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Die Jungfrau von Orleans

from Major Writings

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 April 2017

Karl S. Guthke
Affiliation:
Cambridge University
Dieter Borchmeyer
Affiliation:
Professor of German at the University of Heidelberg
Otto Dann
Affiliation:
Professor of History at the University of Cologne, Germany
Karl S. Guthke
Affiliation:
Kuno Francke Professor of German Art and Culture in the Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures at Harvard University.
Walter Hinderer
Affiliation:
Professor of German at Princeton University, USA
Rolf-Peter Janz
Affiliation:
Professor of German, Free University of Berlin, Germany
Wulf Koepke
Affiliation:
Retired Distinguished Professor of German, Texas A and M University.
Norbert Oellers
Affiliation:
Professor of German, The University of Bonn, GermanyEditor of the Schiller Nationalausgabe
David V. Pugh
Affiliation:
Professor of German at Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
Lesley Sharpe
Affiliation:
Professor of German, The University of Exeter, England
Werner von Stransky-Stranka-Greifenfels
Affiliation:
Associate Professor of German, Militarhogskolan Karlberg, Stockholm, Sweden
James M. van der Laan
Affiliation:
Professor of German at Illinois State University, USA
Steven D. Martinson
Affiliation:
Professor of German Studies and Associated Faculty in Religious Studies, University of Arizona.
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Summary

1.

In his last two completed plays, not counting the “fate tragedy” Die Braut von Messina (The Bride of Messina, 1803), Schiller, the German Shakespeare as he was known in the 1780s, seems to have taken a leaf from the master's book: in Die Jungfrau von Orleans (The Maid of Orleans, 1802) and Wilhelm Tell (1804), tragedy yields to a more conciliatory, indeed redemptive mood, culminating in the triumph and glorification of “Romantic nationalism” (Reed, 97) or related noble sentiments. Not surprisingly, both plays rank highest among Schiller's plays in popularity. All-time favorites of open-air theaters and amateur productions, their “Romantic” pageantry, miraculous events, grandiose scenic effects, and musical intermezzi have the broad appeal of opera. Arguably, there is even a touch of kitsch in them, and they are to this day an inexhaustible reservoir of familiar quotations without which no newspaper or cocktail party would be quite the same.

Yet both are also serious, philosophically charged historical dramas. In Tell, Romantic nationalism glorifies the triumphant political liberation movement of the Swiss cantons; in Jungfrau, it leads up to the apotheosis of the patriotic heroine at the moment when she has turned the tide of the war in favor of her country and a victorious outcome of the struggle for national autonomy is in sight. In each play, the course of history confirms or validates the high-minded aspirations of the protagonist, even suggesting a near-utopian future. This is strange if we remember that in the mid-1790s, Schiller had rejected his idealistic, teleological, and therefore optimistic conception of history, and its lofty promise of ultimate justice (“die Weltgeschichte ist das Weltgericht”) in favor of a thoroughly skeptical, indeed disillusioned concept of history — history as a jumble of random events without ulterior meaning and certainly without the seeds of progress of any kind (Hofmann in Oellers, 371–79).

But this apparent contradiction between the historical plays and their author's view of history becomes irrelevant once we realize that in all of his historical plays, Schiller focuses not so much on the course of history and its ulterior meaning as on the prominent man or woman caught up in it. He did so in Fiesko and Don Carlos, before his supposed disillusion with history, and again in Wallenstein and Maria Stuart after it.

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Chapter
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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2005

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