For Me. Online assignment writing service.
Write My A Paper Write My Paper For Me. Online assignment writing service.Write My A Paper Write My Paper For Me. Online assignment writing service.
Write My A Paper Write My Paper For Me. Online assignment writing service.Jill Brown
 
Author-Editor Learning Communities Writing Science..pdf
Author-Editor Learning Communities  Writing Science..pdfAuthor-Editor Learning Communities  Writing Science..pdf
Author-Editor Learning Communities Writing Science..pdfJill Brown
 

Mehr von Jill Brown (20)

Aquatic Ecosystem, Biodiversity, Free Resume, Definitions, Samp
Aquatic Ecosystem, Biodiversity, Free Resume, Definitions, SampAquatic Ecosystem, Biodiversity, Free Resume, Definitions, Samp
Aquatic Ecosystem, Biodiversity, Free Resume, Definitions, Samp
 
History 2 Essay. Online assignment writing service.
History 2 Essay. Online assignment writing service.History 2 Essay. Online assignment writing service.
History 2 Essay. Online assignment writing service.
 
003 Explanatory Essay Examples Example Sample Expository Fra
003 Explanatory Essay Examples Example Sample Expository Fra003 Explanatory Essay Examples Example Sample Expository Fra
003 Explanatory Essay Examples Example Sample Expository Fra
 
Starting Sentence Of An Essay. Online assignment writing service.
Starting Sentence Of An Essay. Online assignment writing service.Starting Sentence Of An Essay. Online assignment writing service.
Starting Sentence Of An Essay. Online assignment writing service.
 
How To Write Journal Paper.. Online assignment writing service.
How To Write Journal Paper.. Online assignment writing service.How To Write Journal Paper.. Online assignment writing service.
How To Write Journal Paper.. Online assignment writing service.
 
Data Analysis Report Sample Template - Templates For
Data Analysis Report Sample Template - Templates ForData Analysis Report Sample Template - Templates For
Data Analysis Report Sample Template - Templates For
 
Learn To Write Your Name - He. Online assignment writing service.
Learn To Write Your Name - He. Online assignment writing service.Learn To Write Your Name - He. Online assignment writing service.
Learn To Write Your Name - He. Online assignment writing service.
 
Can Anyone Help Me Salary Somebody To Pr
Can Anyone Help Me Salary Somebody To PrCan Anyone Help Me Salary Somebody To Pr
Can Anyone Help Me Salary Somebody To Pr
 
How To Write A Linking Sentence For An Essay
How To Write A Linking Sentence For An EssayHow To Write A Linking Sentence For An Essay
How To Write A Linking Sentence For An Essay
 
002 Essay For Students My Life Story Example Sca Pa
002 Essay For Students My Life Story Example Sca Pa002 Essay For Students My Life Story Example Sca Pa
002 Essay For Students My Life Story Example Sca Pa
 
Analytical Essay Sample Structure. Analytical Essay Example. 2022-
Analytical Essay Sample Structure. Analytical Essay Example. 2022-Analytical Essay Sample Structure. Analytical Essay Example. 2022-
Analytical Essay Sample Structure. Analytical Essay Example. 2022-
 
Essay Writing Service In Australia - Essay Writing Servi
Essay Writing Service In Australia - Essay Writing ServiEssay Writing Service In Australia - Essay Writing Servi
Essay Writing Service In Australia - Essay Writing Servi
 
Project Proposal 11 Making A Business Proposal Sampl
Project Proposal 11 Making A Business Proposal SamplProject Proposal 11 Making A Business Proposal Sampl
Project Proposal 11 Making A Business Proposal Sampl
 
Amazon.Co.Uk Pens To Write On Black Paper
Amazon.Co.Uk Pens To Write On Black PaperAmazon.Co.Uk Pens To Write On Black Paper
Amazon.Co.Uk Pens To Write On Black Paper
 
Types Of Research Papers What Is A Research Paper
Types Of Research Papers  What Is A Research PaperTypes Of Research Papers  What Is A Research Paper
Types Of Research Papers What Is A Research Paper
 
Democracy Essay Democracy Liberty. Online assignment writing service.
Democracy Essay  Democracy  Liberty. Online assignment writing service.Democracy Essay  Democracy  Liberty. Online assignment writing service.
Democracy Essay Democracy Liberty. Online assignment writing service.
 
How To Write A Hypothesis Statem. Online assignment writing service.
How To Write A Hypothesis Statem. Online assignment writing service.How To Write A Hypothesis Statem. Online assignment writing service.
How To Write A Hypothesis Statem. Online assignment writing service.
 
Antique Images Distressed Tattered Background Old
Antique Images Distressed Tattered Background OldAntique Images Distressed Tattered Background Old
Antique Images Distressed Tattered Background Old
 
Write My A Paper Write My Paper For Me. Online assignment writing service.
Write My A Paper Write My Paper For Me. Online assignment writing service.Write My A Paper Write My Paper For Me. Online assignment writing service.
Write My A Paper Write My Paper For Me. Online assignment writing service.
 
Author-Editor Learning Communities Writing Science..pdf
Author-Editor Learning Communities  Writing Science..pdfAuthor-Editor Learning Communities  Writing Science..pdf
Author-Editor Learning Communities Writing Science..pdf
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen

ENGLISH 7_Q4_LESSON 2_ Employing a Variety of Strategies for Effective Interp...
ENGLISH 7_Q4_LESSON 2_ Employing a Variety of Strategies for Effective Interp...ENGLISH 7_Q4_LESSON 2_ Employing a Variety of Strategies for Effective Interp...
ENGLISH 7_Q4_LESSON 2_ Employing a Variety of Strategies for Effective Interp...JhezDiaz1
 
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...Nguyen Thanh Tu Collection
 
Employee wellbeing at the workplace.pptx
Employee wellbeing at the workplace.pptxEmployee wellbeing at the workplace.pptx
Employee wellbeing at the workplace.pptxNirmalaLoungPoorunde1
 
Roles & Responsibilities in Pharmacovigilance
Roles & Responsibilities in PharmacovigilanceRoles & Responsibilities in Pharmacovigilance
Roles & Responsibilities in PharmacovigilanceSamikshaHamane
 
AmericanHighSchoolsprezentacijaoskolama.
AmericanHighSchoolsprezentacijaoskolama.AmericanHighSchoolsprezentacijaoskolama.
AmericanHighSchoolsprezentacijaoskolama.arsicmarija21
 
Judging the Relevance and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
Judging the Relevance  and worth of ideas part 2.pptxJudging the Relevance  and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
Judging the Relevance and worth of ideas part 2.pptxSherlyMaeNeri
 
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher EducationIntroduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Educationpboyjonauth
 
Planning a health career 4th Quarter.pptx
Planning a health career 4th Quarter.pptxPlanning a health career 4th Quarter.pptx
Planning a health career 4th Quarter.pptxLigayaBacuel1
 
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdfLike-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdfMr Bounab Samir
 
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media ComponentAlper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media ComponentInMediaRes1
 
Atmosphere science 7 quarter 4 .........
Atmosphere science 7 quarter 4 .........Atmosphere science 7 quarter 4 .........
Atmosphere science 7 quarter 4 .........LeaCamillePacle
 
AMERICAN LANGUAGE HUB_Level2_Student'sBook_Answerkey.pdf
AMERICAN LANGUAGE HUB_Level2_Student'sBook_Answerkey.pdfAMERICAN LANGUAGE HUB_Level2_Student'sBook_Answerkey.pdf
AMERICAN LANGUAGE HUB_Level2_Student'sBook_Answerkey.pdfphamnguyenenglishnb
 
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERPHow to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERPCeline George
 
How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17
How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17
How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17Celine George
 
Full Stack Web Development Course for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course  for BeginnersFull Stack Web Development Course  for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course for BeginnersSabitha Banu
 
Computed Fields and api Depends in the Odoo 17
Computed Fields and api Depends in the Odoo 17Computed Fields and api Depends in the Odoo 17
Computed Fields and api Depends in the Odoo 17Celine George
 
Introduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptx
Introduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptxIntroduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptx
Introduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptxpboyjonauth
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen (20)

ENGLISH 7_Q4_LESSON 2_ Employing a Variety of Strategies for Effective Interp...
ENGLISH 7_Q4_LESSON 2_ Employing a Variety of Strategies for Effective Interp...ENGLISH 7_Q4_LESSON 2_ Employing a Variety of Strategies for Effective Interp...
ENGLISH 7_Q4_LESSON 2_ Employing a Variety of Strategies for Effective Interp...
 
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
HỌC TỐT TIẾNG ANH 11 THEO CHƯƠNG TRÌNH GLOBAL SUCCESS ĐÁP ÁN CHI TIẾT - CẢ NĂ...
 
Employee wellbeing at the workplace.pptx
Employee wellbeing at the workplace.pptxEmployee wellbeing at the workplace.pptx
Employee wellbeing at the workplace.pptx
 
Model Call Girl in Bikash Puri Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝
Model Call Girl in Bikash Puri  Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝Model Call Girl in Bikash Puri  Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝
Model Call Girl in Bikash Puri Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝
 
Model Call Girl in Tilak Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝
Model Call Girl in Tilak Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝Model Call Girl in Tilak Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝
Model Call Girl in Tilak Nagar Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝
 
Roles & Responsibilities in Pharmacovigilance
Roles & Responsibilities in PharmacovigilanceRoles & Responsibilities in Pharmacovigilance
Roles & Responsibilities in Pharmacovigilance
 
AmericanHighSchoolsprezentacijaoskolama.
AmericanHighSchoolsprezentacijaoskolama.AmericanHighSchoolsprezentacijaoskolama.
AmericanHighSchoolsprezentacijaoskolama.
 
Judging the Relevance and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
Judging the Relevance  and worth of ideas part 2.pptxJudging the Relevance  and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
Judging the Relevance and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
 
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher EducationIntroduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
Introduction to ArtificiaI Intelligence in Higher Education
 
Planning a health career 4th Quarter.pptx
Planning a health career 4th Quarter.pptxPlanning a health career 4th Quarter.pptx
Planning a health career 4th Quarter.pptx
 
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdfLike-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
Like-prefer-love -hate+verb+ing & silent letters & citizenship text.pdf
 
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media ComponentAlper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
 
Atmosphere science 7 quarter 4 .........
Atmosphere science 7 quarter 4 .........Atmosphere science 7 quarter 4 .........
Atmosphere science 7 quarter 4 .........
 
AMERICAN LANGUAGE HUB_Level2_Student'sBook_Answerkey.pdf
AMERICAN LANGUAGE HUB_Level2_Student'sBook_Answerkey.pdfAMERICAN LANGUAGE HUB_Level2_Student'sBook_Answerkey.pdf
AMERICAN LANGUAGE HUB_Level2_Student'sBook_Answerkey.pdf
 
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERPHow to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
How to do quick user assign in kanban in Odoo 17 ERP
 
How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17
How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17
How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17
 
Full Stack Web Development Course for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course  for BeginnersFull Stack Web Development Course  for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course for Beginners
 
Computed Fields and api Depends in the Odoo 17
Computed Fields and api Depends in the Odoo 17Computed Fields and api Depends in the Odoo 17
Computed Fields and api Depends in the Odoo 17
 
OS-operating systems- ch04 (Threads) ...
OS-operating systems- ch04 (Threads) ...OS-operating systems- ch04 (Threads) ...
OS-operating systems- ch04 (Threads) ...
 
Introduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptx
Introduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptxIntroduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptx
Introduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptx
 

A Dead Poet s Society On Ulrich Raulff, Kreis ohne Meister, in La vie des id es Books Ideas, 28 March 2011.pdf

  • 1. 1 A Dead Poet’s Society Henning TRÜPER Ulrich Raulff studies Stefan George’s tempestuous afterlife and the controversial interpretation of the poet’s political and aesthetic positions. He undertakes a group biography of George’s circle of disciples and shows how they furtively created specific focal points for German discussions about the Nazi past. Reviewed: Ulrich Raulff, Kreis ohne Meister. Stefan Georges Nachleben, München: Beck, 2009 Ulrich Raulff’s biography d’outre-tombe of the poet Stefan George has been the object of so many accolades on the part of previous reviewers that it seems almost awkward to add another voice to the chorus. Accordingly, the voice of this review essay will be an awkward one, adding the occasional dissonant remark, while by and large going along with the praise the book has so deservedly harvested. No doubt, it is at once a triumph of archival research of stylistic elegance, an incisive intellectual history and a sometimes exciting and sometimes unsettling ghost story. The Poet Encircled Stefan George, one of the dominant figures in German poetry from the 1890s until his death in 1933, famous for his formal perfectionism, his coldly elegant lyrical voice, his aesthetic detachment from the mundane, spent a great deal of time to mutate into his own art. A dazzling and arresting presence, he began collecting devout followers, the so-called “circle”, before the turn of the century. The circle had a certain proximity to attempts at reforming the stiff Lebenswelt of the bourgeoisie and often required members to leave behind at least some aspects of their previous lives. The circle had no permanent base as George maintained a perambulatory existence without a home, without noteworthy property, living as a house guest with select admirers, mainly in Berlin, Munich, Heidelberg and the Ticino. Since most followers did not actually move around with George, the circle was a continuously changing arrangement. It attracted a surprisingly large number of great figures of German
  • 2. 2 intellectual life, the best known being the poet Karl Wolfskehl, the literary scholars Friedrich Gundolf and Max Kommerell, and the historian Ernst Kantorowicz. The periphery of the circle touched on the grand protagonists of the emerging social sciences, Georg Simmel and Max Weber (whose ideas about “charisma” partly drew on the phenomenon of George’s effect on his followers); and many other regulars of the intellectual sphere were, in some way or other, affected by “the master” as George was universally addressed by his acolytes. The circle was also a system of procuring young male lovers to George and entertained an often ridiculed cult of male adolescence. Although the group included also a number of women – and Raulff places a few of them in the limelight, innovatively if perhaps insufficiently – it was boys and young men who were consistently privileged in the circle’s economy of attention. Among the younger members at the time of George’s demise, the most prominent were the three Stauffenberg brothers the most famous of whom, Claus, was to plant the bomb that exploded next to Hitler on 20 July 1944. For the apologists and mythologists of the circle, the genealogy of the 1944 plot has served as a source of political vindication. By contrast, critical voices have stressed George’s ambiguous stance towards Nazism, maligning him as one of the forces that helped establish a proto-fascist ideal of the political, of anti-democratic authority and leadership, and hyper-nationalist imagination. Sure enough, the George circle used the swastika as one of its semi-esoteric symbols; and when George decided to push for a self-description of the circle as a quasi-political entity in the late 1920s, he embraced a vocabulary in which the dream of a new Reich was a central component. Yet at the same time, the “Third Reich”, when it actually came into being, was suspicious of the large number of Jews in and around the circle and in the end decided to omit George from its invented intellectual ancestry. In short: there is abundant material for a smashing group biography. Unsurprisingly, the George circle has been a favorite among literary and intellectual historians in and of Germany for some time. Their attention has consistently oscillated between fascination and derision – an oscillation Raulff embraces. Inheritance, Bickering and Political Theory Raulff radically dismisses George’s actual biography. He begins (ch. 1) with the poet’s funeral in December 1933 and the preceding months, after George’s ambiguous evasion to Switzerland. Leisurely sailing across Lake Constance, the poet feigned merely to pursue a more wholesome climate for the summer, yet never returned to Germany. Still, he carefully avoided clarifying his opinions on the new regime since the circle was split between pro- and anti-Nazi partisans (the latter being mainly his older, the former mainly his younger friends).
  • 3. 3 Arguably, George’s afterlife began precisely at the point at which, for fear of losing the circle, he relinquished his own voice, leaving to his followers the decision as to how his silence was to be interpreted. His actual death was only corroborative. Controversy began even before the funeral when the pharmaceutics manager Robert Boehringer, George’s formal heir and unrelenting protector of his posthumous integrity, had to push through the decision not to transfer the corpse back to Germany against the resistance of other followers present. A few days after the funeral, somebody cut the swastikas off the bows of the wreath the German envoy to Switzerland, Ernst von Weizsäcker, had discreetly deposited. Clearly, here was a corpse that was not to rest in peace. Raulff is precise on the contestations of the less legitimate heirs. Conflict – about memory, legitimate continuation of the “master’s” work, legitimate interpretation of his political and aesthetic positions – is the leitmotif of the book. Raulff makes clear that George himself had laid the groundwork for this tempestuous afterlife by his ever more pronounced and ever more enigmatic interpretation of the circle as a political entity. In the 1920s, in collaboration with one of his followers, the Marburg historian Friedrich Wolters (d. 1930), he had developed a historical self-description of the circle that framed in terms of a “state” what formerly had been imagined as a group of aesthetically like-minded friends. This was a divisive move. It aestheticized politics as much as it politicized aesthetics; and more importantly in terms of George’s afterlife, it politicized the circle. Raulff includes, in his work, a number of highly interesting micro-studies of the patterns of actual political thought which were informed by the politicization of the circle as much as they informed it. These patterns were developed through a culture of references to great men of the distant past. The intellectual heroes of choice were Plato and Dante. Raulff’s tracing of Dante motives in particular is an engaging pursuit of oblique notions, especially in the work of Ernst Kantorowicz, the implicit main character of the book. The idiosyncratic Platonism espoused by George and some members of the group, notably the very contrary and very forgotten philosophers Kurt Hildebrandt and Edith Landmann, recognized the Symposion as the most important source text and proposed a bizarrely poeticized vision of the philosopher who had so damningly denigrated the pursuits of poetry in Politeia. The unearthing of authors of such obscurity, from the middle of the 20th century, is a great achievement in the project of disrupting the canon of thinkers on which so far most intellectual histories of German political discourse in the 20th century have been based. Raulff succeeds in restoring a strange and
  • 4. 4 bewildering density to the undergrowth of the familiar ideologies. The George circle, in his presentation, becomes emblematic of these qualities. After a steady flow of publications during the last fifteen years, the study of Ernst Kantorowicz has grown into a sophisticated branch of biographical historiography. It receives novel impulses by Raulff’s discussion of the continuities in the work of the German-Jewish medievalist who emigrated to the U.S. and “secularized his Georgean Reich”, as the philosopher Karl Löwith sarcastically wrote. Yet Raulff detects, in this “secularization” marking Kantorowicz’s American oeuvre, a continuing commitment to an aesthetics and a notion of history inherited from George and his followers. This was an ambiguous heritage, and Kantorowicz took significant care to insulate himself and his ideas from the remainders of the “circle”. Although Raulff’s is an attractive account of Kantorowicz’s life and thought, he displays a certain propensity to think in terms of ideas as constituting biographical continuities. He has a preference for regarding ideas as layered, proceeding to ever deeper layers marked by ever greater continuities (thus also the procedure in his landmark biography of Marc Bloch from 1995). It is perhaps possible to criticize this procedure as unquestioningly assuming the priority of biography over the “intellectual”, or even discourse. At any rate, Raulff does not offer an in-depth discussion of this methodical feature of his work. Decidedly not a champion of explicit theory, he proceeds in a fashion that leaves aside much jargon of present fashion. Decidedly a champion of implicit theory however, he theorizes George’s ghostly existence as an “afterlife” along the lines of Aby Warburg’s thought, as the survival of a peculiar set of formulae of pathos, of symbolic patterns shaping affective life. Yet although this is an innovative and fascinating undertaking, it may also be pointed out that Raulff’s study has a methodologically problematic bent where it stipulates rather than demonstrates biographical continuities and stable ideas. Haunting Historical Method After Raulff has dissected the political philosophies (chapter 2), the formation of novel sectarian circles among former Georgeans (chapter 3), and the trajectories of the exiles (chapter 4), he moves into post-war territory. Particularly dazzling is his account of the Stauffenbergs, the resistance of 1944 (he is the first to make use of newly found and highly interesting letters by Claus von Stauffenberg from 1939), and its later representations (chapter 5). Raulff demolishes the widespread notion that Claus von Stauffenberg’s last words, in front of the firing squad, had consisted of a reference to the political aesthetics of the George circle.
  • 5. 5 All eyewitness accounts stated that Stauffenberg had exclaimed the words: “Es lebe das heilige Deutschland!” (i.e., “Long live the holy Germany”). Yet, post-war authors from the ambit of the circle, in particular the exiled economist Edgar Salin, professor in Basle, propagated that the witnesses must have misunderstood and that Stauffenberg had actually yelled: “Es lebe das geheime Deutschland!” (“Long live the secret Germany”), a familiar phrase of innuendo referring to the imaginary state invented and revered by the George circle. Claus von Stauffenberg’s older brother Berthold, a jurist who was hanged three weeks after the failed coup, had been one of George’s favourites and belonged to a triumvirate originally in charge of the “master’s” literary estate (the other two were Boehringer and another forgotten figure, the sculptor Frank Mehnert, George’s last companion, who died as a soldier at the eastern front). The Stauffenbergs’ connections to the circle were tight. But Raulff, while doing away with a teleological reading of the circle as a forerunner of Nazism, also destroys the notion that the circle was a source of resistance during the war. Instead, George could be deployed to legitimize whatever politics. Indeed, in 1933, the Stauffenbergs, along with Mehnert and others, had belonged to the pro-Nazi group plotting to bury the poet in Germany. Berthold von Stauffenberg and Mehnert had moreover pursued a strategy of monumentalizing George’s memory, a strategy with which Boehringer, as Raulff ingeniously reconstructs, fundamentally disagreed. Yet the remembrance of these conflicts, and of the shifting positions of the Stauffenbergs, was to be purged after the war. The heilig-geheim semantic shift was the most momentous event in this purging. George’s ghost did not only haunt the commemoration of the Stauffenbergs. It was also present at the Wilhelmstraßenprozess 1947-49, the second-last of the Nuremberg trials, in which high-ranking former officials of the ministry of foreign affairs were prosecuted. Most prominent among the accused was Ernst von Weizsäcker, indicted in particular for having signed deportation orders for French Jews in his function as Staatssekretär in the Foreign Office from 1938 to 43. Raulff, to be sure, is less interested in Weizsäcker than in the improbable constellation of Georgeans and quasi-Georgeans at the trial, a constellation that closely followed the lines of conflict that had emerged in the circle from the 1930s. The prosecution was represented by Robert Kempner, a lawyer and brother of one Walter Kempner, George’s doctor; both brothers had fled to the U.S. Weizsäcker’s defense was staged by Hellmut Becker, the son of the orientalist and former Prussian minister of education, Carl Heinrich Becker (1876-1933). The latter, while not part of the George circle, had been its staunch supporter and was connected to it by numerous protégés of his own. It
  • 6. 6 was, as Raulff argues, mainly thanks to Becker père that a number of Georgeans had managed to climb to professorships in the highly conservative ranks of German academia in the 1920s. Becker fils, an early war invalid, had taught at the University of Strasbourg from 1941. After the war, he had opened a law office that specialized in the whitewashing of tainted representatives of the state elite. In Strasbourg he had befriended Weizsäcker’s oldest son, the physicist Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker; and in Nuremberg, Becker was assisted by the youngest of Weizsäcker’s sons, Richard, the future president of the Federal Republic. The Weizsäcker boys had been brought to visit George around 1930 by Robert Boehringer, long- time friend of the family. During the trial, Edgar Salin and his former student Marion Gräfin Dönhoff, East Prussian aristocrat, founding editor of the renowned weekly Die Zeit and monument of democratic journalism in the Federal Republic, contributed a widely resonating press campaign based on Becker’s defense strategy. In the perception of the public, Ernst von Weizsäcker became the center of the trial. Against rather solid evidence, Becker painted the Württembergian aristocrat as a stalwart of active resistance. The prosecution prevailed, and Weizsäcker received a sentence that, in part due to the vigorous media campaign in his favor, was regarded as severe. He was pardoned after only one and a half years in prison. In a broad German public, his name had already been cleared during the trial. Ironically, as in the case of the Stauffenbergs, the internal divisions of the George circle, the rather peculiar preoccupations of a self-proclaimed elitist-poetic network, had a profound and entirely nontransparent impact on public political discourse. The motivation and the means to protect Weizsäcker’s reputation derived entirely from his ties to a group of tarnished poetry lovers who desired to maintain faith in their own integrity by marginalizing the memory of those members of their group with better political judgment. For years, the George circle furtively created specific focal points for German discussions about the Nazi past in which George himself was never named. Yet, the passages on the Wilhelmstraßenprozess constitute a turning point in the book: here, Raulff moves from the actual members of the circle to a wider network of academics, officials and journalists who where, thus his argument, nonetheless haunted by George. But at the end of the day, their connections to the circle remained tenuous. While the research presented here is interesting as a pioneering if sketchy study of interweaving elite biographies in Nazi and post-war Germany, Raulff recognizes the problem himself and adds a lengthy methodical digression to the following chapter (chapter 6) in which he focuses on reform school movements in the Federal Republic. A good ghost does not actually leave traces; so
  • 7. 7 perhaps Raulff’s treatment is legitimate as an ironical extension to George’s afterlife. Certainly, there were analogies between the George circle and the elitist and vitalist reform ideas of the pedagogues of the fifties and sixties. Their awkward and subliminally violent eroticization of the teacher-student relationship equally echoed Georgean motives. Moreover, the network of educational reformism chillingly was a direct continuation of the group of Ernst von Weizsäcker’s defenders. Hellmut Becker, energetically having turned himself into a scholar of educational matters, became one of the leading academics in the field for decades to come. Another semi-obliterated educator, the George admirer and free-time Plato scholar Georg Picht, was a close family friend of the Weizsäckers, too. Connections to Dönhoff and other figures from this milieu abounded, and everywhere, eerie evidence for impassioned readings of George’s poetry can be dug up. And yet, and in full awareness, Raulff overstretches his argument. This is partly the result of the narrative model of the book, which the author ironically likens, not only to a ghost story, but also to the Book of Acts that reports the deeds of the Apostles. Yet at this point in Raulff’s story, the Apostles have disappeared. The transition is supposed to be one towards “a phenomenology of the subliminal afterlife” (p. 435), as based on a loose web of biographical, prosopographical and discursive evidence. But if one can demonstrate someone’s familiarity with George, one has not yet said anything about what other gods the person in question may have worshipped. The problem with the overall plotline is indeed that it treats the George circle as a group of Apostles that recognized one god and only one. For some members this is more plausible than for others. Although it concurs with the rhetoric of the circle, it does not necessarily concur with its reality. At times, Raulff’s book seems to slide into a monotheism problem. Although there is potentially great merit in revealing possible connections between monotheism and ghost stories, the historian ought not to follow the commandment only to worship a single master explanatory context. The Body Poetic Then again, in defense of Raulff’s procedure it may be responded that the book voluntarily crosses the border, not into fiction, but into artful literary form. The argumentative overstretch can also be read as a deliberate element of hyperbole that has the merit of highlighting the extent to which, possibly, elusively, the political culture of Germany even in the 1960s was molded by the stale poetry of a bygone era. Or at least the stale aesthetic enthusiasm of a bygone era, for Raulff is after archival treasures to such an extent that he mostly omits talking about the actual poetry. This is not uncommon in the literature on George; but it allows avoiding not only the crucial question of whether it is actually the poetry
  • 8. 8 that constitutes, for Raulff, the fascination of studying George (or, if not, what else?); but also the even more crucial question as to the extent to which the political might, in mid-20th - century Germany, might be deciphered as code for the poetical; the extent to which the body politic was a body poetic. In the epilogue (chapter 7), Raulff suggests a course of argument – already envisioned by his deceased teacher Gert Mattenklott – which connects fin de siècle aestheticism in general and George in particular with the pop-cultural vitalism of the “live fast, die young” crowd of the 1960s. 1968 also marked the centennial of George’s birth, formally the end point of Raulff’s narration. At first glance, the pompous, monumental aesthetics and the authoritarian lifeworld of the George circle seem utterly removed from the emancipation narratives characteristic of the 1960s. Still, the idolization of (male) youth and rebellion was a major shared theme. Perhaps it even travelled from the European fin de siècle to the U.S. and back; and in Germany, it may in addition have trickled down the generations from the bourgeois admirers of “the master” to their children and grandchildren. This imaginative intersection illustrates Raulff’s pleasure in creating surprising connections. Yet the problems touched upon in this respect reach further into territory the book marginalizes. A recurring phrase of Raulff’s is that of “the dirty little secret of sex and the dirty big secret of politics” as constituting the two arcane taboos of the George circle. Yet, wary that he might end up reducing George to his sexual orientation, Raulff chooses not to discuss the way in which these “secrets” interwove; perhaps also because this is too un-subtle an intersection. But let us continue on a plainer and flatter note and point out that the George circle defined its departure from mainstream morality and political sobriety precisely through the constant innuendo of sexual difference. The circle created more or less ritualized moments of initiation. It was generally a seductive group, and the act of seduction was symbolically, and at least sometimes practically, sexual. However, the question as to what was to follow once one had been seduced remained precariously unanswered. There was no further ritualized agenda. At most, the circle offered a few vague notions of a freer, more festive, more poetical, generally enhanced existence. As Raulff points out in one of his rare discussions of George’s poetry, the arcane core of the circle was theatrical, empty and banal when the make-belief was exposed. Those members of the circle who at some point in their lives broke away from George (most prominently Gundolf and Kommerell) all appear to have done so at least partly because they had come to resent the group in general and the “master” in particular as inhibiting their own
  • 9. 9 creative projects. In short, the circle was a dead end; which presumably accounts for all the biographical dead ends haunted by the dead poet. Perhaps one could say, using one of the abstract terms of reference Raulff so diligently eschews, that the George circle was a makeshift heterotopy, a space defined by its carefully instituted non-inclusion in the discursive and practical frameworks of surrounding society. Whether within the circle sexuality expressed politics or vice versa is a moot question, precisely because the distinction was one of surrounding society, and hence void to those initiated in the circle. The dead end character of the group might be attributed precisely to its status of non-inclusion and non-participation. The circle created a bizarre mixture of beauty and hierarchy, gravity and mischief, violence and joy – and never declared an unambiguous project. Instead of having rigid rules and laws it had poetry. George’s ambition, arguably, was the creation of a corpus of poetry in the sense of an organically coherent oeuvre, an actual body of work the perfect (and subtly sexualized) shape of which was to either mock or educate or, eventually, supplant the Leviathan (be it that of the state or that of the church). In a way, it was a logical step of escalation for George to reinvent the circle as a “state” once he felt that his oeuvre had achieved the corporeal form he aimed at, sufficient for imitating or replacing the theatrics of law. This was the theatrics of the recital. It required a system of quotation, of verse to be rehearsed and repeated endlessly. The practice in which the Georgeans engaged when throwing the master’s lines at each other imitated that of legal citation. They acted as mock lawyers in a dead-serious political-historical charade. The most generally deployed political topos in the entire literary output of the circle until 1933 was that of the imminent reform and restoration of the German nation, albeit in strange disguises, as a staged “secret Germany”, an enactment not merely of the nation state, but also of eschatology. The heterotopian character of the circle was stabilized by a target, an internal teleology. This target was provided by the play of the transformation of the nation. It was meaningful primarily under the conditions of the circle; outside, it was not pursued in earnest. The poetics and the enhanced notion of life cultivated by the Georgeans parodied not only the forms of the political, but also those of the historical. But their politics and their history were unreal, deliberately disconnected and self-enclosed. When the nation had transformed, prodded by other “circles” and a different “master”, the game was up. And yet, the game had an afterlife perhaps more powerful than its actual life, since it molded at least some of the multiple Germanies of the 20th century, including some of those
  • 10. 10 the émigrés carried abroad. This is what Raulff pursues. For the first time, his book explores the mangled, fragmented, and distorted reprisals of the “secret Germany” in the Federal Republic and the ways in which these reprisals shaped the political sphere of the post-war period. Yet eschewing such abstractions (and others), he also leaves much to explore in the history of German political culture in the 20th century. We are accustomed to recognize narrative as an indispensable category for understanding political history as shaped by literary form. The attraction of George and his circle might well be that they extend an open invitation to reconsider this habit and take seriously poetry as another literary form indispensable for the historical understanding of political culture. And it is in the study of such phenomena that the historical examination of the George circle might, in the future, find its actual prize. Published in booksandideas.net 28 March 2011. ©booksandideas.net