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James L. Rolleston, Professor and Director of Graduate Studies, Germanic Languages and Literature
Office Location: | 116L Old Chemistry |
Office Phone: | (919) 660-3162, (919) 660-3160 |
Email Address: |
- Education:
Ph.D. Yale University 1968 BA Ford Fellow, University of Minnesota 1962 M.A. University of Minnesota, Twin Cities 1962 B.A. University of Cambridge (United Kingdom) 1961 BA Winchester College, Winchester, England 1958
- Specialties:
-
19th Century Literature
20th Century Literature
Critical Theory
Literary History & Criticism
- Research Interests: 20th Century, Theory, Kafka, Romanticism, and Marxism
I arrived in German Studies through a love of poetry and specifically of Rilke’s poetry. Both my M.A. and my Ph.D. theses were on Rilke, and I realize now that Rilke has subtly influenced my choice of other topics for scholarly work, through the magisterial power and scope of his language; through his historical position as a German modernist in an intensely productive era; and through his formulation of that perennial German Romantic dream of a “total work of art”, a version of th e aesthetic so comprehensive that it intervenes on life at every point. Two of my courses, Romanticism and Modern Poetry (Goethe to the present) are taught very much in this spirit. Not that I see Rilke as some teleological high point in German literature: my perspective is, rather, originary, drawing out the astonishing, seemingly infinite implications of texts by early Romantics like Novalis, Tieck and Friedrich Schlegel. Another enduring concern of mine has been the work of Franz Kafka, Rilke’s near contemporary: indeed both these great, totally dissimilar writers grew up in Prague, a cultural fact that has been very fruitful for linguistic and thematic analysis. I teach a graduate seminar on Kafka, in which we read virtually all his fiction and survey the continuously interesting critical tradition. In our time literary theory may play the role performed by Romanticism and Modernism in their historical moments, the role of bringing together seemingly disparate phenomena (art and advertising, pleasure and politics) in the cause of conceptualizin g human culture as a whole. Cultural Studies, of which German Studies is a branch, is the most useful label for current theoretical aspirations. And of course it’s a style of theorizing deployed by many German writers since the originary Romantics. I n my course Consciousness and Modern Society, I present readings from Hegel, Marx, Nietzsche, Freud, Lukacs, the Frankfurt School and Habermas. The theme is the way in which the Romantic concept of productive consciousness has generated a ceaseless thinking of what would be needed for a “good society” to come into being.
- Keywords:
- Europe • Germany • Poetry • Romanticism • Modernism
- Current Ph.D. Students
- David A. Hughes
- Recent Publications
(More Publications)
- J. Rolleston, Choric Consciousness in Expressionist Poetry: Ernst Stadler, Else Lasker-Schüler, Georg Heym, Georg Trakl, Gottfried Benn, in A Companion to German Expressionism, edited by Neil Donahue (forthcoming), Rochester, NY: Camden House
- J. Rolleston, Heute, 1948: Photojournalism Frames the German Present, South Atlantic Review (forthcoming)
- J. Rolleston, A Companion to the Works of Franz Kafka (2002), Camden House
- Raymond Furness, Zarathustra's Children: A Study of a Lost Generation of German Writers, vol. 93 no. 4 (2001) (Rochester, NY: Camden House, 2000.)
- J. Rolleston, The Poetry and Poetics of the Young Rilke, 1879-1902, in A Rilke Companion, edited by Michael and Erica Metzger (2001), pp. 40-66, Columbia, S.C.: Camden House