BIBLIOGRAPHY
Arthur O. Lovejoy's interpretation emerges clearly from
the articles reprinted in Essays in the History of Ideas
(Baltimore, 1948), especially the one on “The Discrim-
ination of Romanticisms” of 1924. See also for general
interpretation J. Barzun, Romanticism and the Modern Ego
(Boston, 1943); W. J. Bate, From Classic to Romantic
(Cambridge, Mass., 1946); H. Fairchild, The Romantic Quest
(New York, 1931); W. T. Jones, The Romantic Syndrome (The
Hague, 1961); H. A. Korff, Humanismus und Romantik
(Leipzig, 1924); D. Mornet, Le romantisme en France au
XVIIIe siècle (Paris, 1912); J. H. Randall, The Career of
Philosophy, Vol. II (New York, 1965); H. G. Schenk, The
Mind of the European Romantics (London, 1966); F. Strich,
Deutsche Klassik und Romantik (Munich, 1928); R. Wellek,
“The Concept of Romanticism in Literary History,” Con-
cepts of Criticism (New Haven, 1963), pp. 128-98. For some
of the special aspects of romantic thought discussed in
the text, see also R. Aris, History of Political Thought in
Germany from 1789 to 1815 (London, 1936); J. W. Beach,
The Concept of Nature in Nineteenth-Century English Poetry
(New York, 1936); A. Béguin, L'âme romantique et le rêve
(Paris, 1939); M. Bowra, The Romantic Imagination
(Cambridge, Mass., 1949); C. Brinton, The Political Ideas
of the English Romanticists (London, 1926); M. Brion, Ro-
mantic Art (New York, 1960); K. Clark, The Gothic Revival
(London, 1928); R. T. Clark, Herder (Berkeley, 1955); A.
Cobban, Edmund Burke and the Revolt against the Eight-
eenth Century (London, 1929); H. Kohn, The Idea of
Nationalism (New York, 1944); R. Picard, Le romantisme
social (New York, 1944); A. M. Osborn, Rousseau and Burke
(London, 1940); J. L. Talmon, Romanticism and Revolt.
Europe 1815-1848 (London, 1967).
FRANKLIN L. BAUMER
[See also Classicism; Enlightenment; Genius;
Historicism;
Individualism; Infinity;
Irrationalism; Nationalism; Nature;
Organicism; Progress;
Romanticism in Literature;
Romanticism in Post-Kantian Philosophy; Utopia.]