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Movement and embodiment in Klopstock and Goethe

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Authors

Lee, CL 

Abstract

Poetry is both physical and mobile: it moves us, and moves in us. This essay focuses on the role of the moving body in the work of Klopstock, with a brief excursus into Goethe's poetry. Klopstock conceived of poetry as a kind of dance, and his innovations in prosody consisted of an intensification of the physical dimension of poetry. He consistently challenged the assumption underlying dualistic philosophies: namely, that the physical and the metaphysical, the tangible and the intangible, are ultimately separate. In his work, it is precisely the substance and weight of language which allows poetry to spin into the realms of the spiritual. His theory and practice is, therefore, thoroughly in tune with the premises of the modern notion of embodied cognition.

Description

Keywords

47 Language, Communication and Culture, 4703 Language Studies, 4705 Literary Studies

Journal Title

German Life and Letters

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0016-8777
1468-0483

Volume Title

70

Publisher

Wiley