

An edition of The birth of European romanticism (1994)
Truth and Propaganda in Staël's 'De l'Allemagne', 18101813 (Cambridge Studies in French)
By John Claiborne Isbell
Publish Date
November 23, 2006
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Language
eng
Pages
278
Description:
The modern term 'Romantic' coined in Germany reached Europe and America through Stael's best-seller De l'Allemagne. Stael here transforms her eclectic source material into a sweeping Romantic manifesto, a weapon offering Napoleonic Europe an alternative to everything he stood for. Napoleon tried to destroy the book in 1810; republished as he fell, it revealed a new universe which helped to bury the neo-Classical past and to shape the nineteenth century. In this ground-breaking work, Dr. Isbell analyses Stael's vast agenda, covering Classical and Romantic divides in Western art, philosophy, religion and society from 1789 to 1815. This investigation sheds new light on the two revolutions that created modern Europe, seen here by a leader of both.
subjects: French literature, German influences, Germany, Germany in literature, In literature, Knowledge, Romanticism, Stael, madame de (anne-louise-germaine), 1766-1817, French literature, history and criticism, 19th century, Romanticism, europe, Romanticism, france
People: Staël Madame de (1766-1817)