New from Camden House
      John Blair
      Tracing Subversive Currents in Goethe's Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship
      Cloth. ISBN 1-57113-092-6. Ca. 200 pp. $54.95 44.00 Eng. Pd.
      Publication date 15 March 1997
      A new reading of Goethe's most influential novel.

      Blair's close attention to the text itself brings to light startling insights into this most influential of all German novels. He shows that, contrary to most readings of the novel, Goethe slyly introduced material in the work that is full of low-cultural, subversive vitality that mocks conservative, authoritarian powers interested in conformity or propriety. The novel does not just find fault with developments of the late
      Enlightenment but rather seductively describes loci of resistance to them: the marketplace, the traveling theater, the Hanswurst. Although "high" aesthetics, morals, institutions, and rationality are impugned in the Lehrjahre, they are not completely discredited. The novel suggests that the problem with "high" principles is their tendency to present themselves as the only valid voice. This new reading will have to be take into consideration in all future scholarship on this seminal work.

       "Blair provides a stimulating reinterpretation of Goethe's novel by shifting attention away from Wilhelm and instead focusing on figures such as Philine and Friedrich who undermine the reglementizing forces in society. In so doing, he interrupts the 'monologue' of interpretations stressing Wilhelm's seamless integration within social structures and argues convincingly on behalf of the multivalence of Goethe's poetic text. His chapter on women in the Apprenticeship demonstrates his sure sense for those elements of the novel that do not easily fit into the Bildungsroman paradigm and that have suffered corresponding critical inattention."
                          --Dennis F. Mahoney, University of Vermont
      Orders 1-800-723-9455