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Beyond the tragic vision : the quest for identity in the nineteenth century / by Morse Peckham.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1981Copyright date: ©1962Description: 380 pages ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0521281539
  • 9780521281539
Other title:
  • Quest for identity in the nineteenth century
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: No titleDDC classification:
  • 700.94 23
LOC classification:
  • NX542.A1
Contents:
Introduction: the problems of the historian -- Part One. The end of ancient thinking -- I. Orientation and culture -- II. Paradise and eternity -- III. Enlightenment -- Part Two. The alienated vision -- IV. The discovery of the self : Goethe-Kant -- V. Explorers: 1. : Byron-Stendhal -- VI. Explorers: 2. : Wordsworth-Goethe -- VII. Explorers: 3. : Friedrich-Constable -- VIII. Explorers: 4. : Schopenhauer-Beethoven -- Part Three. The heroic redeemer -- IX. The world without value : Beethoven-Kant-Hegel-Schopenhauer -- X. Transcendental authority : Carlyle-Balzac-Scott -- XI. The transcendental ear : Tennyson-Balzac-Berlioz-Schumann-Hoffmann -- XII. The transcendental eye : Baudelaire-Delacroix-Turner -- Part Four. Illusion and reality -- XIII. Transcendentalism in difficulty : Disraeli-Carlyle-Balzac -- XIV. The hero frustrated : Wagner's dreams ; Wagner's music -- XV. Self and object : Ruskin-Browning-Flaubert-Baudelaire-Hanslick-Bruckner -- XVI. The crisis of style : Schumann-Flaubert-Ruskin-Browning-Baudelaire-Tennyson-Zola-Darwin-Courbet-Manet -- Part Five. Style and value -- XVII. Identity and personality : Wagner-Swinburne-Wilde-Moreau -- XVIII. Identity and style : Brahms-Mallarme -- XIX. Style and freedom : Seurat-Cezanne-Gauguin-Debussy -- XX. Beyond tragedy : Nietzsche.
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Originally published: New York : Braziller, 1962.

Includes index.

Introduction: the problems of the historian -- Part One. The end of ancient thinking -- I. Orientation and culture -- II. Paradise and eternity -- III. Enlightenment -- Part Two. The alienated vision -- IV. The discovery of the self : Goethe-Kant -- V. Explorers: 1. : Byron-Stendhal -- VI. Explorers: 2. : Wordsworth-Goethe -- VII. Explorers: 3. : Friedrich-Constable -- VIII. Explorers: 4. : Schopenhauer-Beethoven -- Part Three. The heroic redeemer -- IX. The world without value : Beethoven-Kant-Hegel-Schopenhauer -- X. Transcendental authority : Carlyle-Balzac-Scott -- XI. The transcendental ear : Tennyson-Balzac-Berlioz-Schumann-Hoffmann -- XII. The transcendental eye : Baudelaire-Delacroix-Turner -- Part Four. Illusion and reality -- XIII. Transcendentalism in difficulty : Disraeli-Carlyle-Balzac -- XIV. The hero frustrated : Wagner's dreams ; Wagner's music -- XV. Self and object : Ruskin-Browning-Flaubert-Baudelaire-Hanslick-Bruckner -- XVI. The crisis of style : Schumann-Flaubert-Ruskin-Browning-Baudelaire-Tennyson-Zola-Darwin-Courbet-Manet -- Part Five. Style and value -- XVII. Identity and personality : Wagner-Swinburne-Wilde-Moreau -- XVIII. Identity and style : Brahms-Mallarme -- XIX. Style and freedom : Seurat-Cezanne-Gauguin-Debussy -- XX. Beyond tragedy : Nietzsche.

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