Showing 41 - 60 results of 71 for search '"romanticist"', query time: 0.14s Refine Results
  1. 41

    Female types in V.P. Meshchersky's publicistic and fictional works by Yu.B. Avdonina, G.I. Shcherbakova

    Published 2017-06-01
    “…Meshchersky (1839–1914), the publisher and editor of the “Grazhdanin” journal and the same-named newspaper, have been analyzed. The influence of romanticist and realistic principles, aesthetic and moral principles has been identified. …”
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    Article
  2. 42

    The Anglo-American Elements in Jose Rizal’s Poem Education Gives Luster to the Motherland by Glenn G. Pajares, Percia A. Leyte, Richard B. Fernandez

    Published 2014-06-01
    “…The study found out through descriptive textual analysis that Rizal’s poem is romanticist in character. Since romanticism originated in England, his poem contains English ideas and he is influenced by English thought. …”
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    Article
  3. 43

    William Blake and F.M. Dostoevsky: a History of Comparison by Vera V. Serdechnaia

    Published 2020-09-01
    “…The director interprets the desire of Thel and Stavrogin to get out of innocence into experience, and the dance of Stavrogin with Thel-Matryosha is not an act of violence, but an act of young passion. Thus, the English romanticist Blake and the Russian realist Dostoevsky have a serious and interesting history of comparison.…”
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    Article
  4. 44

    Pioneering political ecology: perceptions of nature, Indigenous practices and power relations during Alexander von Humboldt's travels in Latin America by Joachim Eibach, Tobias Haller

    Published 2021-10-01
    “…Furthermore, Wulf's biography titled The Invention of Nature tries to show that Humboldt wanted to bridge the gap between the emerging natural sciences and Romanticist aesthetics. However, based on his writings, we argue that his perception of nature has been misread and that his position was shaped by a view akin to open and critical political ecology, as opposed to pure nature constructivism without including local humans. …”
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    Article
  5. 45

    Identity: A Heritage from the Past or a Choice for the Future? by N. Taghavian

    Published 2017-06-01
    “…But Marx, Nietzsche, Freud and Romanticist Movement radically criticized the concept of ‘subject’ and thus brought about crisis for modern society. …”
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    Article
  6. 46

    Examples and Proofs from History (Historical Proses by M. Kukučín, L. N. Jégé and M. Rázus) by René Bílik

    Published 2007-02-01
    “…The key result of the study is a confirmation of pragmatic orientation of the proses of Kukučín and Rázus and explicitly formulated polemic instruction of Jégé´s historical proses opposite to domestic Romanticist tradition. This polemic is evident not only in the level of topics but also in the way how Jégé works with conventional generic schemes.…”
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    Article
  7. 47

    The Real and the Symbolic in Tutecotzimí: Darío’s Well-Wrought Urn by Rick McCallister

    Published 2014-09-01
    “…It also fulfills the romanticist notion that all great nations are conceived in epic.…”
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    Article
  8. 48

    Forward to the past : modernizing linguistic typology by returning to its roots by LaPolla, Randy J.

    Published 2021
    “…The comparative study of unrelated languages did not begin with Joseph Greenberg in the 1960’s, but began more than 150 years earlier in Europe with scholars of the Romanticist movement. The most prominent of these scholars was the German scholar Wilhelm von Humboldt, whose goal in studying 75 different languages was to understand the construal of the world (Weltansicht) of the speakers of the different languages, what we now think of as the cognitive categories manifested by the languages of the speakers, as each language manifests a unique set of cognitive categories. …”
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    Journal Article
  9. 49

    The good infinite in early German romanticism by Burda, J

    Published 2017
    “…</p> <p>Together these chapters support my claim that interpreting infinity to entail unreachability amounts to a limited and ultimately unfaithful reading of the early German romanticist project. With 'good infinity' I offer a way out of those limitations. …”
    Thesis
  10. 50

    Ironic remarks in Divan of Naser Khosrow and works of schlegel brothers by Ehsan Koosha, Aliasghar Halabi, Ahmad Hasani ranjbar hormozabadi

    Published 2020-08-01
    “…Romanticism was born in eighteenth century and the romanticists said that Determinism could not explain and interpret the World. …”
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    Article
  11. 51

    A STYLISTIC STUDY OF SYNONYMY IN W. WORDSWORTH’S POETRY by Fareed -Hindawi, Musaab Abdulzahra Alkhazaali

    Published 2014-04-01
    “…Romanticists believe in naturalism and realism in the place of morality. …”
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    Article
  12. 52

    Vila ljubavnica u književnosti srpskog romantizma<br>The Lover Fairy in Romantic Serbian Literature</br> by Dejan Ajdačić

    Published 2015-05-01
    “…The paper examines lover fairies in literature of Serbian romanticists. Stressed are especially the connections between folklor-mythological creatures and literary alterations and metamorphoses.…”
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    Article
  13. 53

    Romantizmas ir krikščioniškoji Vakarų kultūros tradicija | Romanticism and the Christian Tradition of the Western Culture by Dalia Čiočytė

    Published 2005-01-01
    “…In the works of English, German, Polish, Russian Romanticists a double movement can be observed away from the traditional Christian philosophy and back towards it. …”
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    Article
  14. 54

    At the edge of romanticism or beyond it? E. T. A. Hoffmann and the nature of art in Kant's aesthetics by Kalinnikov L. A.

    Published 2011-07-01
    “…Hoffmann, who opposed the philosophical monism of romanticists. Under the influence of Kant's aesthetics and philosophy of art, E. …”
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    Article
  15. 55

    How Style Became Famous and Irrelevant at the Same Time by Nataša Lah

    Published 2015-12-01
    “…Therefore, parallel to the birth of theoretical notion of “the styles of the eras”, romanticists not only paved the way for Modernism, but also thwarted the application of a newly risen stylistic methodology concerned with the cultural codification of style. …”
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  16. 56

    Empathy and the art of Leonardo da Vinci by Samira Schultz Mansur, Javier DeFelipe, Javier DeFelipe

    Published 2024-03-01
    “…These are facts that German Romanticists tried to explain as the relationship between empathy and a work of art. …”
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    Article
  17. 57

    Il re si diverte e muore: un itinerario dal grottesco all’assurdo by Paulo Filipe Monteiro

    Published 2013-10-01
    “…Finally, we follow the creation of new kings, from Jarry’s Ubu to Ionesco’s Le roi se meurt: the absurd dimension which the romanticists had felt but had refused to surrender to is in the absurd and in most post-dramatic theatre a double impossibility of giving sense to the world and language to tragedy.…”
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    Article
  18. 58

    Transcendental philosophy within perspectives of the romantic fragmentariness by Vlaški Stanko

    Published 2015-01-01
    “…The author tries to evaluate the importance of Fichte’s version of critical idealism for romantics, considering the crucial romanticists’ intention of historization of transcendental idealism with the help of the fragment. …”
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    Article
  19. 59

    Book Review: Ecocriticism on the Edge: The Anthropocene as a Threshold Concept by Timothy Clark by Deepak Pandiaraj

    Published 2019-03-01
    “…He is dissatisfied equally with the global capitalist thinking that least bothers about the earth, with the anthropocentric tendencies inherent in postcolonial thinking, with the romanticists who want to preserve the forest and with the progressives interested in the rights of oppressed groups insofar as the solution each camp suggests does not first understand the intellectual challenges set forth by the recognition of the anthropocene epoch.…”
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    Article
  20. 60

    De dominante staat. De Gentse opstand (1449-1453) in de negentiende en twintigste-eeuwse historiografie by J. Haemers

    Published 2004-01-01
    “…The Gent revolt (1449-1453) in nineteenth and twentieth century historiography In this survey of the historiography of the Gent revolt (1449-1453), the author argues that the position adopted by historians in the nineteenth and twentieth century was largely determined by their own views about government. The romanticists, in their historical accounts, reflected their own time, namely the legitimate resistance of Dutch freedom-fighters against a Francophone oppressor. …”
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