Romanticism in National ContextRoy Porter, Mikulas Teich Cambridge University Press, 1988-05-27 - 353 psl. The main literary and artistic currents of Romanticism are well known. This volume aims uniquely to set them in their wider contexts. Thirteen distinguished contributors examine the particular configurations of the Romantic movement within individual national contexts. Parallels, influences and differences are explored between the course of Romanticism in England, France, Germany and ten other European nations, and special emphasis is placed upon the interplay between Romantic culture and social, political and economic change. Narrow definitions of Romanticism are avoided: the contributors emphasize the Romantic strands within science, philosophy and political thinking as well as within art and literature. The book also forms part of a sequence of collections of essays which started with The Enlightenment in National Context (1981). In preparation are Fin-de-Siècle and its Legacy and the Renaissance in National Context. The purpose of these and other envisaged collections is to bring together comparative, national and inter-disciplinary approaches to the history of great movements in the development of human thought and action. |
Turinys
Romanticism in Wales | 9 |
Romanticism in England | 37 |
Haunted by history Irish romantic writing 180050 | 68 |
Romanticism in Greece | 92 |
Romanticism in Germany | 109 |
Romanticism in Switzerland | 134 |
Romanticism in Scandinavia | 172 |
Romanticism in The Netherlands | 191 |
Romanticism in Hungary | 217 |
Romanticism in France | 240 |
Spanish Romanticism | 260 |
Russian Romanticism | 284 |
The Agony in the Garden Polish Romanticism | 317 |
345 | |
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Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
ancien régime ancient artistic ballads became Bilderdijk Byron Cambridge canton Catholic Châteaubriand circle classical concept Congress Kingdom Coppet criticism cultural Dutch E. T. A. Hoffmann early eighteenth century Empire England English Enlightenment essay Europe European exile France French French Revolution Friedrich Friedrich Schlegel Gaelic German Greece hero Hungarian Ibid ideal ideas identity ideology individual influence intellectual Iolo Morganwg Ireland Irish language Larra later liberal literary literature London lyrical Mickiewicz Mme de Staël Napoleonic National Romanticism nature Naturphilosophie nineteenth century Novalis novel organic painting Paris past patriotic period philosophy poem poet poetic poetry Polish political popular prose Protestant published Pushkin radical religion religious Revolution Romantic movement Romantic nationalism Romanticism Russian Schlegel sense social society Solomós songs Spain Spanish spirit St Petersburg Steffens Swiss Switzerland Széchenyi theme ticism tradition translation University Vaud Wales Welsh Willem Bilderdijk Wordsworth writers young