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2011 | 48 | 1 | 81-111

Article title

Béla Balázs: Über lyrische Sensibilität

Authors

Content

Title variants

EN
BELA BALAZS: ON LYRICAL SENSIBILITY

Languages of publication

DE

Abstracts

EN
In comparison with his art criticism, verse, and screenplays, Bela Balazs's (1884-1949) writings on aesthetics and the history of genres have received little attention. His essay 'A lirai erzekenysegrol' (On lyrical sensibility) consists of lectures that were heard in the extracurricular series Freie Schule der Geisteswissenschaften (Open School of the Humanities), which was established in Budapest, in 1917, by the Sonntagskreis (Sunday Circle) discussion group, whose members included Georg Lukacs, Karl Mannheim, and Arnold Hauser. In these lectures, Balazs describes the development of lyric verse, culminating with Goethe, as being a process distinguished by an emerging distance and complexity in the relationship between the human soul and nature. This change, resulting in a gradual growing apart of religion, the arts and science, and Romantic utopia, has meant that lyric verse may have gained in subject matter, but these newer topics are no longer manifested as an 'extension of the soul', but as a sign of the increasingly intense feeling of loneliness amidst alienated reality. Balazs's approach to questions related to the history of genres evokes social-historical contexts, and is typical of comparable approaches taken by the thinkers of the Sonntagskreis. They too were determined to capture the singularity of each work of art by questioning the special features of the times or the continuous development of genres.

Year

Volume

48

Issue

1

Pages

81-111

Physical description

Document type

ARTICLE

Contributors

  • Amalia Kerekes, Eoetvoes Lorand University, Budapest, Hungary

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

CEJSH db identifier
11CZAAAA09493

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.6d9bba63-7247-3dd8-814e-a21c6a54cee4
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