Wolfgang Clemen

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Wolfgang Clemen (9 March 1909 in Bonn, Germany – 16 March 1990 in Bad Endorf, Bavaria, Germany) was an eminent German literary scholar who helped reestablish English Studies in Germany after World War II. His father, Paul Clemen, was a well-known art historian.

Biography/Career

Clemen studied from 1928 to 1934 at the Universities of Heidelberg, Freiburg, Berlin, München, Bonn and Cambridge. Among his academic teachers were

University of Munich. In 1953, he was Visiting Professor at Columbia University; in 1964, Visiting Professor at the University of Bristol
.

In 1964, Clemen founded the Munich Shakespeare Library, one of the major collections of scholarship on William Shakespeare outside Britain.

Scholarly achievements

Clemen's reputation rests in large part on his monograph on Shakespeare’s Imagery, a revised English translation of his doctoral dissertation published in 1951 with

Canterbury Tales and Troilus and Criseyde. This changed because Clemen could demonstrate that the Middle English author was as independent of his French and Classical sources in his early as in his later poetry.[1]

Select publications

  • Shakespeare's Soliloquies
  • The Development of Shakespeare's Imagery
  • Das Wesen der Dichtung in der Sicht moderner englischer und amerikanischer Dichter
  • Der junge Chaucer / Chaucer's Early Poetry
  • Die Tragödie vor Shakespeare
  • Das Drama Shakespeares
  • Shakespeares Monologe

Literature

  • Frank-Rutger Hausmann, Anglistik und Amerikanistik im Dritten Reich (Frankfurt: Klostermann, 2003), esp. pp. 448–449.
  • Ina Schabert, ed. Wolfgang Clemen im Kontext seiner Zeit: Ein Beitrag zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte vor und nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg. Heidelberg: Universitätsverlag Winter, 2009.
  • Richard Utz, Chaucer and the Discourse of German Philology (Turnhout: Brepols, 2002), esp. pp. 207–20.

References

  1. ^ Richard Utz, "Clemen Among the Chaucerians – Toward a History of Reception of Der junge Chaucer," in: Wolfgang Clemen im Kontext seiner Zeit, ed. Ina Schabert, Andreas Höfele, and Manfred Pfister (Heidelberg: Winter, 2009), pp. 71–80.