RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Cultivating a Poetics of Knowledge: H.M. Enzensberger’s Mausoleum, the Botanical, and the Anthropocene JF Monatshefte FD University of Wisconsin Press SP 600 OP 616 DO 10.3368/m.110.4.600 VO 110 IS 4 A1 Charlotte Melin YR 2018 UL http://mon.uwpress.org/content/110/4/600.abstract AB Hans Magnus Enzensberger’s Mausoleum: Siebenunddreißig Balladen aus der Geschichte des Fortschritts (1975) has been widely interpreted as a critique of technological progress. Close reading of its poems about Carolus Linnaeus, Alexander von Humboldt, Charles Darwin, and other figures, however, reveals an ecological turn in Enzensberger’s thinking premised on human relations with the botanical world. This essay proposes an interpretation of the poetic cycle in terms of the Anthropocene, a concept that recognizes the interconnection of human and natural history. Theoretical grounding for the analysis comes from both discussion of the Anthropocene by historian Dipesh Chakrabarty and ecocriticism pertaining to literary plant studies. Following a discussion of the significance of nature poetry for Enzensberger’s work, the essay explores the deployment of botanical tropes in Mausoleum as an aesthetic experiment in the creation of knowledge that is facilitated by the narrative framework of deep history. (CM)