「Romanticism」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 97件
d for excessive use of decorative language, | romanticism aloof from contemporary social and economic |
His popular textbook, | Romanticism: An Anthology, went to a third edition in 2 |
he non fiction book, The Fantastic Sublime: | Romanticism and Transcendence in Nineteenth-century Chi |
es from the English Civil War to the era of | Romanticism and beyond. |
Placing his references in German | Romanticism and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's Faust, the |
wandering that may be traced back to German | Romanticism and the German system of apprenticeship. |
him with notions of chivalry, aristocratic ' | romanticism', and the missionary ideals of Burgundy. |
for his early work in the Finnish national | romanticism and jugend styles. |
This close connection between Polish | Romanticism and Polish history became one of the defini |
nterest, is of its time: an amalgam of late | Romanticism and early Modernism, comparable with those |
started as a reaction to late 19th-century | Romanticism and was characterized by a desire for or be |
es the composition is let loose into modern | romanticism, and so the manner descends into the midst |
In his fairy tales he used | romanticism and true love. |
Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net (ISSN 1916-1441 | |
Romanticism and the 20th Century, from 1800 (1957) | |
Anthology of | Romanticism and Guide Through the Romantic Movement (19 |
He is known as a theorist of | Romanticism, and of irony. |
nce is now regarded as a transition between | Romanticism and Modernism. |
s prolific work focuses on German idealism, | romanticism, and the concepts of subjectivity and self- |
am, Andrew and Jardine, Nicholas eds (1990) | Romanticism and the Sciences, Cambridge University Pres |
yle, while her contemporaries embraced both | Romanticism and Realism. |
Bell, Carolyn Coss, Revolution, | Romanticism, and the Afro-Creole Protest Tradition in L |
Victorian literature, changing its name to | Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net. |
mportant stage in the development of French | Romanticism and was also popular in Germany. |
He is currently the Assistant Professor of | Romanticism and Children's Literature at the California |
His poetry expresses the ideas of modern | romanticism and realism while maintaining the classical |
Romanticism and Socialism, by Stanley Mitchell in New L | |
ature, he represents the end of the Serbian | Romanticism and the start of Serbian Realism. |
With a conception of music that took | Romanticism as its starting point, he was regarded by m |
The change was as much at the birth of | Romanticism as it was of Classicism. |
Far from reacting against German | romanticism as the other members of Les Six did, Honegg |
d, Maria Yudina gave a cycle of lectures on | Romanticism at the Moscow Conservatory. |
While many writers were into | romanticism at the time, he introduced a new trend that |
e range of subjects, including Shakespeare, | Romanticism, Austrian economics, contemporary popular c |
y Sisters: Three Women Who Ignited American | Romanticism, by Megan Marshall, Houghton Mifflin (ISBN |
The work had an immense impact on early | Romanticism, comparable to that of Goethe's The Sorrows |
ms of the day, using literary forms such as | romanticism, devotionalism and social realism. |
nly to be perfected by later writers in the | Romanticism era Notably Rayaprolu and Devulapalli Krish |
rez is considered to be Puerto Rico's first | Romanticism era composer. |
He was extremely influenced by German | Romanticism, especially Schelling, whom he met during h |
His closing to | romanticism from classicism can be addressed to the wor |
architectural Gothic revival and classical | Romanticism gave rise to the Gothic novel in the second |
Romanticism has been seen as "the revival of the life a | |
Oratorios from the period of | Romanticism have included Liszt's Christus and Mendelss |
long history, and owe much to Victorian era | romanticism, having only been worn on the bonnet since |
Celebrated as the founder of Wallachian | Romanticism, Heliade was equally influenced by Classici |
Influenced by | Romanticism his painting is symbolist with mythological |
alist Realism but with piercing elements of | Romanticism, in addition to an exploitation of some ele |
he characteristics commonly associated with | romanticism in general and German romanticism in partic |
itney Biennial, New York; Ideal Worlds: New | Romanticism in Contemporary Art, Schirn Kunsthalle, Fra |
the sixties who have an evident element of | romanticism in a conceptual practice. |
Members of the group "Jena | Romanticism," which was "a first phase of Romanticism i |
merican literary critic, known for works on | Romanticism, in particular his book The Mirror and the |
contact to important figures of the German | Romanticism, including Goethe, Savigny and Arnim. |
Flower (1902) named after the key symbol of | Romanticism introduced first by Novalis. |
tic conceptualism (also known as conceptual | romanticism) is a strand of conceptual art which seeks |
ating elements are New Gothic, but also New | Romanticism is used. |
probably) possible, whatever their view of ' | romanticism,' is a hopeless romantic." |
eenth and early nineteenth centuries within | Romanticism, leading to the architectural Gothic reviva |
dieval Literature, the Early Modern period, | Romanticism, literary Modernism and Contemporary fictio |
reau and Ralph Waldo Emerson, transatlantic | romanticism, literature and science, and environmental |
erized by aesthetic plurality (a mixture of | Romanticism, Naturalism, Symbolism, Impressionism, Expr |
eriod is not authentic but a product of the | romanticism of the 19th century. |
g stories of front-line camaraderie and the | romanticism of the revolutionary struggle. |
d in the Salon of 1841, where the painterly | romanticism of its style was controversial; Le Constitu |
usic artists would wholly embrace the overt | romanticism of piano-led tracks like 'Dancers Waltz' or |
Someplace Closer To Here, which recalls the | romanticism of Coldplay, the insistent groove of Oasis, |
His Nordic influences further enhanced the | Romanticism of the Viking era during that time. |
The lush | romanticism of the songs had critics searching for supe |
The poem is characterized by the National | Romanticism of the age, as was the bulk of his work. |
well-known, invoking in many the beauty and | romanticism of Italian culture, many hotels and restaur |
The journal was founded in February 1996 as | Romanticism on the Net. |
RaVoN, formerly known as | Romanticism on the Net) is an international online peer |
This helped create the dark | romanticism or American Gothic of authors like Edgar Al |
mber 1867) was a Danish painter of the late | Romanticism period. |
f the most subversive tendencies of Swedish | Romanticism, reflecting the aesthetic-religious revolut |
als and businesses rather than any inherent | romanticism regarding the location. |
e arts and classicism; in the 18th century, | Romanticism reversed it with the creation of the intitu |
Romanticism set forth different themes: it was anti-red | |
8 to 1988 and has been co-editor of journal | Romanticism since 1995. |
tyle, which was more suited to the emerging | romanticism than the existing fashionable neoclassicism |
ndine, a German myth with a theme common in | Romanticism that was adapted by Hans Christian Andersen |
bordered, like blotting paper in ink, with | romanticism, the comforting phrase is superseded by the |
II National | Romanticism: The Formation of National Movements, 2007: |
nder the influence of the Enlightenment and | romanticism, the Czech national revival led to the esta |
have an equal or even stronger bias toward | romanticism: time and again his poems celebrate love, s |
ence of Thorvaldsen, his style changed from | romanticism to neo-classicism. |
arious architectural elements, ranging from | Romanticism to Renaissance. |
usic ranges from Doris Day/Perry Como style | romanticism, to Neolithic rock and dewy doo-wop. |
e Politics of France (Age of Revolution and | Romanticism, Vol 19). |
Romanticism was a complex artistic, literary, and intel | |
New | Romanticism was also an inspiration for the short-lived |
A second phase of | Romanticism was initiated two years later in Heidelberg |
ss was reversed during the period of Polish | Romanticism, when after the partitions of Poland memory |
interview as his attempt to "return to the | romanticism which inspired so much of Italian opera." |
re genre of Gothic Literature and the later | Romanticism which the genre fuelled. |
s by Robert Schumann in the genre of German | Romanticism with a libretto by Robert Reinick and the c |
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