From 1949 to 2004, UNC Press and the UNC Department of Germanic & Slavic Languages and Literatures published the UNC Studies in the Germanic Languages and Literatures series. Monographs, anthologies, and critical editions in the series covered an array of topics including medieval and modern literature, theater, linguistics, philology, onomastics, and the history of ideas. Through the generous support of the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, books in the series have been reissued in new paperback and open access digital editions. For a complete list of books visit www.uncpress.org.Kraftgenie, Kraftrnann, or Kraftrnensch. Herder encouraged writers to depict "grofse Taten" and, following Breitinger, recommended the use of "Machtworter," arguing that "Kraft ist das Wesen der Poesie." 20 It was their zeal to have what Germany did not yet offer them that led to their interest in character: Gerstenberg admired Shakespeare for his attention to it; Klinger would admire "Starke des Charakters"; and Goethe's zeal to locate the German character led him to the erroneous conclusion that Gothic architecture originated in his homeland. 21 But can character burst on the scene all at once if there is no culture that can give it a
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