Goethe's Cosmopolitan Idea of World literature versus Nationalist Thoughts

Document Type : Case Report

Authors

German Language and Literature, Foreign Languages ​​and Foreign Literatures at the University of Tehran, Iran

Abstract
The idea of global literature is one of the main pillars of Goethe's literary
and artistic life. The formation and development of this concept is the result
of the considerable devotion that he addresses to foreign literature and the
need of reflecting the world literature in his own culture, by the
acknowledgment of the capacities and abilities of other cultures. This idea,
from a cultural and literary perspective, is in opposition to the extreme
nationalist insights by its socio-political, and cosmopolitan dimensions. This
argument, especially today, with the re-emergence of the new nationalism,
in many countries around the world, has become more important. The
following article, relying on the idea of Goethe's universal literature,
compares his views with nationalist beliefs and concluded that Goethe
emphasizes on "opening the gates of national literature to the literature of
other nations, by desiring a mutual influence and inviting the world's
thinkers and authors to participate in intellectual exchange, cultural
dialogue and international connection". Goethe’s ideas include some transnational,
trans-ethnical, and trans-regional dimensions.

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