Rochelle Tobias

Rochelle Tobias

Professor of German,
Head of the German Subdivision
Director, Max Kade Center for Modern German Thought

Program: German
rtobias@jhu.edu
On Leave: Academic Year 2023-24
Curriculum Vitae
Gilman 404
410-516-7512

Research Interests: 18th to 20th century German and European literature and thought; phenomenology; religious studies; continental philosophy; modern poetry; theory of the novel, fiction, and autobiography; German-Jewish culture.

Education: PhD, University of California, Berkeley

Rochelle Tobias works at the intersection of modern German literature and philosophy with additional expertise in phenomenology, modern poetry, German-Jewish culture, environmental thought, religious studies, and theories of the novel. She is particularly interested in the concept of the “world” in European literature and thought from the eighteenth to the twenty-first centuries as well as the ecstatic tradition embodied in romantic and modernist literature.

Her first book The Discourse of Nature in the Poetry of Paul Celan (JHU Press, 2016) revives the concept of the poetic conceit to explain how Celan turns the impossibility of poetry after Auschwitz into a “path of the impossible,” to borrow one of his favorite phrases. It argues that the terminology and, above all, motifs associated with nineteenth and early twentieth-century geology, astrology and physiology provide him with an occasion to trace the origins of his poetry in a hollow or void that is then figured in the work.

Tobias’s second book Pseudo-Memoirs: Life and Its Imitation in Modern Fiction (U of Nebraska Press, 2021) revisits some of the foundational questions of literary criticism, aesthetics, and theories of prose fiction. She coins the term “pseudo-memoirs” to describe a broad range of texts from fictional diaries to feigned autobiographies and from imaginary notebooks to mock reminiscences. As the tale of their own telling, or the representation of their own narration, pseudo-memoirs bring to the fore the condition of possibility for any fictional work to present a seeming reality. This condition is consciousness itself, as Tobias shows through theoretical reflections that stretch from Aristotle to Husserl and close readings that extend from Robert Walser to W.G. Sebald.

Much of her recent scholarship has emphasized the importance of Husserlian phenomenology for understanding modernism. With Kristina Mendicino (Brown) and Philippe P. Haensler (Zurich), she edited Phenomenology to the Letter: Husserl and Literature (de Gruyter, 2020), which is the first volume in decades to explore the poetological implications of Husserl’s work. Her interest in the environmental humanities led to the volume Hölderlin’s Philosophy of Nature (Edinburgh UP, 2019), that considers the relation of Hölderlin’s poetic theory to his concept of nature.

She is currently working on two book projects. The first tentatively entitled Mindscapes: From Romanticism to Modernity explores the subjective constitution of the world as seen in the writings of Novalis and Fichte and again in Rilke and Husserl. The second project, Robert Walser, Literary Miracles, and Virgin Births sketches Walser’s incarnational poetics and claims that his texts engineer the birth of the author outside the book in a modern-day version of the word made flesh.

Professor Tobias’s honors include a fellowship at the Center for Advanced Studies at the Ludwig Maximilian University, Munich in 2009 as well as research grants from the American Association of University Women and the DAAD. She is the Director of the Max Kade Center for Modern German Thought at Johns Hopkins.

Recent Graduate Seminars

Husserl's Ideas: An Introduction to Phenomenology

Modern Orpheus: Rilke and Celan

Robert Walser, Literary Miracles, and Virgin Births

On the Difficulty of Saying I

Music, Poetry, Voice: Literature and the Pursuit of Transcendence

Recent Undergraduate Classes

Literature and Madness

Ghost Stories, Haunted Houses, and Other Occult Phenomena

Panorama of German Thought

Rumors, Conspiracy Theories, Disinformation (co-taught with colleagues from Anthropology and Media Theory)

Introduction to German Poetry

Seeing the World by Foot

Sample Publications

See curriculum vitae for complete list.

The Expanse of the Sky: Nature, History and Dwelling in Celan and Hölderlin,” Aesthetica, the journal of Società Italiana di Estetica (SIE), 118 (Sept-Dec 2021), 137-159.

Gregor Samsa and the Problem of Intersubjectivity,” Phenomenology to the Letter: Husserl and Literature, ed. Phlippe P. Haensler, Kristina Mendicino, and Rochelle Tobias (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2021), 309-29.

Introduction,” Hölderlin’s Philosophy of Nature, ed. R. Tobias (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2020), 1-20.

The Untamed Earth: The Labour of Rivers in Hölderlin’s ‘Der Ister,’Hölderlin’s Philosophy of Nature, ed. Rochelle Tobias (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2020), 75-93.

Walking Is Not Writing: Performance and Poetics in Walser’s Der Spaziergang,” Spazieren muß ich unbedingt. Robert Walser und die Kultur des Gehens, ed. Annie Pfeifer and Reto Sorg (Munich: Wilhelm Fink, 2018), 39-49.

"Ringe und Linien bei Sebald," unpublished lecture.

"Rilke, Phenomenology, and the Sensuality of Thought," Konturen VIII (2015), 40-61.

"Rilke's Landscape of the Heart: On the Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge," Modernism/modernity 20:4, 667-684.

Irreconcilable: Ethics and Aesthetics for Hermann Cohen and Walter Benjamin,” Modern Language Notes 127:3 (April 2012), 665-80.

“Romantic Irony and the Modern Lyric: Szondi on Hofmannsthal,” Telos 140 (Fall 2007), 131-46.

The Double Fiction in Robert Walser’s Jakob von Gunten,” in German Quarterly 79:3 (Summer 2006), 293-307. 

“March 27, 1329: Pope John XXII condemns portions of Meister Eckhart’s work as heretical,” in The New History of German Literature, ed. David Wellbery et al (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2004), 140-44.

A Doctor’s Odyssey: Sickness and Health in Kafka’s ‘Ein Landarzt',” in The Germanic Review 75:2 (Spring 2000), 120-131. Reprinted in Short Story Criticism, Vol. 60, ed. Justin Karr.

“Das Gesicht der Dinge,” in Gedichte von Rainer Maria Rilke, ed. Wolfram Groddeck (Stuttgart: Reclam, 1999), 104-121.