Popular French Romanticism
Title | Popular French Romanticism PDF eBook |
Author | James Smith Allen |
Publisher | Syracuse University Press |
Pages | 320 |
Release | 1981-01-01 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 9780815622321 |
Focusing on the Paris book world of this period, Allen reveals how the rise of a new popular literature—jolly chansonniers, the roman-feuilletons or serial novels, melodramas, gothic and sentimental novels, dramatic nationalistic histories—by such authors as Dumas, Sand, Lamennais, Ancelot, Desnoyer, and de Kock coincided with remarkable developments in the production, distribution, and consumption of books. Allen's research ranges from a survey of the then-popular romantic titles and authors and the trade catalogs of booksellers and lending libraries, to the police records of their activities, diaries and journals of working people, and military conscript records and ministerial literacy statistics. The result is a remarkable picture of the exchange between elite and popular culture, the interaction between ideas and their material reality, and the relationship between the literature and the history of France in the romantic period.
French and English Romanticism
Title | French and English Romanticism PDF eBook |
Author | Margaret Bloom |
Publisher | |
Pages | 32 |
Release | 1928 |
Genre | Comparative literature |
ISBN |
French Romantic Travel Writing
Title | French Romantic Travel Writing PDF eBook |
Author | Christopher W. Thompson |
Publisher | Oxford University Press (UK) |
Pages | 466 |
Release | 2012 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0199233543 |
A pioneering overview of the travel books produced by fourteen French Romantic writers - including Chateaubriand, Staël, Stendhal, Hugo, Nerval, Sand, Mérimée, Dumas, and Tristan - whose journeys ranged from Peru to Russia and from North America to North Africa and the Near East.
Rousseau, Robespierre and English Romanticism
Title | Rousseau, Robespierre and English Romanticism PDF eBook |
Author | Gregory Dart |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 308 |
Release | 2005-09-26 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780521020398 |
This book re-opens the question of Rousseau's influence on the French Revolution and on English Romanticism, by examining the relationship between his confessional writings and his political theory. Gregory Dart argues that by looking at the way in which Rousseau's writings were mediated by the speeches and actions of the French Jacobin statesman Maximilien Robespierre, we can gain a clearer and more concrete sense of the legacy he left to English writers. He shows how the writings of William Godwin, Mary Wollstonecraft, William Wordsworth and William Hazlitt rehearse and reflect upon the Jacobin tradition in the aftermath of the French revolutionary Terror.
British Romanticism and the Critique of Political Reason
Title | British Romanticism and the Critique of Political Reason PDF eBook |
Author | Timothy Michael |
Publisher | JHU Press |
Pages | 297 |
Release | 2016 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1421418037 |
Romantic writers responded to the challenges of reform and revolution by rethinking the scope of political reason. What role should reason play in the creation of a free and just society? Can we claim to know anything in a field as complex as politics? And how can the cause of political rationalism be advanced when it is seen as having blood on its hands? These are the questions that occupied a group of British poets, philosophers, and polemicists in the years following the French Revolution. Timothy Michael argues that much literature of the period is a trial, or a critique, of reason in its political capacities and a test of the kinds of knowledge available to it. For Wordsworth, Coleridge, Shelley, Burke, Wollstonecraft, and Godwin, the historical sequence of revolution, counter-revolution, and terror in France—and radicalism and repression in Britain—occasioned a dramatic reassessment of how best to advance the project of enlightenment. The political thought of these figures must be understood, Michael contends, in the context of their philosophical thought. Major poems of the period, including The Prelude, The Excursion, and Prometheus Unbound, are in this reading an adjudication of competing political and epistemological claims. This book bridges for the first time two traditional pillars of Romantic studies: the period’s politics and its theories of the mind and knowledge. Combining literary and intellectual history, it provides an account of British Romanticism in which high rhetoric, political prose, poetry, and poetics converge in a discourse of enlightenment and emancipation.
Nineteenth Century French Art
Title | Nineteenth Century French Art PDF eBook |
Author | Sébastien Allard |
Publisher | Flammarion-Pere Castor |
Pages | 466 |
Release | 2007 |
Genre | Art, French |
ISBN |
During the nineteenth century, France experienced an unprecedented growth in the visual arts, and Paris was its center. French art became a universally accepted benchmark, spreading its many ground-breaking developments -- the radicalism of Impressionism and Post-Impressionism, the daring of Art Nouveau, and the innovations of Haussman's new urban landscape -- far beyond its borders, and in return receiving numerous influences from broad. During this extraordinary rich and productive period, French art also benefited from the synthesis of the past with the innovations of the present, resulting in an artistic output whose legacy is still being felt today. This chronological history, richly illustrated and recounted by experts from France's preeminent museums, charts the growth of this fruitful -- and revolutionary -- period in the history of world art. -- From publisher's description.
Romantic Antiquity
Title | Romantic Antiquity PDF eBook |
Author | Jonathan Sachs |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 317 |
Release | 2010-02-04 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0195376129 |
This work argues that Rome is relevant to the Romantic period not as the continuation of an earlier neoclassicism, but rather as a concept that is simultaneously transformed and transformative: transformed in the sense that new models of historical thinking produced a changed understandings of historicity itself.