Romantic Drama
Editor
In Romantic Drama, three dozen comparatists join forces for a supranational, crosscultural reexamination of the deep paradigm shifts appearing around the start of the nineteenth century which revolutionized drama as a literary art within the enormous civilization constituted by Europe and her overseas extensions. Romantic pronouncements on the canon and poetics of drama, the symptomatic subject-matters treated by Romantic playwrights, the structural means by which they expressed their view of the world, and regional peculiarities are illuminated from multiple perspectives. The volume aspires to skirt the pitfalls of simplistic genetic or teleological thinking. It does not treat Romanticism as a limited “period” dominated by some construed singular master-ethos or dialectic; rather, it follows the literary patterns and dynamics of Romanticism as a flow of interactive currents across geocultural frontiers. Finally, this involves recognizing the Romantic heritage in literary phenomena reaching into our own times. Thus the Romantic celebration of imagination, creation of a theater of the mind, experience of intertextuality, dissolving of generic boundaries, and embrace of “myth” as a challenge to older “history” figure among the important topics, as do Romantic foreshadowings of Symbolist, Existentialist, and Absurdist drama.
This volume is part of a book set which can be ordered at a special discount: https://www.benjamins.com/series/chlel/chlel.special_offer.romanticism.pdf
[Comparative History of Literatures in European Languages, IX] 1993. xvi, 516 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 28 October 2011
Published online on 28 October 2011
© John Benjamins B.V. / Association Internationale de Littérature Comparée
Table of Contents
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Introduction | p. ix
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I. Renewal and Innovation
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1. Shakespeare and the Formation of Romantic Drama in Germany and FranceLilian R. Furst | p. 3
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2. The Reception of the Spanish Theater in European RomanticismDouglas Hilt | p. 17
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3. “Theater in the Theater” and “Word Theater”: Play Thematics and the Breakthrough of Romantic DramaManfred Schmeling | p. 35
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4. Illusion and Romantic DramaFrederick Burwick | p. 59
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II. Themes, Styles, Structures
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1. Shakespeare Refracted: Writer, Audience, and Rewriter in French and German Romantice TranslationsAndré Lefevere | p. 101
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2. Folklore and Romantic DramaMiroslav J. Hanak | p. 115
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3. Nationalism and the Romantic Drama in EuropeMarvin Carlson | p. 139
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4.Romantic Redefinitions of the TragicJeffrey N. Cox | p. 153
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4. The Romantic Tragedy of FateGerhart Hoffmeister | p. 167
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5. Empathy and Distance: German Romantic Theories of Acting ReconsideredGloria Flaherty | p. 181
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6. What is Romantic Opera? — Toward a Musico-Literary DefinitionUlrich Weisstein | p. 209
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III. Affinity, Dissemination, Reception
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1. The Italian Romantic Drama in Its European ContextMarvin Carlson | p. 233
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2. Romantic Drama in the Hispanic World: The Picturesque ModeJohn Dowling | p. 249
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3. Polish Romantic Drama in PerspectiveHarold B. Segel | p. 259
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4. Russian Romantic Drama: The Case of GriboedovAlexander Gershkovich | p. 273
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5. Romanticism in Genres of Drama in BohemiaHana Voisine-Jechova | p. 287
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6. Romantic Drama in HungaryMihály Szegedy-Maszák | p. 297
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7. Romantic Trends in Scandinavian DramaGeorge Bisztray | p. 317
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8. From Dark into Light: Nineteenth-Century Romantic Drama in English-CanadaRichard Plant | p. 329
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9. Nineteenth-Century American Drama: A Romantic QuestDinnah Pladott | p. 343
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10. The Romantic Theater in Hispanic AmericaEmilio Carilla | p. 359
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IV. The Romantic Legacy
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1. Classic Vision in the Romantic Age: Goethe’s Reconstitution of European Drama in Faust IIGerald Gillespie | p. 379
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2. Romantic Irony and Biedermeier TragicomedyVirgil Nemoianu | p. 399
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3. Romantic Cosmic DramaMartin Esslin | p. 413
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4. The Past is Prologue: The Romantic Heritage in Dramatic LiteratureGerald Gillespie | p. 429
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Index | p. 489
Subjects
Literature & Literary Studies
Main BIC Subject
DSB: Literary studies: general
Main BISAC Subject
LIT000000: LITERARY CRITICISM / General