BIBLIOGRAPHY
In addition to works by Cassirer, Lovejoy, and others cited
above, the following books can be consulted. Jacques
Barzun, Classic, Romantic and Modern (New York, 1961),
a revised and enlarged version of the author's Romanticism
and the Modern Ego (Boston, 1943), a comprehensive study
of romanticist achievement and critical commentary. Rudolf
Haym, Die romantische Schule (Berlin, 1870; rev. ed.
Tübingen, 1960), remains valuable as a presentation of
nineteenth-century views and bibliography. Nicolai Hart-
mann, Die Philosophie des deutschen Idealismus, 2nd ed.
(Berlin, 1960). Part I is devoted to Fichte, Schelling, and
Die Romantik. See also Ricarda Huch, Die Romantik
(Leipzig, 1908); H. A. Korff,
Humanismus und Romantik
(Leipzig, 1924); H. G. Schenk,
The Mind of the European
Romanticists (London, 1966), with an introduction by Isaiah
Berlin; Walter Silz,
Early German Romanticism, Its Foun-
ders and Heinrich von Kleist (Cambridge, Mass., 1929);
L. A. Willoughby,
The Romantic Movement in Germany,
2nd ed. (New York, 1966).
For English translations of post-Kantian romanticists, see:
J. G. Fichte, The Vocation of Man, ed. Roderick M.
Chisholm (New York, 1956); F. Schleiermacher, Soliloquies,
ed. Horace Leland Friess (Chicago, 1926); F. Schelling, The
Ages of the World, ed. Frederick de Wolfe Bolman, Jr. (New
York, 1942), and idem, Of Human Freedom, ed. James
Gutman (Chicago, 1936).
JAMES GUTMANN
[See also Enlightenment; Existentialism;
Hegelian...;
Nationalism; Nature; Platonism; Pragmatism;
Romanticism;
Skepticism.]