Romanticism and contemporary criticism : the Gauss Seminar and other papers

Bibliographic Information

Romanticism and contemporary criticism : the Gauss Seminar and other papers

Paul de Man ; edited by E.S. Burt, Kevin Newmark, Andrzej Warminski

Johns Hopkins University Press, c1993

  • : pbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 195-212)

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

ISBN 9780801844607

Description

This volume assembles for the first time material written by Paul de Man between 1954 and 1981, including his previously unpublished Gauss Seminar lectures delivered at Princeton in 1967, three papers on romantic and postromantic issues, a commissioned essay on Roland Barthes, and two substantial responses to papers by Frank Kermode and Murray Krieger. 'Romanticism and Contemporary Criticism' represents de Man's reflections on some of the major texts of English, German, and French Romanticism and their reception in twentieth-century literary criticism and theory. The Gauss Seminar lectures in particular convey de Man's consideration of Romanticism as a distinct form of historical consciousness, and illuminate his conviction that this romantic historical consciousness had been a powerful influence on our own development of a historical identity. De Man had planned to use the Gauss lectures as a basis for a major historical study of Romanticism, but the volume was never completed and de Man eventually abandoned the project. Drawn from four decades of de Man's career, these essays reflect the transition in the critic's work from the thematics and vocabulary of "consciousness" and "temporality" characteristic of his work in the 1960s, to the language-oriented concerns and terminology of his later writings. "'Romanticism and Contemporary Criticism' is most absorbing when it reveals the concentric tiers that compose the self-enclosed question with which we are dealing, the question of the temporality of de Man's notion of temporality."--'Studies in Romanticism' "Presents the reader with de Man's main preoccupations and positions over a period of thirty years."--'Nineteenth-Century French Studies'
Volume

: pbk ISBN 9780801844614

Description

This volume assembles for the first time material written by Paul de Man between 1954 and 1981, including his previously unpublished Gauss Seminar lectures delivered at Princeton in 1967, three papers on romantic and postromantic issues, a commissioned essay on Roland Barthes, and two substantial responses to papers by Frank Kermode and Murray Krieger. 'Romanticism and Contemporary Criticism' represents de Man's reflections on some of the major texts of English, German, and French Romanticism and their reception in twentieth-century literary criticism and theory. The Gauss Seminar lectures in particular convey de Man's consideration of Romanticism as a distinct form of historical consciousness, and illuminate his conviction that this romantic historical consciousness had been a powerful influence on our own development of a historical identity. De Man had planned to use the Gauss lectures as a basis for a major historical study of Romanticism, but the volume was never completed and de Man eventually abandoned the project. Drawn from four decades of de Man's career, these essays reflect the transition in the critic's work from the thematics and vocabulary of "consciousness" and "temporality" characteristic of his work in the 1960s, to the language-oriented concerns and terminology of his later writings.

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Details

  • NCID
    BA20060177
  • ISBN
    • 0801844606
    • 0801844614
  • LCCN
    92023340
  • Country Code
    us
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Baltimore
  • Pages/Volumes
    ix, 212 p.
  • Size
    23 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
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