In the opening chapter of Die Wahlverwandtschaften (Elective Affinities, 1809) Charlotte positions Eduard in her newly finished “Mooshütte” or summer- house in such a way “daß er durch Türe und Fenster die verschiedenen Bilder, welche die Landschaft gleichsam im Rahmen zeigten, auf einen Blick übersehen konnte” (“so that through windows and door he could oversee at a glance the different views, in which the landscape appeared like a sequence of framed pictures”). In expressing his admiration for the instantaneous overview, Eduard nevertheless includes the detractor: “Nur eines habe ich zu erinnern … die Hütte scheint mir etwas zu eng” (“my only criticism … would be that one is … a little cramped here”). With his discomfort, Eduard also expresses an awareness of himself and his own position in relation to these framed landscape views. His feeling of being hemmed in is a visceral, bodily response, marking a departure from a manner of viewing which had only recently disconnected the act of seeing from the self, the physical body, and one's location in the world.
Many readers of Goethe's novel have commented on how its activity is largely comprised of shaping spaces, both directly, and indirectly through conversations and reflections on these projects. Whether through landscaping and re-landscaping the castle grounds, planning and positioning new buildings for the most panoramic views, comparing the merits of the new style of English garden with its attendant lack of borders and boundaries against the strict geometry of the older generation, surveying and mapping the premises, or capturing the many sights with the aid of the camera obscura, the characters are extensively engaged in the creation, visualization, and manipulation of space. In this essay I propose to look in the other direction: not at the activity of landscaping or the objects it creates, but at the way landscape viewing in the novel frequently turns the focus back to the subject, positioning her or him in relation to the scene. In line with the significance of maintaining, establishing, and occasionally breaking relationships in the text and title of the novel, this relationship between viewer and scene is often more clearly defined and filled out than the scenes themselves. In the example above, the series of views Eduard takes in from the Mooshütte remain completely blank, and readers only see a series of empty frames.