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GERMAN: ROMANTICISM AND AFTER

GERMAN: ROMANTICISM AND AFTER I 55 ROMANTICISM AND AFTER By A. GILLIES ENERAL WORKS. E. Seilliere adds an attractive companion volume to his work on French romanticism. In Germany the emphasis is being shifted from the J ena to the Heidelberg group, while Kleist is more popular than ever. Prof. Willoughby indicates the indebtedness of present-day Germany to Romantic theories. In comparative literature he demonstrates the influence of German Romanticism on the Oxford Movement, Coleridge and Pusey being the chief intermediaries. A cautious account of the former's contact with Kantian philosophy is written by E. Winkel­ mann.2 From the English side, too, comes a comprehensive 7 A. Bergmann, CARL AuGUSTs Begegnungen mit Zeitgenossen, Weimar, Biihlau, 1933, and Carl August-Bibliographie (JGF, xx), Jena, Frommann, 1933.-H. v. Egloffstein, Das Weimar v. Carl Alexander u. Wilh. Ernst, Berlin, Mittler, 1934.-U. Cramer, D. polit. Charakter d. weimar. Kanzlers Fr. v. MOLLER u. d. Glaubwiirdigkeits. 'Erinnerungen' (Beitr. z. thur. Gesch. i), Jena, Frommann, 1934.-A. Reimers, D. Gefiihrdung d. Familiengemeinschaft durch d. Individualismus in A. W. IFFLANDs Dramen v. I78I bis I8II, Diss. Kiel, 1933.-A. Schultze-Jahde, 'Z. Verfasserfrage d. KoTZEBUEana', ASNSL, clxiii, 3/4, 1933.-A. P. Coleman, 'Kotzebue's Die schone Unbekannte', MP, xxxi, z, 1933. F. Fink, C. L. FE&"'OW. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Year's Work in Modern Language Studies Brill

GERMAN: ROMANTICISM AND AFTER

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Publisher
Brill
Copyright
Copyright © Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
0084-4152
eISSN
2222-4297
DOI
10.1163/22224297-90000417
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

I 55 ROMANTICISM AND AFTER By A. GILLIES ENERAL WORKS. E. Seilliere adds an attractive companion volume to his work on French romanticism. In Germany the emphasis is being shifted from the J ena to the Heidelberg group, while Kleist is more popular than ever. Prof. Willoughby indicates the indebtedness of present-day Germany to Romantic theories. In comparative literature he demonstrates the influence of German Romanticism on the Oxford Movement, Coleridge and Pusey being the chief intermediaries. A cautious account of the former's contact with Kantian philosophy is written by E. Winkel­ mann.2 From the English side, too, comes a comprehensive 7 A. Bergmann, CARL AuGUSTs Begegnungen mit Zeitgenossen, Weimar, Biihlau, 1933, and Carl August-Bibliographie (JGF, xx), Jena, Frommann, 1933.-H. v. Egloffstein, Das Weimar v. Carl Alexander u. Wilh. Ernst, Berlin, Mittler, 1934.-U. Cramer, D. polit. Charakter d. weimar. Kanzlers Fr. v. MOLLER u. d. Glaubwiirdigkeits. 'Erinnerungen' (Beitr. z. thur. Gesch. i), Jena, Frommann, 1934.-A. Reimers, D. Gefiihrdung d. Familiengemeinschaft durch d. Individualismus in A. W. IFFLANDs Dramen v. I78I bis I8II, Diss. Kiel, 1933.-A. Schultze-Jahde, 'Z. Verfasserfrage d. KoTZEBUEana', ASNSL, clxiii, 3/4, 1933.-A. P. Coleman, 'Kotzebue's Die schone Unbekannte', MP, xxxi, z, 1933. F. Fink, C. L. FE&"'OW.

Journal

The Year's Work in Modern Language StudiesBrill

Published: Jan 1, 1

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