Wolfgang Iser (
July 22,
1926–
January 24,
2007) was a German literary scholar.
Biography
He was born in
Marienberg,
Germany. His parents were Paul and Else (Steinbach) Iser. He studied literature in the universities of
Leipzig and
Tübingen before receiving his
PhD in English at
Heidelberg by defending the dissertation on the world view of
Henry Fielding (1950). A year later he was appointed an instructor at Heidelberg and in 1952 an assistant lecturer at the
University of Glasgow, where he started to explore contemporary philosophy and literature, which deepened his interest in inter-cultural exchange. He subsequently lectured in many other parts of the world, including Asia and Israel.
Hermeneutics
He is known for his
reader-response theory in
literary theory. This theory began to evolve in 1967, while he was working in the
University of Konstanz. Together with
Hans Robert Jauss, he is considered to be the founder of
Constance School of
reception aesthetics. Reader-response theory shares many goals and insights with
hermeneutics; both aim to describe the reader's contact with text and the author. Iser describes the process of first reading, the subsequent development of the text into a 'whole', and how the dialogue between the reader and text takes place. In his study of Shakespeare's histories, in particular
Richard II, Iser interprets Richard's continually changing legal policy as expression of the desire for self-assertion. Here he follows
Hans Blumenberg, and attempts to apply his theory of modernity to Shakespeare. In this theory of modernity is self-assertion, which responds to the destruction of scholastic rationalism in the nominalist revolution (with
William of Ockham).
Bibliography
- Die Weltanschauung Henry Fieldings (1952)
- Walter Pater. Die Autonomie des Ästhetischen (1960)
- Der implizite Leser. Kommunikationsformen des Romans von Bunyan bis Beckett (1972)
- Der Akt des Lesens. Theorie ästhetischer Wirkung (1976)
- Laurence Sternes "Tristram Shandy". Inszenierte Subjektivität (1987)
- Shakespeares Historien. Genesis und Geltung (1988)
- Prospecting: From Reader Response to Literary Anthropology (1989)
- Das Fiktive und das Imaginäre. Perspektiven literarischer Anthropologie (1991)
- Staging Politics: The Lasting Impact of Shakespeare's Histories
- The Range of Interpretation (2000)
- How to Do Theory (2006)
External links