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Romanticism, Hellenism, and the philosophy of nature

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This volume investigates intersections between the philosophy of nature and Hellenism in British and German Romanticism, focusing primarily on five central literary/philosophical figures: Friedrich Schelling, Friedrich Hölderlin, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Percy Shelley, and Lord Byron.

Near the end of the 18th century, poets and thinkers reinvented Greece as a site of aesthetic and ontological wholeness, a move that corresponded with a refiguring of nature as a dynamically interconnected web in which each part is linked to the living whole.

This vision of a vibrant materiality that allows us to become 'one with all that lives' along with a Romantic version of Hellenism that wished to reassemble the broken fragments of an imaginary Greece as both site and symbol of this all-unity, functioned as a two-pronged response to subjective anxiety that arose in the wake of Kant and Fichte.

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£44.99
Product Details
Palgrave Macmillan
3319912925 / 9783319912929
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
20/06/2018
England
English
151 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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