Quixotism and the Aesthetic Constitution
of the Individual in Wieland's
Don Sylvio von Rosalva
John P. Heins, George Washington University
Cervantes's Don Quixote has often been referred to as the first modern
work of literature, particularly because of the way in which it thematizes
fictionality, or the relationship between representations and that which
is represented.1 Since its publication in 1605, this text has inspired a
wide variety of appropriations and critical engagements that have played
a central role in ongoing debates about literature's relationship to the
empirical realm. Tracing these appropriations, particularly in the form
of explicitly quixotic figures in literary works, can illustrate changing
conceptions of the nature and function of literature, and of the arts more
generally, in modern societies. In the eighteenth century in particular, the
literary engagement with quixotism addresses the role of aesthetic illusion
in the constitution of individuals as it satirically or humorously portrays
the purported effects of reading imaginative literature.
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