ABSTRACT

Though traditionally defined as a relatively brief time period - typically the half century of 1780-1830 - the "Romantic era" constitutes a crucial, indeed unique, transitional phase in what has come to be called "modernity," for it was during these fifty years that myriad disciplinary, aesthetic, economic, and political changes long in the making accelerated dramatically. Due in part to the increased velocity of change, though, most of modernity’s essential master-tropes - such as secularization, instrumental reason, individual rights, economic self-interest, emancipation, system, institution, nation, empire, utopia, and "life" - were also subjected to incisive critical and methodological reflection and revaluation.

The chapters in this collection argue that Romanticism’s marked ambivalence and resistance to decisive conceptualization arises precisely from the fact that Romantic authors simultaneously extended the project of European modernity while offering Romantic concepts as means for a sustained critical reflection on that very process. Focusing especially on the topics of form (both literary and organic), secularization (and its political correlates, utopia and apocalypse), and the question of how one narrates the arrival of modernity, this collection collectively emphasizes the importance of understanding modernity through the lens of Romanticism, rather than simply understanding Romanticism as part of modernity.

This book was previously published as a special issue of European Romantic Review.

chapter 2|15 pages

Romanticism and Modernity

Epistemological Continuities and Discontinuities

chapter 3|18 pages

Natural Purposes and the Reflecting Power of Judgment

The Problem of the Organism in Kant's Critical Philosophy

chapter 4|17 pages

Excitability

The (Dis)Organization of Knowledge from Schelling's First Outline (1799) to Ages of the World (1815)

chapter 5|17 pages

After the Covenant

Romanticism, Secularization, and Disastrous Transcendence

chapter 7|17 pages

How to Move from Romanticism to Post-Romanticism

Schelling, Hegel, and Heine

chapter 8|13 pages

Sometimes a Stick is Just a Stick

The Essay as (Organic) Form

chapter 9|21 pages

Bildungsspiele

Vicissitudes of Socialization in Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship

chapter 11|14 pages

Machines of Turning Actions into Reactions

The German Novella and the Event

chapter 13|21 pages

Cryptogamia