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Romanticism and Improvisation, 17501850 Angela Esterhammer (Universitat Zurich)

Romanticism and Improvisation, 17501850 By Angela Esterhammer (Universitat Zurich)

Romanticism and Improvisation, 17501850 by Angela Esterhammer (Universitat Zurich)


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Summary

Angela Esterhammer explores the previously unknown influence of male and female performers who improvised poetry in public during the period 17501850. She explores how improvisation contributes to Romantic ideas about genius, gender, and national culture, and traces the representation of poetic improvisers in nineteenth-century fiction.

Romanticism and Improvisation, 17501850 Summary

Romanticism and Improvisation, 17501850 by Angela Esterhammer (Universitat Zurich)

During the Romantic era, especially in Italy, performers known as improvvisatori and improvvisatrici extemporised poetry in public in response to subjects requested by their audiences. This type of performance fascinated Grand Tourists from northern Europe, who reported on poetic improvisers in hundreds of travel accounts, journals, letters, and periodical articles. By uncovering historical data and interpreting literary texts, Professor Esterhammer identifies patterns in the evolving responses of English, German, French, and Russian writers to the experience of improvisation. She explores how improvisation interacts with Romantic ideas about genius, spontaneity, orality, and emotional expressiveness, and relates to evolving concepts of gender and nation. Esterhammer goes on to interpret the influence that the figure of the poetic improviser had in nineteenth-century English and European fiction. In this context, the improvvisatore casts new light on conflicts between poetic genius and socio-economic constraints, and on the evolution of the Bildungsroman.

Romanticism and Improvisation, 17501850 Reviews

'Romanticism and Improvisation is on all counts an original and valuable study of improvisation as a trans-European phenomenon ' Monatshefte
'This book should be of general interest to scholars of the romantic period, but of especial import to those concerned with the emergence of the idea of romantic poetic genius, the development of national concepts of literature, the impact of mass print culture, and romantic audiences.' BARS Bulletin & Review

About Angela Esterhammer (Universitat Zurich)

Angela Esterhammer is Professor in the Department of English, University of Zurich and Distinguished University Professor at the University of Western Ontario. Previous books include Romantic Poetry. The Comparative History of Literatures in European Languages (edited, 2002) and The Romantic Performative: Language and Action in British and German Romanticism (2000).

Table of Contents

1. This lightning of the mind: improvisation and performance in the Romantic era; 2. Defining improvisation and improvising national identity: from grand tourists to Della Cruscans; 3. Importing improvisation: oral performance and print culture in the age of Goethe; 4. Was Homer an improvvisatore?: histories of improvisation in antiquarian scholarship and popular culture; 5. The spectacle of the Romantic improviser: Corilla, Corinne, and British women poets of the 1820s; 6. Stars of the post-Napoleonic stage: Rosa Taddei, Tommaso Sgricci, and their audiences; 7. Byron, Hoffmann, and the improvisational worlds of carnival and commedia; 8. Sociability, social practice, and the Bildungsroman of the 1830s; 9. The improviser's disorder: adventurers and misfits in nineteenth-century fiction; 10. Virtuosi, vaudevillians, mystics, madmen, and rhetoricians: improvisational contexts of the nineteenth century; Afterword.

Additional information

NPB9780521897099
9780521897099
0521897092
Romanticism and Improvisation, 17501850 by Angela Esterhammer (Universitat Zurich)
New
Hardback
Cambridge University Press
2008-08-07
290
N/A
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