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4 - The Pathology of Sentiment: Politics, Sacrifice and Wertherism in the English Novel of Sensibility

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Summary

Suicide is a phenomenon of human nature that demands everyone's attention and needs reassessment in every epoch, however much it may already have been discussed and treated.

Johann von Goethe.

In his compendious A Full Inquiry into the Subject of Suicide (1790), Charles Moore sets out to ‘free this island from the imputation under which it has so long laboured, of producing more self-murder than any other nation’. Citing the high suicide rate of Geneva as evidence that other countries are at least as suicidal as England, Moore nonetheless acknowledges that his compatriots are exceedingly prone to suicide and have ‘a dreadful propensity to its commission’. For Moore and other social critics concerned by the stigma of the English Malady, the publication of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's Die Leiden des jungen Werther (The Sufferings [or Sorrows] of Young Werther) in 1774 must have seemed fortuitous indeed. Not only was the German novel inordinately preoccupied with suicide but its narrative also concluded with its hero's self-destruction. A bourgeois youth of an artistic temperament condemned to the lot of a bureaucrat, Werther flees a romantic attachment only to discover in the obscure village of his refuge a woman whom he finds irresistible. However, much to his despair, Werther discovers that Charlotte (or Lotte, as he refers to her), the unfortunate object of his attraction, is unavailable, owing to her engagement and, ultimately, her marriage to another man.

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Dying to be English
Suicide Narratives and National Identity, 1721–1814
, pp. 115 - 150
Publisher: Pickering & Chatto
First published in: 2014

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