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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > German Literature, Biographies > Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
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Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, German Literature, Biographies

Related Category: German Literature, Biographies

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe[yO´hAn vOlf´gAng fun gO´tu] Pronunciation Key - Early Life and Works

Goethe describes his happy and sheltered childhood in his autobiography, Dichtung und Wahrheit (1811–33). In 1765 he went to Leipzig to study law. There he spent his time in the usual student dissipations, which perhaps contributed to a hemorrhage that required a long convalescence at Frankfurt. His earliest lyric poems, set to music, were published in 1769. In 1770–71 he completed his law studies at Strasbourg, where the acquaintance of Herder filled him with enthusiasm for Shakespeare, for Germany's medieval past, and for the German folk song.

Goethe's lyric poems for Friederike Brion, daughter of the pastor of nearby Sesenheim, were written at this time as new texts for folk-song melodies. Among the lasting influences of Goethe's youth were J. J. Rousseau and Spinoza, who appealed to Goethe's mystic and poetic feeling for nature in its ever-changing aspects. It was in this period that Goethe began his lifelong study of animals and plants and his research in biological morphology.

Goethe first attracted public notice with the drama GOtz von Berlichingen (1773) (see Berlichingen, GOtz von), a pure product of Sturm und Drang. Still more important was the epistolary novel Die Leiden des jungen Werthers (1774, tr. The Sorrows of Young Werther, 1957) which Goethe, on the verge of suicide, wrote after his unrequited love for Charlotte Buff. Werther gave him immediate fame and was widely translated. While the writing had helped Goethe regain stability, the novel's effect on the public was the opposite; it encouraged morbid sensibility.

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Topics that might be of interest to you:

GOtz von Berlichingen
biography
Thomas Carlyle
drama, Western
Faust
Frederick II, king of Prussia
German literature
Hafiz
romanticism
Friedrich von Schiller
Franz Peter Schubert
Strasbourg
Sturm und Drang
tragedy
Weimar
Johann Joachim Winckelmann

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Literature and the Arts > Literature in Other Modern Languages
Literature and the Arts > Biographies
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