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Description
Jonas Teupert theorizes the "fugitive forms" of ephemeral German-language prose writings from the long-19th century, drawing a link between this period's literary history and political philosophy and the refugee narratives from our current moment.
Fugitive Forms traces the German term for refugee, “Flüchtling,” also “fugitive” and “fleeting,” through a genealogy of 19th-century prose writings that articulate ambivalent experiences of displacement. These fast-paced and ephemeral writings – often short stories, small prose pieces, and travelogues – evade classical genres and respond to the disruptive, volatile nature of their political present.
By engaging questions of literary form with history, philosophy, and media aesthetics, Teupert conceptualizes fugitive writing as a form that enacts the precarious flight toward freedom. The long 19th century, in addition to being relatively understudied within migration studies, represents an interstitial period in the history of modern politics. While this era often has been overlooked in discussion of the formation of subject and state, Teupert argues that the concept of fugitivity as a path towards freedom offers new insights into the resistant potential of literature produced before human movement fell under the control of state power.
Reading canonical and lesser-known works by Heinrich von Kleist, Heinrich Heine, and Robert Walser, this book provides a history of writing under conditions of displacement and develops fugitivity as a new category for German Studies. Furthermore, Fugitive Forms makes a case that the Germanophone canon offers literary strategies to critique and imagine community in an age of modern biopolitics.
Accessibility Information
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Table of Contents
1. Ephemeral Community – Kleist
2. The Errant Journey – Heine
3. A World in Motion – Walser
Conclusion
Index
Product details
| Published | 03 Sep 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 256 |
| ISBN | 9798216465904 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Series | New Directions in German Studies |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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The close readings and analyses in Fugitive Forms offer remarkable insights into historical and contemporary sociopolitical and humanitarian issues. Jonas Teupert's explorations of canonical and lesser-known texts provide striking testimony of the cutting-edge work done in German studies today, and they decisively affirm the critical importance of literature alongside philosophy and politics. The book connects histories of involuntary displacement and fugitivity to current struggles and reveals that the long 19th century still has much to teach us about how we understand community.
Laurie Johnson, Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, USA
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Erudite and innovative, Fugitive Forms shows how now-canonical German language literature of the long 19th century was shaped by a poetics of fugitivity and flight. Through clear-eyed contextualization and adept close readings, Teupert explores how the social and ethical concerns of our present were prefigured in the literature of the past.
Paul Buchholz, Associate Professor of German Studies, Emory University, USA

























