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Alienation and Emotion: Hegel Versus Sentimentalism and Romanticism

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  • Warren D. TenHouten

Abstract

The structuralist and social-psychological perspectives on alienation are described, with attention to Seeman’s contention that the experience of alienation is based more on sentiment than on reason. The passions in early modernity are described, and the eighteenth-century moral sentimentalists Hume, Smith, and Kant are discussed. Romanticism is described as the first self-critique of modernity, as it opposed Enlightenment science, rationalism, and uniformitarianism; it is linked to interiorized emotionality and to diversitarianism. Romantic concepts of alienation include inhibition of natural sexuality, oppressive condition of work, and the loss of an imagined Golden Age before human alienation. Hegel’s Phenomenology outlines a four-stage mode of the undoing of social domination which has a narrative structure consistent with romantic story-telling, but was grounded not in romanticism but in Gnosticism and Lutheran dialectics. Hegel’s critique of sentimentalism and romantism is explored, with Hegel emerging as a dedicated anti-romantic who condemned the sophistry of Schlegel and Novalis’s ‘beautiful soul’, arguing that the self, to be viable, cannot remain encapsulated in inner subjectivity but must rather engage in emotion-laden confrontation with self-willed others in the social world; this requires a positive kind of alienation of the self from itself. Romantic effort to keep the self in itself as protection from the corrupted and corrupting social world was misguided. Hegel was right in asserting that the self is necessarily both subjective and objective, both inner and outer, but wrong in his contention that the self can progress by resolving inner contradictions, for the self, as the core of our personality, rather progresses through incorporating and elaborating contradictions, ambiguities, and polysemantic meanings.

Suggested Citation

  • Warren D. TenHouten, 2019. "Alienation and Emotion: Hegel Versus Sentimentalism and Romanticism," Review of European Studies, Canadian Center of Science and Education, vol. 11(3), pages 1-1, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:ibn:resjnl:v:11:y:2019:i:3:p:1
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Hobbes, Thomas, 1640. "The Elements of Law Natural and Politic," History of Economic Thought Books, McMaster University Archive for the History of Economic Thought, number hobbes1640.
    2. Locke, John, 1690. "An Essay Concerning Human Understanding," History of Economic Thought Books, McMaster University Archive for the History of Economic Thought, number locke1690.
    3. Locke, John, 1697. "An Answer to Remarks Upon an Essay Concerning Human Understanding etc," History of Economic Thought Books, McMaster University Archive for the History of Economic Thought, number locke1697.
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    JEL classification:

    • R00 - Urban, Rural, Regional, Real Estate, and Transportation Economics - - General - - - General
    • Z0 - Other Special Topics - - General

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