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European Literature, General & Miscellaneous European History, Literary Movements
The Romantic Revolution: A History by Tim  Blanning — book cover

The Romantic Revolution: A History

by Tim Blanning
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Overview

From the preeminent historian of Europe in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries comes a superb, concise account of a cultural upheaval that still shapes sensibilities today. Long overshadowed by the contemporaneous American, French, and Industrial revolutions, the Romantic Revolution finally receives its due in Tim Blanning’s bold and brilliant work.

A rebellion against the rationality of the Enlightenment, a rejection of “the Academy” in favor of public opinion, Romanticism was a profound shift in expression that altered the arts and ushered in modernity, even as it championed a return to the intuitive and the primitive. Blanning describes its beginnings in Rousseau’s novel La Nouvelle Héloïse, the biggest bestseller of the eighteenth century, a work that placed the creator—and not the created—at the center of aesthetic activity and led to the virtual worship of creative geniuses by the general public.

Blanning reveals the glamorizing of artistic madness and suicide in Goethe’s novel The Sufferings of Young Werther and the ballet Giselle; the role of sex as a psychological force in Friedrich Schlegel’s novel Lucinde; the importance of mind-altering drugs to the fictional protagonist of Confessions of an English Opium Eater and to the composer Hector Berlioz in his Symphonie fantastique; and the use of naïve, dreamlike imagery in Goya’s paintings of monsters, devils, and witches.

Whether it was the new notion of “sex appeal” in the fames of Paganini, Liszt, and Byron, or the celebration of accessible storytelling in the novels of Walter Scott (the most popular writer of the day), The Romantic Revolution unearths the origins of ideas now commonplace in our culture. It is the best introduction to an essential time whose influence would far outlast the mechanistic “age of the railway” that, in the mid-nineteenth century, replaced it.

About the Author, Tim Blanning

Until his retirement in 2009, Tim Blanning was Professor of Modern European History at the University of Cambridge and remains a Fellow of Sidney Sussex College and of the British Academy. He is general editor of The Oxford History of Modern Europe and the Short Oxford History of Europe series and the author of The Culture of Power and the Power of Culture, which won a prestigious German prize and was short-listed for the British Academy Book Prize, The Pursuit of Glory, and The Triumph of Music. In 2000 he was awarded a Pilkington Prize for teaching by the University of Cambridge.

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Editorials

Library Journal

The Romantic movement of the mid-18th to mid-19th centuries, asserts Blanning (formerly modern European history, Univ. of Cambridge; The Triumph of Music: The Rise of Composers, Musicians and Their Art), was as radical in its consequences as the age's political and economic revolutions, changing permanently the way writers, thinkers, and artists perceived themselves. Blanning describes the ways Romantics turned inward (the cult of genius, the privileged status accorded dreams and nightmares), away from the emphasis on reason urged by Enlightenment thinkers. One writer railed against "the tyranny of reason." Another boldly asserted: "God is a poet, not a mathematician." Hegel pondered Romanticism's "absolute inwardness." Blanning analyzes the Romantics' modes of engagement with the world (exaltation of history, love of nature, medievalism) and makes acute observations on the dialectical, not cyclical, progress of the arts up through today. VERDICT It's a pleasure to read a relatively concise piece of scholarship of so high a caliber, especially expressed as well as in this fine book, with images and phrases that illumine the subject and stick in the mind. It will appeal not only to academics but to all readers with an interest in the history of literature, philosophy, and art.—David Keymer, Modesto, CA

Book Details

Published
August 14, 2012
Publisher
Random House Publishing Group
Pages
272
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780812980141

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