ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1970, this book surveys the central philosophical and aesthetic doctrines which characterize German Romanticism. A selection of literary, philosophical and political essays by some of the most important German Romantic thinkers illustrates the principal themes: these range from philosophical idealism and aesthetic subjectivism to folklore and emergent German nationalism, from exotica and medievalism to irrationality and the metaphysics of music. Introductory essays explain the significance of the particular aspects of the Romantic tradition which are revealed in each passage, and commentaries not only elucidate allusions and references which are not immediately identifiable, but draw attention to wider issues, either in the work of that author or in the context of 19th Century German culture as a whole.

chapter |52 pages

Herder

chapter |51 pages

Wackenroder

chapter |23 pages

Fichte

chapter |30 pages

Novalis

chapter |32 pages

Friedrich Schlegel

chapter |31 pages

Schopenhauer

chapter |51 pages

Richard Wagner