This dissertation is a literary history of the Viennese Biedermeier, a period spanning the Vienna Congress in 1815 and the Spring of Nations in 1848. Through four case studies that examine major Viennese literary and cultural institutions — censorship, secret societies, salons, and publishing — it argues for an understanding of the period that is built on analysis of its rich literary communication and the development of the Viennese "literary public" (Habermas). In contrast to prior scholarship, which has focused on the figure of Metternich and his administration's prohibitive political conservatism, this dissertation uncovers overlaps between conservative and liberal ideologies in the period's literary culture and points to the ambivalenc...