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In Our Time - Sturm und Drang

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Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the artistic movement known as Sturm und Drang. In the 1770s a small group of German writers started to produce plays, poetry and novels which were radically different from what had gone before. These writers were all young men, and they rejected the values of the Enlightenment, which they felt had robbed art of its spontaneity and feeling. Their work was passionate, ignored existing conventions and privileged the individual's free will above the constraints of society. The most prominent member of the movement was Johann von Goethe, whose novel The Sorrows of Young Werther became its most notable success, translated into more then thirty languages. Despite this and other successes including Schiller's play The Robbers, the Sturm und Drang disappeared almost as quickly as it had emerged; by the mid-1780s it was already a thing of the past. With: Tim Blanning Emeritus Professor of Modern European History at Cambridge University Susanne Kord Professor of German at University College, London Maike Oergel Associate Professor of German at the University of Nottingham Producer: Thomas Morris.