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The present book takes as its subject the significance and output of both Chopin and Liszt, approaching them from historical, analytical and aesthetical points of view. Due to its plethora of concert halls, publishing houses and piano factories, Paris was one of the leading European capitals of nineteenth-century piano music, able to attract the greatest interpreters of the bravura tradition. The present book takes as its subject the significance and output of the two-composer-pianists mentioned in the title, approaching them from historical, analytical and aesthetical points of view. In so doing the book encompasses many aspects of the Parisian musical scene in which the two composers were involved or to which they were in some way connected.
Music --- muziekgeschiedenis --- Chopin, Frédéric --- Liszt, Franz --- France --- Romanticism in music --- Pianists --- Musical analysis --- Musique --- Romantisme dans la musique --- Pianistes --- Analyse musicale --- History and criticism --- Histoire et critique --- Chopin, Frédéric, --- Liszt, Franz, --- Chopin, Frederic, --- Chopin, Frédéric, --- Criticism and interpretation --- Paris (France) --- 19th century
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The critical endeavor to define the relationship between the verbal and the visual arts commenced in the eighteenth century with Lessing's Laokoön (1766), which sought to discriminate between 'natural' and 'arbitrary' signs. During the Romantic period many of Lessing's aesthetic and semiotic assumptions had been challenged. A greater role was granted to the capacity of imagination to mediate perceptions and ideas and bring word and image into a virtually spontaneous interchange. The attributes of the imagination as developed in English and German Ronaticism constitute the opening section of this volume, and the second section traces the consequences for the relationship between hte 'Sister Arts'. The third section examines two key concepts of Romantic aesthetics, the Picturesque and the Sublime, which stirred profound response among the poets as well as the painters. That poetry should thus find itself in a rivalry with the visual arts gave special impetus to a specific mode of mimesis during the Romantic period, a self-reflexive mode in which the very process of imitation becomes the subject-matter. The fourth section thus investigates ekphrasis, that subspecies of mimesis which involves the imitation of imitation as the poet set out to recreate in words the visual experience of art. The final section is devoted to the particular characteristics of English and German Romanticism as they defined the mode, manner, and style of the period...Back cover.
Old French literature --- German literature --- Literary semiotics --- Art --- English literature --- anno 1800-1899 --- Romanticism --- Romanticism in art --- Romantisme --- Romantisme dans l'art --- Philosophy --- Philosophie --- 82.091 --- -Romanticism --- -Romanticism in art --- -Idealism in art --- Naturalism in art --- Realism in art --- Pseudo-romanticism --- Romanticism in literature --- Aesthetics --- Fiction --- Literary movements --- Art, Occidental --- Art, Visual --- Art, Western (Western countries) --- Arts, Fine --- Arts, Visual --- Fine arts --- Iconography --- Occidental art --- Visual arts --- Western art (Western countries) --- Arts --- Vergelijkende literatuurstudie --- French literature --- Imitation in literature --- Literature, Medieval --- Translating and interpreting --- Philosophy. --- History and criticism --- Congresses. --- -Vergelijkende literatuurstudie --- 82.091 Vergelijkende literatuurstudie --- -82.091 Vergelijkende literatuurstudie --- Romanticism (Art) --- -Pseudo-romanticism --- Idealism in art --- Beautiful, The --- Beauty --- Art and philosophy --- Analysis, interpretation, appreciation --- Congresses
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