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On Naïve and Sentimental Poetry

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Originally published
  
1800

3.7/5
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Author
  
Friedrich Schiller

Similar
  
Works by Friedrich Schiller, Other books

On Naïve and Sentimental Poetry (Über naive und sentimentalische Dichtung) is a 1795 paper by Friedrich Schiller on poetic theory and the different types of poetic relationship to the world. The work divides poetry into two forms. Naïve poetry is poetry of direct description while sentimental poetry is self-reflective. While naïve presents a straight narrative or description, sentimental poetry is built around the authors reflections and relationship to the material.

Schiller classifies all poets as either naïve or sentimental. Almost all Classical Greek poets wrote in the naïve mode, with the exception of Euripides. The modern poetry of Schiller's era tended to the sentimental, but figures such as Shakespeare and Goethe were mainly naïve poets to Schiller. This classification of poetry differed from that of Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel, who saw poetry as firmly divided by era.

References

On Naïve and Sentimental Poetry Wikipedia


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