- Sturm und Drang
"Sturm und Drang" (the conventional translation is "Storm and Stress"; a more literal translation, however, might be "storm and urge", "storm and longing", "storm and drive" or "storm and impulse") is the name of a movement in
German literature and music taking place from the late 1760s through the early 1780s in which individualsubjectivity and, in particular, extremes of emotion were given free expression in response to the confines of rationalism imposed bythe Enlightenment and associatedaesthetic movements.The philosopher
Johann Georg Hamann is considered to be the ideologue of Sturm und Drang, andJohann Wolfgang von Goethe was a notable proponent of the movement, though he andFriedrich Schiller ended their period of association with it, initiating what would becomeWeimar Classicism .Historical background
Counter-Enlightenment
French
Neoclassicism , a movement beginning in the earlybaroque , and its preoccupation withrational congruity, was the principal target of rebellion for authors who would be known as adherents to the "Sturm und Drang" movement. The overt sentimentalism and need to project an objective, anti-personal characterization or image was at odds with the latent desire to express troubling personal emotions and an individual subjective perspective on reality. The ideals ofrationalism ,empiricism , anduniversalism traditionally associated with the Enlightenment were combated by an emerging notion that the reality constructed in the wake of this monumental change in values was not an adequate reflection of the human experience and that a revolutionary restatement was necessary to fully convey the extremes of inner pain and torment, and the reality that personal motivations consist of a balance between the pure and impure.Origin of the term
The term "Sturm und Drang" first appeared as the title to a play about the ongoing
American Revolution by German authorFriedrich Maximilian Klinger , published in 1776, in which the author gives violent expression to difficultemotions and heralds individualexpression and subjectivity over the natural order of rationalism. Though it is argued that literature and music associated with "Sturm und Drang" predate this seminal work, it is this point at which historical analysis begins to outline a distinct aesthetic movement occurring between the late 1760s through the early 1780s of which German artists of the period were distinctlyself-conscious . Contrary to the dominant post-enlightenmentliterary movements of the time, this reaction, seemingly spontaneous in its appearance, came to be associated with a wide breadth ofGerman authors and composers of the mid to lateclassical period . [ Preminger, Alex; Brogan, T. V. F. (Eds). (1993) "The New Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics". Princeton: Princeton University. pg. 1]"Sturm und Drang" came to be associated with literature or music aiming to frighten the audience or imbue them with extremes of emotion until the dispersement of the movement into
Weimar Classicism and the eventual transition into earlyRomanticism wheresocio-political aims were incorporated (these aims asserting unified values contrary todespotism and limitations on human freedom) along with a religious treatment of all things natural. [Pascal, Roy. (Apr., 1952). "The Modern Language Review", Vol. 47, No. 2. pp. 129–151. pg. 32.] There is much debate regarding whose work should and should not be included in the canon of "Sturm und Drang"; there being an argument for limiting the movement toGoethe ,Herder ,Lenz and their direct German associates writing works of fiction and philosophy between 1770 and the early 1780s. [Pascal. Pg 129.]The alternative perspective is that of a literary movement inextricably linked to simultaneous developments in prose, poetry, and drama extending its direct influence throughout the German-speaking lands until the end of the 18th century. Nevertheless, it should be noted that the originators of the movement viewed it as a time of premature exuberance which was then abandoned in later years for often conflicting artistic pursuits. [Heckscher, William S. (1966–1967) Simiolus: "Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art", Vol. 1, No. 2. pp. 94–105. Pg. 94.]
Related aesthetic and philosophical movements
Kraftmensch existed as a precursor to "Sturm und Drang" among dramatists beginning with F.M. Klinger, the expression of which is seen in the radical degree to whichindividuality need appeal to no outside force outside the self nor be tempered byrationalism . [Leidner, Alan. (Mar., 1989). C. PMLA, Vol. 104, No. 2, pp. 178-189. Pg. 178] Theseideals are identical to those of "Sturm und Drang", and it can be argued that the later name exists to catalog a number of parallel, co-influential movements inGerman literature rather than express anything substantially different than what German dramatists were achieving in the violent plays attributed to theKraftmensch movement.Major philosophical/theoretical influences on the literary Sturm und Drang movement were
Johann Georg Hamann (especially the 1762 text "Aesthetica in nuce. Eine Rhapsodie in kabbalistischer Prose") andJohann Gottfried Herder , both from Königsberg, and both formerly in contact withImmanuel Kant . Significant theoretical statements of Sturm und Drang aesthetics by the movement's central dramatists themselves include Lenz' "Anmerkungen übers Theater" and Goethe's "Von deutscher Baukunst" and "Zum Schäkespears Tag" ("sic"). The most important contemporary document was the 1773 volume "Von deutscher Art und Kunst. Einige fliegende Blätter", a collection of essays which included commentaries by Herder on Ossian and Shakespeare, along with contributions by Goethe,Paolo Frisi (in translation from the Italian), andJustus Möser ."Sturm und Drang" in literature
Characteristics
The
protagonist in a typical "Sturm und Drang" stage work,poem , ornovel is driven to action not by pursuit of noble means nor by true motives, but byrevenge andgreed . Further, this action to which the primary character is drawn is often one ofviolence .Goethe 's unfinished "Prometheus" exemplifies this along with the common ambiguity provided by the interspersion of humanistic platitudes next to outbursts of irrationality. [Alan Liedner Pg. 178] The literature with "Sturm und Drang" has an anti-aristocrat ic slant and places value on those things humble, natural, or intensely real (i.e. painful, tormenting, or frightening).The story of hopeless love and eventual suicide presented in
Goethe 'ssentimental novel "The Sorrows of Young Werther " (1774) is an example of the author's tempered introspection regarding his love and torment.Friedrich Schiller 's drama, "Die Räuber " (1781), provided the groundwork formelodrama to become a recognized dramatic form through a plot portraying the conflict between two aristocratic brothers, Franz andKarl Moor . Franz is portrayed as a villain attempting to cheat Karl out of his inheritance, though the motives for his action are complex and initiate a thorough investigation of good and evil.Both of these works are seminal examples of "Sturm und Drang" in
German literature .Notable literary works
*
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749–1832):
** "Zum Schäkespears Tag" (1771)
** "Sesenheimer Lieder" (1770–1771)
** "Prometheus" (1772–1774)
** "Götz von Berlichingen " (1773)
** "Clavigo" (1774)
** "Die Leiden des jungen Werthers" (1774)
** "Mahomets Gesang" (1774)
** "Adler und Taube" (1774)
** "An Schwager Kronos" (1774)
** "Gedichte der Straßburger und Frankfurter Zeit" (1775)
** "Stella. Ein Schauspiel für Liebende" (1776)
** "Die Geschwister" (1776)
*Friedrich Schiller (1759–1805):
** "Die Räuber " (1781)
** "Die Verschwörung des Fiesko zu Genua " (1783)
** "Kabale und Liebe " (1784)
** "An die Freude " (1785)
*Jakob Michael Reinhold Lenz (1751–1792)
** "Anmerkung über das Theater nebst angehängtem übersetzten Stück Shakespeares" (1774)
** "Der Hofmeister oder Vorteile der Privaterziehung" (1774)
** "Lustspiele nach dem Plautus fürs deutsche Theater" (1774)
** "Die Soldaten" (1776)
*Friedrich Maximilian Klinger (1752–1831):
** "Das leidende Weib" (1775)
** "Sturm und Drang" (1776)
** "Die Zwillinge" (1776)
** "Simsone Grisaldo" (1776)
*Gottfried August Bürger (1747–1794):
** "Lenore" (1773)
** "Gedichte" (1778)
** "Wunderbare Reisen zu Wasser und zu Lande, Feldzüge und lustige Abenteuer des Freiherren von Münchhausen" (1786)
*Heinrich Wilhelm von Gerstenberg (1737–1823):
** "Gedichte eines Skalden" (1766)
** "Briefe über Merkwürdigkeiten der Literatur" (1766–67)
** "Ugolino" (1768)
*Johann Georg Hamann (1730–1788):
** "Sokratische Denkwürdigkeiten für die lange Weile des Publikums zusammengetragen von einem Liebhaber der langen Weile" (1759)
** "Kreuzzüge des Philologen" (1762)
*Johann Jakob Wilhelm Heinse (1746–1803):
** "Ardinghello und die glückseligen Inseln" (1787)
*Johann Gottfried Herder (1744–1803):
** "Fragmente über die neuere deutsche Literatur" (1767–1768)
** "Kritische Wälder oder Betrachtungen, die Wissenschaft und Kunst des Schönen betreffend, nach Maßgabe neuerer Schriften" (1769)
** "Journal meiner Reise im Jahre" (1769)
** "Abhandlung über den Ursprung der Sprache" (1770)
** "Von deutscher Art und Kunst, einige fliegende Blätter" (1773)
** "Volkslieder" (1778-79)
** "Vom Geist der Hebräischen Poesie" (1782–1783)
** "Ideen zur Philosophie der Geschichte der Menschheit" (1784–1791)"Sturm und Drang" in music
History
Musical theater stands as the meeting place where the literary movement "Sturm und Drang" enters the realm ofmusical composition with the aim of increasing emotional expression inopera . Theobbligato recitative is a prime example. Here,orchestra l accompaniment provides an intense underlay capable of vivid tone-painting to the solorecitative (recitative itself being influenced by Greekmonody —the highest form of individual emotional expression in neo-platonic thought).Christoph Willibald Gluck 's 1761opera , "Don Juan ", exemplifies the emergence of "Sturm und Drang" in music including explicit reference in the program notes that the intent of the D minor finale was to evoke fear in the listener.Jean Jacques Rousseau 's "Pygmalion" (1770) is a similarly important bridge in its use of underlyinginstrumental music to convey the mood of spokendrama to the audience. The first example of musicalmelodrama ,Goethe and others important to German literature were influenced by this work. [Heartz/Bruce, Daniel and Alan Brown. (Accessed21 March 2007 ). 'Sturm und Drang', "Grove Music Online", "http://www.grovemusic.com/shared/views/article.html?section=music.27035"]Nevertheless, in comparison to the influence of "Sturm und Drang" on literature, the influence on
musical composition remained limited and many efforts to label music as conforming to this thought current are tenuous at best.Vienna , the seat of the major German-speaking composers—Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart andJoseph Haydn specifically—was a cosmopolitan city with an international culture. Hence, those writinginstrumental music in the city were writing more expressive music inminor modes with innovative melodic elements as the result of a longer progression in artistic movements occurring throughout Europe. The clearest connections can be realized inopera and the early predecessors ofprogram music such asHaydn 's "Farewell Symphony ".Characteristics
The music associated with "Sturm und Drang" is predominantly written in a
minor key conveying a sense of difficult or depressing sentiment. The major themes of a piece tend to be angular, with large leaps and unpredictable melodic contour.Tempo s change rapidly and unpredictably, as dodynamics in order to reflect strong changes in emotion. Pulsingrhythm s andsyncopation are common as are racing lines in thesoprano oralto registers. For string players,tremolo is a point of emphasis.Joseph Haydn's "Sturm und Drang" Period
A "Sturm und Drang" period is often attributed to
Viennese composerJoseph Haydn between the late 1760s through the early 1770s. Works during this period often feature an impassioned or agitated element, although pinning this as worthy of inclusion in the "Sturm und Drang" movement is difficult.Haydn never states thisself-conscious literary movement as the motivation for his new compositional style. [Brown, A. Peter. (Spring, 1992). "The Journal of Musicology", Vol. 10, No. 2. pp. 192-230. Pg. 198] ThoughHaydn may have not considered his music as a direct statement affirming these anti-rational ideals (there is still an overarching adherence toform and motivic unity), one can draw a connection to the influence ofmusical theater upon hisinstrumental works withHaydn 's writing essentially two degrees removed fromGoethe and his compatriots.Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Mozart 's Symphony No. 25 (1773), otherwise known as the 'Little' G Minor Symphony, is unusual for aclassical symphony as it is in a minor key, being one of two minor symphonies written byMozart in his career. Beyond itsminor key , thesymphony demonstrates rhythmicsyncopation along with the jagged themes associated with musical "Sturm und Drang". [Wright, Craig and Bryan Simms. (2006) Music in Western Civilization. Belmont: Thomson Schirmer. Pg. 423] More interesting is the emancipation of thewind instruments in this piece with theviolin yielding to colorful bursts from theoboe andflute . Exhibiting the ordered presentation of agitation and stress expected in the literature of "Sturm und Drang", it is the influence of Vanhal's manic-depressive minor key pieces on Mozart's writing rather than aself-conscious adherence to a German literary movement which can be held responsible for Mozart'sharmonic andmelodic experiments in Symphony No 25. [A. Peter Brown. Pg. 198 ]Notable composers and works
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach
*Symphonies, keyboard concertos and sonatasJohann Christian Bach
*Symphony in G minor op.6 No.6Johann Christoph Friedrich Bach
*Oratorio "Die Auferweckung des Lazarus "
*Cantata "Cassandra"Wilhelm Friedemann Bach
*Adagio und Fuge in D minor Falk 65Georg Anton Benda
*Melodrama "Medea"
*Melodrama "Ariadne auf Naxos"
*Melodrama "Pygmalion"Johann Gottfried Eckard
*Keyboard sonatas op. 1 & 2Joseph Haydn
*Symphony No. 49 in F minor "La Passione" (1768)
*Symphony No. 44 in E minor "Trauer" ("Mourning") (1772)
*Symphony No. 45 in F sharp minor "Farewell" (1772)
*Symphony No. 26 in D minor "Lamentatione"
*String Quartet No. 23 in F minor, Op. 20 No. 5 (1772)Joseph Martin Kraus
*Oratorio "Der Tod Jesu" VB 17 (1776)
*Symphony in F major VB 130 (1776)
*Symphony in C sharp minor VB 140 (1782)
*Symphony in C minor VB 142 (1783)
*Ouverture "Olympie" VB 29 (1792)Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
*Symphony No. 25 in G minor, K. 183 (1773)Christoph Willibald Gluck
*Ballet "Don Juan" (1761)
*Opera "Orfeo ed Euridice " (1762)Luigi Boccherini
* Symphony in D minor "La Casa del Diavolo" G. 506 (1771)Ignaz Holzbauer
*Singspiel "Günther von Schwarzburg" (1777)Jean Jacques Rousseau
*"Pygmalion" (1770)Johann Heinrich Rolle
*Oratorio "Der Tod Abels" (1771)
*Oratorio "Abraham" (1777)
*Oratorio "Lazarus" (1779)
*Oratorio "Thirza und ihre Söhne" (1781)Johann Baptist Vanhal
*Symphony in D minor
*Symphony in G minor
*Symphony in E minorErnst Wilhelm Wolff
*Keyboard concertos and sonatasJohann Gottfried Müthel
*Keyboard concertos and sonatasBernhard Joachim Hagen
*Sonatas forlute Friedrich Ludwig Aemilius Kunzen
*SymphoniesLeopold Kozeluch
*SymphoniesFranz Anton Rössler/Antonio Rosetti
*SymphoniesCarl Ditters von Dittersdorf
*Symphonies"Sturm und Drang" in Visual Art
Characteristics
The parallel movement in the
visual art s can be witnessed inpainting s of storms and shipwrecks showing the terror and irrational destruction wrought bynature . These pre-romantic works were fashionable inGermany from the 1760s on through the 1780s, illustrating a public audience for emotionally provocative artwork. Additionally, disturbing visions and portrayals ofnightmares were gaining an audience in Germany as evidenced byGoethe 's possession and admiration of paintings byFuseli capable of 'giving the viewer a good fright.' [Daniel Heartz/Bruce Pg. 1]Notable Artists
*
Joseph Vernet
*Philip James de Loutherbourg
*Henry Fuseli ee also
*
Romanticism
*Counter-Enlightenment
*Ossian
*Primitivism
*Kraftmensch
*Johann Gottfried Herder
*Friedrich Maximilian Klinger
*Friedrich Schiller
*Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
*Durmstrang Footnotes
References
*Baldick, Chris. (1990) "The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms". Oxford: Oxford University.
*Brown, A. Peter. (Spring, 1992). "The Journal of Musicology", Vol. 10, No. 2. pp. 192–230.
*Heartz/Bruce, Daniel and Alan Brown. (Accessed21 March 2007 ). "Sturm und Drang", Grove Music Online, "http://www.grovemusic.com/shared/views/article.html?section=music.27035"
*Heckscher, William S. (1966–1967) Simiolus: "Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art", Vol. 1, No. 2. pp. 94–105.
*Leidner, Alan. (Mar., 1989). C. PMLA, Vol. 104, No. 2, pp. 178–189.
*Pascal, Roy. (Apr., 1952). "The Modern Language Review", Vol. 47, No. 2. pp. 129–151.
*Preminger, Alex; Brogan, T. V. F. (Eds). (1993) "The New Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics". Princeton: Princeton University.
*Wright, Craig and Bryan Simms. (2006) "Music in Western Civilization". Belmont: Thomson Schirmer.External links
* [http://www.bartleby.com/65/st/Sturmund.html Sturm und Drang. The Columbia Encyclopedia]
* [http://www.litencyc.com/php/stopics.php?rec=true&UID=1266 Sturm und Drang. Literary Encyclopedia]
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