In:Nonfictional Romantic Prose: Expanding borders
Edited by Steven P. Sondrup and Virgil Nemoianu
[Comparative History of Literatures in European Languages XVIII] 2004
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 31 March 2004
https://doi.org/10.1075/chlel.xviii.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/chlel.xviii.toc
Table of contents
Prefacevii
I. General Introduction
II. Romantic Theoretical and Critical Writing
Theories of Romanticism: The First Two Hundred Years
Romantic Disavowals of Romanticism, 1800–1830
Hegel and Hegelianism in European Romanticism
The Aesthetics of German Idealism and Its Reception in European Romanticism
Romantic Theories of National Literature and Language in Germany, England, and France
Sir Walter Scott and the Beginnings of Ethnology
III. Expansions in Time115
Burke’s Conservatism and Its Echoes on the Continent and in the United States
Distorted Echoes: The Mythologies of Nordic Nationalism
IV. Expansions in Space163
Romantic Travel Narratives
Romanticism and Nonfictional Prose in Spanish America, 1780–1850
V. Expansions of the Self
Allegories of Address: The Poetics of the Romantic Diary
The Romantic Subject in Autobiography
Educating for Women’s Future: Thinking New Forms
VI. Generic Expansions
The Romantic Familiar Essay
The Unending Conversation: The Role of Periodicals in England and on the Continent during the Romantic Age
Almanacs and Romantic Non-fictional Prose
The Romantic Pamphlet: Stylistic and Thematic Impurity of a Double-Edged Genre
Costumbrismo in Spanish Literature and its European Analogues
VII. Intersections: Scientific and Artistic Discourses in the Romantic Age
Romanticism, the Unconscious, and the Brain
Literary Sources of Romantic Psychology
Romantic Discourse on the Visual Arts
Aspects of German Romantic Musical Discourse
VIII. Intimations of Transcendence421
Sacrality as Aesthetic in the Early Nineteenth Century: A Network Approach
The Myth of the Fallen Angel: Its Theosophy in Scandinavian, English, and French Literature
IX. Conclusion: Romanticism as Explosion and Epidemic
Index
