Abstract

The attempts to consider the works of Annette von Droste-Hulshoff from a social point of view have mostly emphasised, in a unilateral way, the influences of the class and the geographical milieu. Consequently, the interpretations have overlooked a utopical dimension that is always present in her works, and that is rendered through a complex symbolism and a number of elements proceeding from the pagan and Christian traditions — though translated into the language of Romanticism. An inquiry on the relationship of Droste with the romantic anticapitalist tradition (and, especially, with the so-called «Heidelberg Romanticism») allows to understand more accurately the social meaning of her works and, notably, of Die Judenbuche.

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