Heine, Heinrich (Vol. 147) - John Carson Pettey (essay date 1993)

John Carson Pettey (essay date 1993)

SOURCE: Pettey, John Carson. “Anticolonialism in Heine's ‘Vitzliputzli.’” Colloquia Germanica 26, no. 1 (1993): 37-47.

[In the following essay, Pettey discusses Heine's poem “Vitzliputzli” in relation to colonialism, suggesting that the poem displays Heine's “contempt” for colonialism's greed and barbarism.]

In «Vitzliputzli»,1 the longest of the «Historien» in Romanzero (1851), Heine avoided sentimentalizing the Aztecs vis-à-vis their Spanish conquerors and colonizers. He was chiefly concerned with presenting his historical vision in a disturbingly vivid, nightmarish account of the clash between two diverse cultures. Following a major theme found in the «Historien,» «Vitzliputzli» illustrates the dominance of barbarity attended by a baffling lack of transcendent benevolence in human history.2 As was always his wont, Heine sided overtly with the...

[The entire page is 4716 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: