Vischer, Friedrich Theodor (Ludwigsburg, 1807-87, Gmunden, Traunsee, Austria), was at school at Stuttgart and Blaubeuren and then studied for ordination at the Tübinger Stift. A curate at Horrheim in 1830, he taught at Maulbronn (1831) before moving to Tübingen. In 1837 he was appointed a supernumerary professor at Tübingen University and in 1844 was elected to an established chair; but the Liberal tone of his inaugural lecture resulted in his suspension for two years.
Vischer's first writings of note were aesthetic treatises based on Hegel's philosophy: Über das Erhabene und Komische (1837), Kritische Gänge (2 vols., 1844, in 6 vols., 1860-73), and Ästhetik oder Wissenschaft des Schönen (3 vols., 1846-57). Vischer was a moderate Liberal deputy at Frankfurt in 1848 (see Frankfurter Nationalversammlung). He later became a professor at Zurich (1855) and then at Tübingen University (1866). Under the pseudonym Deutobold Symbolizetti Allegorowitsch Mystifizinsky he published in 1862 a parody of Goethe's Faust ( Faust. Der Tragödie dritter Theil) and, under another pseudonym (P. V. Schartenmeyer), a comic epic on the war of 1870 (Der deutsche Krieg, 1874). He is best remembered for his whimsical novel, Auch Einer (2 vols., 1879), in which the hero A. E. wages unsuccessful war against a treacherous physical reality (‘Tücke des Objekts’). A serious contribution to Faust literature (Goethes Faust. Neue Beiträge zur Kritik des Gedichts) appeared in 1875 (reprinted 1969). Two late works are a collection of poems, Lyrische Gänge (1882), the title of which is a counterpart to the earlier Kritische Gänge, and the Swabian comedy Nicht Ia (1884), which makes slight use of dialect.
Vischer was granted a patent of nobility as F. Th. von Vischer in 1870. His considerable impact upon German literature and thought in his lifetime depended in part on his dynamic and combative personality.




