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Realpoetik considers the relationship between literary and political ideas in the thought of key European writers of the Romantic period examining how the main historical events of the period encouraged a re-imagining of the political shape of Europe which also changed the way we think about imagination itself.
List of contents
- Introduction: Realpoetik
- Part One: Resistance
- 1: Revolution and Restoration: Romantic Political Transformations
- 2: The Exiles of Madame de Staël
- 3: The Liberties of Benjamin Constant
- Part Two: Diplomacy
- 4: Chateaubriand's Christian Eloquence
- 5: Friedrich Schlegel's Concert of Europe
- Part Three: The Future
- 6: The Cosmopolitan Novalis
- 7: Resourcing Philosophy - Schelling's Figurative Materialism
- 8: Leopardi and The Proper Conversation of a Citizen
About the author
Paul Hamilton was a Fellow in English at Exeter College, Oxford, then Professor of English at the University of Southampton before taking up a Chair at Queen Mary, University of London. He has published widely on the Romantic period. His recent books include Metaromanticism (2003) and Coleridge and German Philosophy: The Poet in the Land of Logic (2007). He is currently editing The Oxford Handbook to European Romanticism.
Summary
Realpoetik compares the writings of key German, French, and Italian Romantics, with an eye to their differences from British Romanticism. The principle of selection is to choose writers whose use of fiction is realistic -- not realist, but fundamentally contributory to the purposes of non-fictional discourse. The political resonance audible when we put Real at the start of a compound noun is also true to the period looked at. At that time, positive political institutions were recovering from their upending in the French Revolution and their strategic re-shaping in the period of Restoration after Napoleon. In this volume, Paul Hamilton pinpoints a moment when the political imagination was actually creative of political reality. It is a long gloss on Friedrich Meinecke's description of the early Romantic period in Germany as 'that past era of teeming intellectual impulses with its excess of non-political political ideals', but Hamilton finds his insight into the contemporary inextricability of the ideal and the political true of France and Italy. Before the existence of a unified Germany or Italy, and in the new France after Napoleon, there was an opportunity and a necessity to imagine the kind of nation which would be desirable. Realpoetik examines the extent to which this illuminates the fiction and philosophy of Friedrich Schlegel, Madame de Staël, Giacomo Leopardi and others. It also reflects on current dissatisfaction with existing political arrangements and our contemporary desire to re-imagine a new, more representative politics.
Additional text
Paul Hamilton's latest book, Realpoetik, is certainly in the business of promulgating great literature as an indispensable store of value.