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Little Women Masterclass: Laurie's Literal Origins
Rating: 5.0 out of 5(2 ratings)
471 students

Little Women Masterclass: Laurie's Literal Origins

Louisa May Alcott and Sorrows of young Werther
Last updated 5/2022
English

What you'll learn

  • You will learn about the history of Little Women and the real characters who inspired the story.
  • Louisa May Alcott's love for German literature and the poet Goethe.
  • Scenes in Little Women the novel that show the dark side of Jo's and Laurie's relationship.
  • Laurie's growth process and becoming more independent with his relationship with Amy.
  • How Little Women film makers have added scenes to the adaptations between Jo and Laurie that don't happen in the novel.

Course content

2 sections7 lectures52m total length
  • Louisa May Alcott and Goethe2:30
  • Literal Origins9:15

    Both professor Bhaer and Laurie Lawrence can be found from the Sorrows of young Werther.

  • Both Werther and Jo wake up to consider their values5:54

    When working in a job that consumes his soul Werther wakes up to consider his own values. In Little Women Jo has an existential crisis when writing to a sensational magazine.

  • Emotional Distress7:41

    Both Laurie and Werther suffer from emotional distress. Sentimentality was a big part of the world's literature at the beginning of the 19th century.

  • Laurie's proposal and Werther's proposal11:25

Requirements

  • Interest for Little Women and the life of Louisa May Alcott.

Description

One of Louisa May Alcott's favourite books growing up was Goethe's "Sorrows of Young Werther". Werther's tragic romance with Lottie is quite similar to Jo's and Laurie's relationship in Little Women. Alcott's favourite writer Goethe, was also one of the models for Friedrich Bhaer's character. In this class, we shall dissect this story and these two male characters and trace their origins to 18th-century German literature, which was well known for its "sentimental air".


I will also be discussing Laurie's character arc and his growth process and how his background is close to Werther and his creator Goethe and how the "Wertherian" characters can still be found today in pop culture.


Alcott, according to her own words “grew up hearing stories of Goethe on her father´s knee”. Bronson Alcott´s library included a contemporary translation of Goethe´s biography and we can assume that it was one of the first books that she read. One of Alcott's most famous literal characters, Laurie from Little Women, is partially based on Goethe and Goethe´s literal heroes


Goethe was one of the most prominent figures of the German Sturm und Drang movement. Sturm und Drang refers to deep emotional stress. The name of the movement originates from a play called Sturm und Drang written by Friedrich Maximilian von Klinger. The two most prominent figures of the movement were Goethe and Friedrich Schiller and the movement affected the German art world, music, literature and theatre.

Alcott describes herself as “a creature of moods” so finding an author who managed to capture Alcott´s own emotional stress into words must have been both exciting and comforting. In Little Women Laurie, Jo and Friedrich can be described as Goethean characters, Laurie notably the most. We can trace Laurie´s character arc in Little Women to two of Goethe´s novels: “Sorrows of Young Werther” and “Wilhelm Meister´s apprenticeship” and to Goethe himself.

Who this course is for:

  • Great educational material for anyone who loves Little Women and literature in general.
  • People who enjoy learning new things.