English Fiction & Prose Literature - General & Miscellaneous - Literary Criticism, Creativity, Art - General & Miscellaneous, Romanticism - Literary Movements, 18th-19th Century German Literature - Literary Criticism, Empiricism, General & Miscellaneous G
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Overview
In a work of astonishing intellectual range, James Engell traces the evolution ofthe creative imagination, from its emergence in British empirical thought through its flowering in Romantic art and literature.The notion of a creative imagination, Engell shows, was the most powerful and important development of the eighteenth century. It grew simultaneously in literature, criticism, philosophy, psychology, religion, and science, attracting such diverse minds as Hobbes, Addison, Gerard, Goethe, Kant, and Coleridge. Indeed, rather than discussing merely the abstract notion of the imagination, Engell examines the community of thinkers, especially in England and Germany, who joined to pursue and develop what became the most fascinating and suggestive concept of modern Western thought. For as the imagination became the dominant subject of literature, its meanings multiplied. Finally it came to be seen as the crown of artistic creation and as the mediator in the ongoing dialectic between matter and spirit, materialism and transcendentalism.
Book Details
Published
July 1, 1981
Publisher
Cambridge, Mass. Harvard University Press 1981
Pages
436
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780674175723