Bazsites.com Romanticism
Directory Topics
On the Web
- San Antonio College LitWeb Index of English Romanticism - A list of prevalent British writers of Romanticism, with listings of their major works and links to where these works can be found if available online.
- WebMuseum: Romanticism - Short introduction.
- The American Conference on Romanticism - The home page of the American Conference on Romanticism, an association of scholars.
- Romanticism On the Net - Peer-reviewed, online journal devoted to Romantic studies.
- The Rise of Romanticism - A history of the Romantic movement in France. Written by Alfred Bates, 1906.
- Romanticism and Shelley's - An essay by Patrick Mooney about Romanticism in Percy Shelley's poem "Ode to the West Wind." Includes a bibliography and links.
- North American Society for the Study of Romanticism - Information about upcoming and past conferences, publications, and resources for scholars interested in Romanticism from a variety of national and disciplinary perspectives.
- Romantics Unbound - Online research and learning resource for the study of Romanticism in literature, art, and music.
- Nature, Romanticism, and Harry Potter - Scholarly analysis of the Harry Potter books, stating that J.K. Rowling has put together, often beautifully, the opposites that are central to romanticism -- the strange and the ordinary.
- Romanticism in Dresden - a photographic exhibition of artwork at one of the greatest centers of the Romantic era
Wikipedia Articles
- Post-romanticism - Post-romanticism or Postromanticism is the postmodern expression of passion in art, and refers to the re-enactment of romantic themes and motifs. As an emerging trend, inspired by romanticism, and emphasizing the expression of passion and beauty in contemporary art, the cultural movement has been officially founded by artist Leonardo Pereznieto and writer Claudia Moscovici.
- Neo-romanticism - The term neo-romanticism is used to cover a variety of movements in music and painting. It has been used with reference to very late 19th century and early 20th century composers such as Gustav Mahler particularly by Dalhaus who uses it as synonymous with late Romanticism.
- Romanticism in science - Romanticism, also known as the “Age of Reflexion,” describes the intellectual movement from 1800-1840 that originated in Western Europe as a counter-movement to the Enlightenment of the late 18th century. Romanticism incorporated many fields of study, including art, music, poetry and drama, painting, prose, theology, and philosophy, yet it also had a major impact in sciences of the 19th century.
- Gothic Romanticism - Gothic Romanticism is a genre used in literature, film, the visual and performing arts, and the creative arts to describe a merger between Gothic and Romanticism.
- Ultra-romanticism - Ultra-romanticism (in Portuguese, Ultra-romantismo), was a Portuguese literary movement in the second half of the nineteenth century. It was typified by a tendency to exaggerate, at times to a ridiculous degree, the norms and ideals of Romanticism, namely the value of subjectivity, individualism, amorous idealism, nature and the medieval world.