The Sufferings of Young Werther (1774)

Title Page of Werther

Cult of Sensibility
sensibility (Goethe 17) = refers to "quickness and acuteness of apprehension or feeling; the quality of being easily and strongly affected by emotional influences; sensitiveness" (OED 5a). The cult of sensibility reversed stereotypical roles normally accorded men and women. 
Pre-1770: Head and intellect = maleness, heart and body = female
Post 1770: Men associate more with feeling and sensibility, and in comparison to men, women seem cold and incapable of true sentiment



Gender Stereotypes Rom. Era
Female
Male
Irrational 
Receptive, passive
Cold, unfeeling
Fall into fixed roles: virgin, mother, whore
Can puppet or imitate knowledge
Rational
Active
Possess true sensibility
Can take on unlimited roles in society and imagination
True intellectuals and scholars with deep understanding of knowledge


Romantic Irony in Werther


Naive View Ironic view
Werther bourgeois hero, proto-existentialist (“between being and non-being,” 67), authentic lover overly sentimental, unable to see Lotte for her true self, a “sick” romantic (to Heinrich: “how I envy your melancholy,” 70)
Lotte "innocence" (Goethe 27), mother of nine children (and Werther), a young woman who had to grow up quickly, a beautiful soul (“a refined feminine soul,” 79) a coquette who flirts with men (17, 61) and draws them (siren-like) to the brink of madness (Heinrich, 71), loves having W. around but won’t even give him away to one of her friends (83)
Works Cited


Quotes


Works Cited

Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von. The Sufferings of Young Werther. Trans. Harry Steinhauer. NY: Norton, 1970. Print.

"Sensibility." Oxford English Dictionary. 2011. Accessed Feb. 2012. Web.