Niklaus Largier
Sidney and Margaret Ancker Chair in the Humanities; Distinguished Professor of German and Comparative Literature“Mysticism and Modernity”
Largier’s research focuses on the history of relations between literature, philosophy, and religion with a particular interest in the history of emotions, the senses, and the imagination. His most recent books explore bodily ascetic practices, eroticism, and the literary imagination (In Praise of the Whip: A Cultural History of Arousal, 2007); the fascination of decadent literature with religious practices (Die Kunst des Begehrens: Dekadenz, Sinnlichkeit und Askese, 2007); and the phenomenology of rhetorical effects in the play with figures, images, and figuration in contexts of contemplative practice and literary imagination (Figures of Possibility: Aesthetic Experience, Mysticism, and the Play of the Senses, 2022). He is currently working on a book about notions of the symbol with a particular emphasis on the connection between symbolic forms and energetic moments, reaching from Orphic speech and mystical hymns to Ernst Cassirer and Aby Warburg. Largier has served as chair of the Department of German (2006–12) and of the Department of Comparative Literature (2020–25).