From the middle of the thirties to the end of the fifties, Romano Guardini studied the poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke (1875-1926), particularly his vision of existence which gave voice to the extraordinarily lyrically intense verse of the 'Duino Elegies', written between 1912 and 1922. Several publications accompany a journey of interpretation which Guardini has tackled with interpretative rigour and poetic refinement, but also with deep feeling and suffering, on the one hand because the interpreter has an ardous task when faced with lines which are sometimes imperviuous, and on the other hand because the vision of the world and man that they reflect is dramatically distant from that of Christian belivers. The dissolution of the person, that Guardini identifies as the common theme throughout the articulate and complex meditation of the poet from Prague, is characteristic not only of his personal concept of the human being, but it becomes the key to understanding the crisis of the modern era and the tragedy of the two world wars.
Mor Wuehrer, L., Romano Guardini lettore di Rilke, <<HUMANITAS>>, 2019; LXXIV (2-3): 468-481 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/142291]
Romano Guardini lettore di Rilke
Mor Wuehrer, LuciaPrimo
2019
Abstract
From the middle of the thirties to the end of the fifties, Romano Guardini studied the poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke (1875-1926), particularly his vision of existence which gave voice to the extraordinarily lyrically intense verse of the 'Duino Elegies', written between 1912 and 1922. Several publications accompany a journey of interpretation which Guardini has tackled with interpretative rigour and poetic refinement, but also with deep feeling and suffering, on the one hand because the interpreter has an ardous task when faced with lines which are sometimes imperviuous, and on the other hand because the vision of the world and man that they reflect is dramatically distant from that of Christian belivers. The dissolution of the person, that Guardini identifies as the common theme throughout the articulate and complex meditation of the poet from Prague, is characteristic not only of his personal concept of the human being, but it becomes the key to understanding the crisis of the modern era and the tragedy of the two world wars.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.