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Vocations, Careers, and Talent: Lutheran Pietism and Sponsored Mobility in Eighteenth-Century Germany

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2009

Anthony J. La Vopa
Affiliation:
North Carolina State University

Extract

Every subject of the state, Immanual Kant reasoned in a discussion of “civil equality” in 1793, “must be able to attain the social rank [Stufe eines Standes] … to which his talent, his effort, and his luck can carry him” without hindrance by any “hereditary prerogative.” A year later Kant's former disciple Johann Gottlieb Fichte likewise imagined a society in which “the choice of a Stand” would be “a choice through freedom” to which no “particular action” or “general institution” could pose a legitimate barrier. The two philosophers offered variations on the radical social principle of “careers open to talent,” extending the promise of upward mobility to talented children of the underprivileged. Proclaimed by the French National Assembly in August 1789, the principle also had a German lineage and, in the first decade of the next century, was to figure prominently in the official program for national revival in Prussia.

Type
On Connecting Institutions to Social Class
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1986

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References

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10 The various career patterns in the Protestant clergy are well represented in the sixty-six autobiographies and biographies spanning 1789 to 1796 in Allgeineines Magazin fir Prediger nach den Bedürfnissen unserer Zeit (cited hereafter as AMP). For other examples of the obscure pastors sons who ascended to prominent positions, see Spalding, Johann Joachim, Lebensbeschreibung von ihm selbst aufgesetzt (Halle. 1804).Google ScholarHorn, Franz Christoph. Friedrich Gedike: eine biographic (Berlin. 1808).Google Scholar

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18 LP. VI, 2123.Google Scholar

19 Francke, , Tiark (1722), 51.Google Scholar

20 LP, II, 145–49;Google ScholarLP, III, 172–75;Google ScholarLP, IV, 7787, 113;Google ScholarLP, VII. 150.Google Scholar

21 The complete text of Francke's conversion account, with useful editorial information, is in August Hermann Francke, Peschke, , ed., 529. See especially 23–24, 28–29.Google Scholar

22 LP, III, 1819;Google ScholarLP, IV, 3233, 111–12, 164.Google Scholar

23 LP, I. 42, 130–34;Google ScholarLP, II, 33. 201–4;Google ScholarLP, III, 126–27;Google ScholarLP, IV, 118–44.Google Scholar On Luther's view of prayer. see especially Asheim, Ivar. Glaube und Erziehung bei Luther. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte des Verhältnisses von Theologie und Pädagogik (Heidelberg, 1961), 168–74.Google Scholar

24 LP, IV, 21.Google Scholar

25 LP, I, 127:Google ScholarLP, II, 179–83, 221–22, 272–73, 336;Google ScholarLP, V. 17;Google ScholarLP, VI. 2426, 257;Google ScholarLP, VII, 136–37, 275, 305–6, 370–73.Google Scholar

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28 LP, I, 128–29.Google Scholar See also LP, II, 366–71;Google ScholarLP, IV, 7787;Google ScholarLP, V. 318–19;Google ScholarLP, VI, 20.Google Scholar

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30 In many cases, he noted, the father had made the decision, and with the sole thought that “other employments in the world are very uncertain but there has to be a pastor in almost every village.” For others, the “fleshly motive” was simply to avoid learning a manual trade regarded as “contemptible.” LP, V. 6263.Google Scholar

31 LP, III, 247–55;Google ScholarLP, IV, 2932;Google ScholarLP, V. 6468.Google Scholar It is striking that Francke diverged here from Christian Kortholt, one of his former teachers, who had felt that such unsuitable candidates should be encouraged to leave the clergy. Peschke, , Bekehrung und Reform, 4748.Google Scholar

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33 LP, IV, 50.Google Scholar

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39 LP, III, 372–75;Google ScholarLP. V. 157–58;Google ScholarLP, VII, 138–39.Google Scholar On the vocatio mediata, see especially Lieberg, , Amt und Ordination, 143–45.Google Scholar

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41 LP, V, 6973.Google Scholar

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43 LP, III, 291.Google Scholar

44 Peschke, , Bekehrung and Reform, 3940, 142–44. My reading of Francke's theology, it should be stressed, is limited to the Lectures, which may exaggerate his faithfulness to Luther. In the most thorough and careful treatment of the subject, Peschke characterizes Franke's thought as “einem eigenuilligen Lutherverstandnis,” corresponding considerably to Luther's intentions in the “formale Ansatz der Gedankenführung” but often diverging from them in the “inhaltiliche Durchführung.”Google ScholarIbid., 148–49.

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47 See, e.g., Luther's Works, XLVI, 250–51.Google Scholar See also the remarks on Luther's view of the social order and social mobility in Spitz, Lewis W., “Luther's Social Concern for Students,” in The Social History of the Reformation, Buck, Lawrence P. and Zophy, Jonathan W.. eds. (Columbus, Ohio, 1972), 258–62.Google Scholar

48 Kramer, , August Hermann Francke, II, 486;Google ScholarNiemeyer, August Hermann, Geschichte des königlihen Pädagogiums seit seiner Stifiung his zum Schluss des ersten Jahrhunderts (Halle, 1796).Google Scholar

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50 The best theological explication of Luther's doctrine of vocation is still Wingren, Gustaf. Luther on Vocation, Rasmussen, Carl C., trans. (Philadelphia, 1957).Google Scholar See also Asheim, . Glaube und Erzieluang bei Luther;Google ScholarLieberg, , Amt und Ordination.Google Scholar

51 This increasing concern to restore authority is emphasized in Strauss, , Luther's House of Learning.Google Scholar

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55 The rationalistic influence of seventeenth-century academies and utopian literature is given due emphasis in Hinrichs, , Preussentum und Pietismus, especially 45.Google Scholar

56 A. H. Francke. Pddagogische Schrifren, Lorenzen, , ed., 15. 3033. 4547.Google Scholar

57 Ibid., 17, 40–41. 51, 83.

58 Oschlies, , Arbeits-und Berufspadagogik, 124–27;Google ScholarHinrichs, , Preussentuin und Pietismus, 65.Google Scholar

59 In his magisterial study, Carl Hinrichs sees Halle Pietism as a cultural bridge for an ideal of rational progress, rooted in the utopian literature of the seventeenth century and assuming its modern, secular form in Enlightenment optimism. Hinrichs's detailed analysis of Francke's reform projects is not matched by due attention to the inner spirituality that was supposed to impel them. To scholars who have focussed on the psychological dynamics of conversion. Francke's Pietism, like other varieties, prepared the way for a fascination with the self and individual psychology at the end of the century. See, e.g., Stemme, Fritz, “Die Säkularisation des Pietismus zur Erfahrungsseelenkunde.” Zeitschrift für deutsche Philologie, 72, Heft 2 (1953), 144–58.Google Scholar Other important studies of Pietist influence are Kaiser, Gerhard, Pietismus und Patriotismus im literarischen Deutschland. Ein Beitrag zum Problem der Säkularisation (Wiesbaden, 1961).Google ScholarMinder, Robert, Glaube, Skepsis und Rationalismus. Dargestellt aufgrund der autohiographischen Schriften von Karl Philipp Moritz (1936; Frankfurt/Main, 1974).Google Scholar

60 Michaelson, Robert S., “Changes in the Puritan Concept of Calling or Vocation,” The New England Quarterly, 26 (06 1953). 315–36;CrossRefGoogle ScholarDouglas, , “Talent and Vocation.” 295–98.Google Scholar To judge by an excellent study of the Mathers, the evolution of Puritanism in New England was more complex. Cotton Mather, who was Francke's contemporary and conducted a correspondence with him, advocated an “American Pietism” which was open to “secular” trends in some respects but placed increasing emphasis on man's natural depravity and total helplessness in the conversion process. Middlekauf, Robert, The Mathers. Three Generations of Puritan Intellectuals, 1596–1728 (New York. 1971), especially 191–319.Google Scholar

61 Weber, Max, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. Parsons, Talcott. trans. (New York. 1976),Google Scholar especially 132–39. For a corrective interpretation of Puritanism, see especially Walzer, , Revolution of the Saints;Google Scholar item. “Puritanism as a Revolutionary Ideology,” in The Protestant Ethic and Modern?atmon. A Comparative View, Eisenstadt, S. N., ed. (New York. 1968), 109–34.Google Scholar On the difference between Halle Pietism and Weber's version of Puritanism, see also Hinrichs, , Preussentum und Pietismns, especially 12. 342–51.Google Scholar

62 All of these differences informed divergent views of the relationship between “nature” and “art” (Kunst) in pedagogy. See especially Dohmen, Günther, Die Entstehung des pädagogischen Bildungsbegriffs und seines Bezugs zum Schuhmterrieht, Vol. II of Biltung und Schule, (Weinheim, 1965).Google Scholar

63 See. e.g., Dommerich, M. Jo. Cph., “Gedanken von besserer Einrichtung der Lebensart junger Leute, zum Nutzen der Republik,”Google Scholar reprinted in Krünitz, Johann Georg. “Lebens-Art,” Oekonomisch-technologische Encvklopädie, 67 (1795), 8899;Google ScholarBöttiger, Carl August, Ueber die besten Minel die Studliersuch derer, die zum Studieren Keinen Beruf haben, zu hemmen (Leipzig, 1789),Google Scholar especially 69–93; Villaume, Peter, “Ob und inwiefern bei der Erziehung die Vollkommenheit des einzelnen Menschen seiner Brauchbarkeit aufzuopfern sei?” in Bildung iind Brauchbarkeit. Texie von Joachim Heinrich Campe und Peter Villaume zur utilitärer Erziehung, Blankertz, Herwig, ed. (Braunschweig, 1965), 106–7Google Scholar (orig. pub. in Allgeineine Revision des gesammten Schul-und Erziehungsuesens, Campe, Joachim Heinrich. ed.. Vol. III (1785)).Google Scholar See also the excellent discussion of Friedrich Gedike's “progressive” reform thought in Müller, Detlef K., Sozialstruktur und Schulsystem: Aspekte zum Strukturwandel des Schulwesens im 19. Jahrhundert (Göttingen, 1977), 98109.Google Scholar For a suggestive discussion of the psychology of individual achievement among sons of the upper bourgeoisie, contrasted with the collective mentality of the lower bourgeoisie. see Schlumbohm, Jurgen, “‘Traditional’ Collectivity and ‘Modem’ Individuality: Some Questions and Suggestions for the Historical Study of Socialization. The Example of the German Lower and Upper Bourgeoisies around 1800.” Social History, 5:1 (01 1980), 71103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

64 Moritz, Karl Philipp. Anton Reiser. Em psvchologischer Roman (17851790; Frankfurt/Main, 1979).Google Scholar See also the fragments of Moritz's diary published in Gnothi sauton: oder, Maga:in zur Erfahrungsseelenkunde, 7:3 (1789), 2552.Google Scholar The detailed correspondences between the Roman and Moritz's life have been demonstrated in Eybisch, Hugo, Anton Reiser. Untersuchungen zur Lebensgeschichte von K. Ph. Moritz und our Kritik seiner Autobiographic, (Leipzig, 1909).Google Scholar For a more general discussion of Moritz's relationship to Pietism, rich in insights, see Minder, . Glaube, Skepsis und Rationalismus,Google Scholar especially 118–81. On the social aspects of his work, see especially Grolimund, Josef, Dos Menschenbild in den autob??graphischen Schriften Karl Philipp Moritz (Zürich, 1967);Google ScholarBoulby, Mark, Karl Philipp Moritz. At the Fringe of Genois (Toronto, 1979), 3550.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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66 See. e.g., Büsching, Anton Friedrich, Ausführliche Nachricht von der jetzigen Verfassung des berlinischen Gvnnnasii (Berlin, 1768);Google ScholarGedike, Friedrich, “Praktische Beitrag zur Methodik des öffentlichen Schulunterrichts,”Google Scholar in idem.Gesammlete Schulschriften, 2 vols. (Berlin, 1789 1795), I. 75157.Google Scholar

67 See espcially LP, I, 241–45, 302–7;Google ScholarLP, II, 160, 340–41;Google ScholarLP, III, 191–93, 291;Google ScholarLP, VII, 124–25, 305–15.Google Scholar Cotton Mather, who was particularly aware of this tension, rejected the prevailing “preparationist” approach to conversion on the grounds that its preparatory stages admitted human merit in the guise of “psychological ‘works,’ accomplished by the self.” Middlekauf, , The Machers, esp. 233–46.Google Scholar

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72 See, e.g., the life histories in AMP, 4:2 (1790), 216–24Google ScholarPubMed (Christian Wilhelm Gemler); AMP, 3:6(1790). 634–36Google ScholarPubMed (Karl Christian Tittmann); AMP, 11:4 (1795), 8394Google ScholarPubMed (Johann Samuel Fest): AMP, 6 (1798), 241–47Google ScholarPubMed (Samuel Friedrich Nathanael Morus); AMP. 11:5 (1795), 97112Google ScholarPubMed (Johann Wilhelm Schmid); AMP, 7:4 (1792), 456–90Google Scholar (Heinrich Gottlieb Zerenner). See also Spalding, Johann Salomo, Lebensbeschreibung,Google Scholar especially 130–33; Semler, , Lebensbeschreibung (Halle, 1781),Google Scholar especially 295–98. See also background on the view of conversion in the Enlightenment in Schings, Hans-Jurgen, Melancholie und Aufklärung (Stuttgart, 1977).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

73 Moritz, , Anton Reiser, especially 161–67. It is perhaps no accident that Anton incurs disapproval by nearly tearing a page in Cicero's De Officiis, one of the more important classical treatises arguing for the cultivation of natural talent.Google Scholar

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