Imagination in German Romanticism: Re-thinking the Self and its Environment
In German Romanticism, the imagination is the site of the encounter between the subject and its environment; this book examines that encounter. Dealing with both literary and philosophical texts, it argues that the Romantic imagination performs a critique of rationalism. In reflecting on the fragmentary, the Romantics require the reader to both imagine and to question this as a hermeneutic process. As such, they understand writing to be an experiment in memory, both individual and cultural. This book is a study of the writings of E.T.A. Hoffmann, Novalis, Tieck and also of the utopian project of Romanticism itself. Methodologically, it is informed by what Foucault termed the archaeological approach to discourse as well as by psychoanalysis and literary theory. Examining points of contact as well of divergence between Kantian epistemology and Romantic nature philosophy, it also highlights the correspondences between literature, philosophy and science. Above all, it treats Romanticism as an experiment in the portrayal of ambivalent modern identity.
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Imagination in German Romanticism: Re-thinking the Self and its Environment
In German Romanticism, the imagination is the site of the encounter between the subject and its environment; this book examines that encounter. Dealing with both literary and philosophical texts, it argues that the Romantic imagination performs a critique of rationalism. In reflecting on the fragmentary, the Romantics require the reader to both imagine and to question this as a hermeneutic process. As such, they understand writing to be an experiment in memory, both individual and cultural. This book is a study of the writings of E.T.A. Hoffmann, Novalis, Tieck and also of the utopian project of Romanticism itself. Methodologically, it is informed by what Foucault termed the archaeological approach to discourse as well as by psychoanalysis and literary theory. Examining points of contact as well of divergence between Kantian epistemology and Romantic nature philosophy, it also highlights the correspondences between literature, philosophy and science. Above all, it treats Romanticism as an experiment in the portrayal of ambivalent modern identity.
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Imagination in German Romanticism: Re-thinking the Self and its Environment

Imagination in German Romanticism: Re-thinking the Self and its Environment

by Jeanne Riou
Imagination in German Romanticism: Re-thinking the Self and its Environment

Imagination in German Romanticism: Re-thinking the Self and its Environment

by Jeanne Riou

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$96.10 
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Overview

In German Romanticism, the imagination is the site of the encounter between the subject and its environment; this book examines that encounter. Dealing with both literary and philosophical texts, it argues that the Romantic imagination performs a critique of rationalism. In reflecting on the fragmentary, the Romantics require the reader to both imagine and to question this as a hermeneutic process. As such, they understand writing to be an experiment in memory, both individual and cultural. This book is a study of the writings of E.T.A. Hoffmann, Novalis, Tieck and also of the utopian project of Romanticism itself. Methodologically, it is informed by what Foucault termed the archaeological approach to discourse as well as by psychoanalysis and literary theory. Examining points of contact as well of divergence between Kantian epistemology and Romantic nature philosophy, it also highlights the correspondences between literature, philosophy and science. Above all, it treats Romanticism as an experiment in the portrayal of ambivalent modern identity.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783039102693
Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
Publication date: 08/26/2004
Pages: 266
Product dimensions: 5.91(w) x 8.66(h) x (d)

About the Author

The Author: Jeanne Riou, born in Dublin, has been a Lecturer in German at University College Dublin since 1998. She has recently edited and contributed to Netzwerke. Eine Kulturtechnik der Moderne (jointly edited with Jürgen Barkhoff and Hartmut Böhme), 2004. She has published articles on the critique of culture in Schiller, Nietzsche and Benjamin, on the aesthetics of New Technologies, on nature philosophy and rationalism in Goethe, on music as non-verbal reason in E.T.A. Hoffmann and on Grillparzer's Der arme Spielmann.

Table of Contents

Contents: Mind, Body, Soul in Rationalistic discourses: Self-identity – History, Imagination and the Romantic Experiment – Narratives of Memory (Tieck and Hoffmann) – Die Elixiere des Teufels. Fictional Autobiography and the Search for an Authentic Self – Malevolent Innerlichkeit.
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