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A pervasive quality of modern American literature, but one which has received hardly a critical nod, is longing, homesickness, nostalgia. "Our literature is stamped with a quality of longing and unrest," Carson McCullers wrote in 1940,' referring specifically to Thomas Wolfe as being "maddened by unfocused longing."' More than simple longing or nostalgia, however, and lacking a sufficiently expressive English term, this quality can best be characterized by the German term Sehnsucht (a compound of the verb sehnen, "to long for," and the noun sucht, "addiction"), an intense addiction of and to longing. Deeply rooted in German Romanticism (note, for example, Goethe's "Selige Sehnsucht," Schiller's "Sehnsucht," Eichendorff s "Sehnsucht," and Novalis' Hymns to the Night), it cuts across literary movements, geographical regions, ethnicity, and gender. Sehnsucht plays a major role in modern American fiction, ranging from the work of Kate Chopin, at the cusp of the twentieth century, to that of contemporary writers, such as Marge Piercy, Gail Godwin, Anne Tyler, and Ann Beattie, and from Theodore Dreiser and Sinclair Lewis to Vladimir Nabokov, Walker Percy, and Saul Bellow.' One of few critics to discuss nostalgia, Wright Morris, in his essay on Scott Fitzgerald, entitled "The Function of Nostalgia," concludes that the "subject" of Wolfe, Hemingway, and Faulkner, however diverse their backgrounds and styles, is nostalgia, but that it was left to Fitzgerald to carry the subject to its logical conclusion and become "the aesthete of nostalgia."' Further, in his essay on Wolfe, entitled "the Function of Appetite," Morris concludes, without qualification, and erroneously, I believe, that "an insatiable hunger, like an insatiable desire, is not the sign of life, but of impotence,"' "impotence [being], indeed, . . . part of the romantic agony."6 What has not been recognized is that neither in the case of Fitzgerald nor in the case of Wolfe is this simply nostalgia, desire, or hunger but something much deeper and more significant: Sehnsucht.
Some have considered this quality to be endemic in American culture. This "curious emotion," McCullers writes, "[is with Americans . . . a national trait, as native to us as the roller coaster or the jukebox.... It is no simple longing for the home town or the country of our birth.... As often as not, we are...