Romanticism as a Transnational Movement
Romanticism is a paradigmatic test case for comparative periodization. Did a single Romantic movement sweep European literatures, or are there only many discrete 'romanticisms' that resist unification under one name?
Definition
The comparative study of Romanticism as a transnational literary movement, addressing whether the diverse national Romanticisms share a common core of aesthetic and intellectual commitments.
Scope
Examines Romanticism as a comparative object: Lovejoy's argument that 'Romanticism' fractures into incompatible meanings, Wellek's counter-case for a unifying set of Romantic norms across Europe, and Abrams's account of the expressive theory of poetry that distinguishes Romantic aesthetics. Concerns the diffusion, common features, and national variants of the movement across literatures.
Core questions
- Is there one Romanticism or many irreducibly distinct romanticisms?
- What aesthetic and philosophical commitments, if any, unify Romantic literature across nations?
- How did Romantic ideas and forms travel between European literatures?
- How do national Romanticisms differ in timing, emphasis, and politics?
Key theories
- Discrimination of romanticisms
- Lovejoy argued that 'Romanticism' had splintered into so many incompatible meanings that the singular term was useless and should be replaced by a plural study of distinct romanticisms.
- Unity of Romanticism
- Wellek replied that the European Romanticisms shared a coherent set of norms — an organic view of nature, the imagination as creative power, and symbol and myth as means of knowledge — justifying a unified concept.
- The mirror and the lamp
- Abrams characterized the Romantic shift from mimetic theories of art as a mirror to expressive theories of art as a lamp projecting the poet's inner life, providing a defining aesthetic criterion.
History
Lovejoy's 1924 PMLA essay launched the modern debate by declaring the term hopelessly equivocal. Wellek's mid-century essays, collected in Concepts of Criticism (1963), defended a unified European Romanticism, while Abrams's 1953 The Mirror and the Lamp reconstructed the expressive aesthetics underlying Romantic poetics. Their exchange remains the touchstone for comparative work on the movement.
Debates
- One Romanticism or many
- Whether the national variants of Romanticism share enough to warrant a single unifying concept (Wellek) or are too divergent to be grouped under one term (Lovejoy).
Key figures
- Arthur O. Lovejoy
- René Wellek
- M. H. Abrams
Related topics
Seminal works
- lovejoy1924
- wellekconcepts1963
- abrams1953
Frequently asked questions
- Why is Romanticism so hard to define?
- It names a cluster of overlapping but not identical commitments — to imagination, nature, emotion, the symbol, and national or revolutionary feeling — that appear differently across literatures. Lovejoy stressed this disunity; Wellek argued a common core nonetheless holds the concept together.