Abstract
In the 1920s, Leo Lowenthal mustered the courage and the nonchalance to point literary studies in a direction which, had die discipline in Germany at diat time taken heed, would have spared it a great deal of repetition forty years later. In looking at his career, we must consider how diese early efforts were subject to a consolidation and historical elaboration dirough Lowendial's involvement with the Institute of Social Research in Frankfurt and dien in New York. We ought to consider mat mere is today a need for a social historian who understands diat literature contains the history of bourgeois society — including all of its sufferings, shortcomings and hopes — better than the traditional sources of political history