PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Todd Kontje TI - Schiller’s <em>Wilhelm Tell</em>: Weimar Classicism between Empire and Nation AID - 10.3368/m.109.4.519 DP - 2017 Dec 01 TA - Monatshefte PG - 519--538 VI - 109 IP - 4 4099 - http://mon.uwpress.org/content/109/4/519.short 4100 - http://mon.uwpress.org/content/109/4/519.full AB - In this essay I explore ways in which Schiller’s Wilhelm Tell responds to the paradigm shift in European politics from the Holy Roman Empire to the modern nation-state. Rather than clinging to the imperial politics of the past or embracing unequivocally the new model of the egalitarian nation-state, Schiller explores the advantages and disadvantages of both. Schiller stages a conflict between local Swiss cantons and the Habsburg-controlled Austrian territory. This historical opposition, in turn, makes implicit reference to the recent French efforts to control and centralize the Swiss government, as well as intra-German tensions between smaller principalities and larger territorial states. The larger purpose of the essay is to reconsider the cultural politics of Weimar Classicism in ways that subvert the teleological model of the “Klassik-Legende.”