For a Reappreciation of the Literary in Literary Studies: Poetic Thinking

As a literary scholar based in German Studies outside of Germany, I am confronted with German being considered a minor subject matter. There are evidently clear differences between the German departments within German-speaking countries and abroad. The latter are shrinking considerably almost every...

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Main Author: Marko Pajević
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: University of Tartu Press 2020-06-01
Series:Interlitteraria
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/IL/article/view/16623
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spelling doaj-c2677f21b9a84e34a52023022aac67e62020-11-25T03:46:37ZdeuUniversity of Tartu PressInterlitteraria1406-07012228-47292020-06-0125110.12697/IL.2020.25.1.2For a Reappreciation of the Literary in Literary Studies: Poetic ThinkingMarko Pajević0Tartu Ülikool, Maailma keelte ja kultuuride kolledž, Lossi 3, 51003 Tartu As a literary scholar based in German Studies outside of Germany, I am confronted with German being considered a minor subject matter. There are evidently clear differences between the German departments within German-speaking countries and abroad. The latter are shrinking considerably almost everywhere and need to focus on few aspects, often related to historical issues and some general successful movements, such as gender or postcolonialism. In Germany, there seems to be a preoccupation with didactics and media. But since I consider these symptoms part of a wider issue, I prefer making some more general observations. World literature is – at least in the dominant anglophone cultures – increasingly identified with English language literature. Comparative literature programmes mostly work with translations as if those were original literary texts which – roughly speaking – reduces literature to its plot and, possibly, its structure. This is also reflected in the tendency in literary studies to be oblivious of the poetic approach. Philologies are often subservient to outer goals (history, sociology, psychology), and, in their efforts to justify their existence in the eyes of the market economy, they believe they cannot afford to deal with the core of what litera ture is about, the literary. In my view, this is one of the reasons for the difficulties of the philologies and possibly Humanities altogether. Literary studies, despite the various enriching overlaps with various other disciplines, should not forget this specificity, which I call poetics, the interaction of the form of language and the form of life. By making a strong case for the relevance of an understanding of what language is and does – and literature is the privileged field of observation – philologies would be of obvious importance for society as a whole. https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/IL/article/view/16623modern languagesGerman studiesworld literaturecomparative literatureSprachdenkenlife sciences
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marko Pajević
spellingShingle Marko Pajević
For a Reappreciation of the Literary in Literary Studies: Poetic Thinking
Interlitteraria
modern languages
German studies
world literature
comparative literature
Sprachdenken
life sciences
author_facet Marko Pajević
author_sort Marko Pajević
title For a Reappreciation of the Literary in Literary Studies: Poetic Thinking
title_short For a Reappreciation of the Literary in Literary Studies: Poetic Thinking
title_full For a Reappreciation of the Literary in Literary Studies: Poetic Thinking
title_fullStr For a Reappreciation of the Literary in Literary Studies: Poetic Thinking
title_full_unstemmed For a Reappreciation of the Literary in Literary Studies: Poetic Thinking
title_sort for a reappreciation of the literary in literary studies: poetic thinking
publisher University of Tartu Press
series Interlitteraria
issn 1406-0701
2228-4729
publishDate 2020-06-01
description As a literary scholar based in German Studies outside of Germany, I am confronted with German being considered a minor subject matter. There are evidently clear differences between the German departments within German-speaking countries and abroad. The latter are shrinking considerably almost everywhere and need to focus on few aspects, often related to historical issues and some general successful movements, such as gender or postcolonialism. In Germany, there seems to be a preoccupation with didactics and media. But since I consider these symptoms part of a wider issue, I prefer making some more general observations. World literature is – at least in the dominant anglophone cultures – increasingly identified with English language literature. Comparative literature programmes mostly work with translations as if those were original literary texts which – roughly speaking – reduces literature to its plot and, possibly, its structure. This is also reflected in the tendency in literary studies to be oblivious of the poetic approach. Philologies are often subservient to outer goals (history, sociology, psychology), and, in their efforts to justify their existence in the eyes of the market economy, they believe they cannot afford to deal with the core of what litera ture is about, the literary. In my view, this is one of the reasons for the difficulties of the philologies and possibly Humanities altogether. Literary studies, despite the various enriching overlaps with various other disciplines, should not forget this specificity, which I call poetics, the interaction of the form of language and the form of life. By making a strong case for the relevance of an understanding of what language is and does – and literature is the privileged field of observation – philologies would be of obvious importance for society as a whole.
topic modern languages
German studies
world literature
comparative literature
Sprachdenken
life sciences
url https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/IL/article/view/16623
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