Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/001528718/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 34 of
34
with 100 items per page.
- catalog abstract "Discusses the poetry, painting, and science of the Romantic period and explains how the Romantics invented the past, studied nature, and created the gothic style.".
- catalog contributor b2177352.
- catalog coverage "Great Britain Civilization 19th century.".
- catalog created "c1988.".
- catalog date "1988".
- catalog date "c1988.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1988.".
- catalog description "Bibliography: p. [377]-416.".
- catalog description "Discusses the poetry, painting, and science of the Romantic period and explains how the Romantics invented the past, studied nature, and created the gothic style.".
- catalog description "Part I: The human context -- I. People during the Romantic Age -- II. The literary marketplace -- Publishers -- The reviews -- William Hazlitt -- Magazines -- Leigh Hunt -- Thomas De Quincey -- Newspapers -- William Cobbett -- Religious tracts: Hannah More -- III. Children's literature and education -- The Didactic background -- Rousseau and his influence -- Maria Edgeworth -- Educational systems -- William Godwin -- Charles and Mary Lamb -- Poems for children -- Robert Southey and "The three bears" -- The birth of fantasy -- IV. The theater -- Licensed theaters -- Unlicensed theaters -- Pantomime -- Melodrama -- Actors -- Poets as playwrights -- Thomas Lovell Beddoes -- V. Poets and a gallery of "Sophisters, economists, and calculators" -- Poetry and power -- Adam Smith -- Thomas R. Malthus -- Jeremy Bentham -- Edmund Burke -- Thomas Paine -- Mary Wollstonecraft -- William Godwin -- Robert Owen -- Samuel Taylor Coleridge -- Poets and politics -- VI. Heroes and heroism -- The decline of heroism -- The royal family and friends -- Beau Brummell -- Religious heroes -- Warrior heroes: Nelson, Wellington, and Napoleon -- The Byronic hero".
- catalog description "Part II: The illusion of history -- VII. Inventing the past -- The uses of the Bible -- The Druids -- The Hellenic revival -- The erotic theme -- The Platonic theme -- The Elgin marbles -- Dionysius in England -- Percy Bysshe Shelley: The Hellenic fulfillment -- The Hellenic twilight -- VIII. Natural history and its illusion -- Geological forces -- John Martin: Painter of catastrophism -- Romantic melancholy -- The Reality of death -- John Keats: The temple of melancholy -- IX. The Gothic -- The early Gothic novel: Horace Walpole and Ann Radcliffe -- Sensibility and the Gothic -- The sublime and the Gothic romance -- Gothic terror: William Beckford and Matthew "Monk" Lewis -- The grotesque: Henry Fuseli's Nightmare -- Shifts in Gothic taste -- Parodying Gothic; Jane Austen and Thomas Love Peacock -- The psychological Gothic: Mary Shelley -- John Polidori's The Vampyre -- Charles Maturin's Melmouth the wanderer -- James Hogg's Confessions of a justified sinner -- The role of the Gothic -- X. Bards and minstrelsy -- The appeal of antiquarianism -- Percy's Reliques -- The minstrel: James Beattie and Thomas Chatterton -- Robert Burns -- Collectors and antiquarians -- Sir Walter Scott: Minstrel historian -- Thomas Carlyle: The historian as bard -- History and poetry".
- catalog description "Part III: The experimental arts: Poetry, painting, science -- XI. The poetry of life: The philosophical background -- Tradition and creativity -- Empiricism: Harley and Wordsworth -- Idealism: Berkeley and the poets -- The common sense philosophers -- Physiognomy and phrenology -- Fragmented philosophy and philosophical poetry -- The imagination -- William Wordsworth -- Wordsworth and the guidebooks -- XII. Paingint and other visual arts -- The awakening of the visual arts -- William Blake -- The state of the arts -- The profesionalization of the fine arts -- Benjamin Robert Haydon: Exemplary failure -- Illustration and portraiture -- Physiognomy, natural history, and animal painting -- painting animals and illustrating natural history -- John Constable: Painting as earth science -- J. M. W. Turner: Painting as physical science -- XIII. Science -- The chain of being and the chain of life -- Analogical thinking -- Electricity -- Naturalphilosophie -- What is life? -- Science and poetry -- Humphry Davy: Poet scientist -- Science and "The household of man" -- The profesionalization of science -- Science and technology -- The limits of knowledge -- Enfranchisement of the human imagination.".
- catalog extent "xvi, 447 p. ;".
- catalog identifier "0393025411".
- catalog identifier "0393955478 (pbk.)".
- catalog issued "1988".
- catalog issued "c1988.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "New York : W.W. Norton,".
- catalog spatial "Great Britain Civilization 19th century.".
- catalog spatial "Great Britain".
- catalog spatial "Great Britain.".
- catalog subject "821/.7/09145 19".
- catalog subject "English poetry 19th century History and criticism.".
- catalog subject "Literature and society Great Britain History 19th century.".
- catalog subject "PR590 .G38 1988".
- catalog subject "Romanticism Great Britain.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Part I: The human context -- I. People during the Romantic Age -- II. The literary marketplace -- Publishers -- The reviews -- William Hazlitt -- Magazines -- Leigh Hunt -- Thomas De Quincey -- Newspapers -- William Cobbett -- Religious tracts: Hannah More -- III. Children's literature and education -- The Didactic background -- Rousseau and his influence -- Maria Edgeworth -- Educational systems -- William Godwin -- Charles and Mary Lamb -- Poems for children -- Robert Southey and "The three bears" -- The birth of fantasy -- IV. The theater -- Licensed theaters -- Unlicensed theaters -- Pantomime -- Melodrama -- Actors -- Poets as playwrights -- Thomas Lovell Beddoes -- V. Poets and a gallery of "Sophisters, economists, and calculators" -- Poetry and power -- Adam Smith -- Thomas R. Malthus -- Jeremy Bentham -- Edmund Burke -- Thomas Paine -- Mary Wollstonecraft -- William Godwin -- Robert Owen -- Samuel Taylor Coleridge -- Poets and politics -- VI. Heroes and heroism -- The decline of heroism -- The royal family and friends -- Beau Brummell -- Religious heroes -- Warrior heroes: Nelson, Wellington, and Napoleon -- The Byronic hero".
- catalog tableOfContents "Part II: The illusion of history -- VII. Inventing the past -- The uses of the Bible -- The Druids -- The Hellenic revival -- The erotic theme -- The Platonic theme -- The Elgin marbles -- Dionysius in England -- Percy Bysshe Shelley: The Hellenic fulfillment -- The Hellenic twilight -- VIII. Natural history and its illusion -- Geological forces -- John Martin: Painter of catastrophism -- Romantic melancholy -- The Reality of death -- John Keats: The temple of melancholy -- IX. The Gothic -- The early Gothic novel: Horace Walpole and Ann Radcliffe -- Sensibility and the Gothic -- The sublime and the Gothic romance -- Gothic terror: William Beckford and Matthew "Monk" Lewis -- The grotesque: Henry Fuseli's Nightmare -- Shifts in Gothic taste -- Parodying Gothic; Jane Austen and Thomas Love Peacock -- The psychological Gothic: Mary Shelley -- John Polidori's The Vampyre -- Charles Maturin's Melmouth the wanderer -- James Hogg's Confessions of a justified sinner -- The role of the Gothic -- X. Bards and minstrelsy -- The appeal of antiquarianism -- Percy's Reliques -- The minstrel: James Beattie and Thomas Chatterton -- Robert Burns -- Collectors and antiquarians -- Sir Walter Scott: Minstrel historian -- Thomas Carlyle: The historian as bard -- History and poetry".
- catalog tableOfContents "Part III: The experimental arts: Poetry, painting, science -- XI. The poetry of life: The philosophical background -- Tradition and creativity -- Empiricism: Harley and Wordsworth -- Idealism: Berkeley and the poets -- The common sense philosophers -- Physiognomy and phrenology -- Fragmented philosophy and philosophical poetry -- The imagination -- William Wordsworth -- Wordsworth and the guidebooks -- XII. Paingint and other visual arts -- The awakening of the visual arts -- William Blake -- The state of the arts -- The profesionalization of the fine arts -- Benjamin Robert Haydon: Exemplary failure -- Illustration and portraiture -- Physiognomy, natural history, and animal painting -- painting animals and illustrating natural history -- John Constable: Painting as earth science -- J. M. W. Turner: Painting as physical science -- XIII. Science -- The chain of being and the chain of life -- Analogical thinking -- Electricity -- Naturalphilosophie -- What is life? -- Science and poetry -- Humphry Davy: Poet scientist -- Science and "The household of man" -- The profesionalization of science -- Science and technology -- The limits of knowledge -- Enfranchisement of the human imagination.".
- catalog title "English romanticism : the human context / Marilyn Gaull.".
- catalog type "Criticism, interpretation, etc. fast".
- catalog type "History. fast".
- catalog type "text".