"Die Vaterschaft beruht nur Ÿberhaupt auf
der †berzeugung": The Displaced Family in
Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre
Heidi M. Schlipphacke, Old Dominion University
Perhaps no other German novel has been granted the status of paradigmatic
testament to shifting notions of bourgeois subjectivity so much as
Goethe's Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre.1 Georg Luk‡cs has deemed the novel
the most important literary product reflecting the transition from the
eighteenth to the nineteenth century.2 Generally viewed as both the first
and the penultimate Bildungsroman, Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre signals a
defining moment for the German SpŠtaufklŠrung.3 Through the depiction
of the "education" of the protagonist Wilhelm, the novel reflects
Enlightenment notions of subjectivity and education and at the same time
calls into question the foundation of these notions. Through a repetitive
dialectic of harmony and destruction, I suggest, Goethe's novel shies away
from synthesis and rather multiplies than simplifies. The bourgeois family,
a notion that is paramount to any conception of bourgeois subjectivity, is,
I argue, consistently and repeatedly deconstructed; biological relations
are unstable, and ostensibly "natural" familial relations are often revealed
to be "unnatural" in their lack of love.
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