Part 1 Romantic illusions: the definitive text, Honore de Balzac et al; the intense inane - religious revivial in English, French and German romanticism, M.K. Abrams and William Empson; separating life and art - romantic documents, romantic punctuation, Gustave Flaubert and George Gordon Byron; the cookbook as romantic pastoral, Elizabeth David; secret codes, Caspar David Friedrich and Robert Schumann; mad poets, William Cowper et al. Part 2 Approaches to criticism: the ruins of Walter Benjamin - German and English baroque drama, romantic aesthetics and symbolist theory of language; concealed structures, Heinrich Schenker et al; ambiguous intentions, William Empson; the journalist critic as hero, George Bernard Shaw.
Charles Rosen was a concert pianist, Professor of Music and Social Thought at the University of Chicago, and the author of numerous books, including The Classical Style, The Romantic Generation (Harvard), and Freedom and the Arts (Harvard).
In the first of these essays, Charles Rosen is discussing whether
there can be any such thing as a definitive edition of a work of
modern literature...His essay takes in a new edition of La Comedie
Humaine, Jerome J. McGann's edition of Byron's poetical works and
two new books on Wordsworth, but has an even broader agenda than
that: the distinction between a definitive edition of an ancient
work--a matter of getting it right--and the multiple demands of
modern ones, starting as early as Montaigne's marginal entries in
his late-16th century essays, in which he observes that 'I am
myself the matter of my book'...The piece, like its fellows, will
delight the bookish, and the writing is always crisp, salted and
peppered with throwaways like 'authors are often no worse than any
one else at correcting their works.' That essay kicks off this
collection of 10 written over the past 20 or so years...Mr. Rosen's
attitude in the book is to see modern works of art, literature and
music--by modern meaning that they date from the late-18th century
or later--as moving rather than fixed targets...The essay on Walter
Benjamin is the book's longest one and a tour de force...The
discussion of the problematic nature of criticism and art history
in the modern world goes to the heart of Mr. Rosen's critical
outlook, first distinguishing between formalist and biographical or
historical forms of criticism, then recombining them in the
Benjaminesque notion of the work of art in history as a
beauty-filled ruin...This [is a] volume of delights.
*Washington Times*
Charles Rosen's Romantic Poets, Critics, and Other Madmen, a
collection of essays published between 1973 and 1993, makes one
feel better about the supposedly dire state of letters in the
United States. If Rosen could write, the New York Review of Books
publish, and thousands of readers follow these subtle, wide-ranging
occasional pieces, we are living not in a leaden but a golden age
of criticism--one that resembles the early 19th century which is
Rosen's primary focus in this book...Rosen's range of reading, in
German, French, and English; his artistic sensitivity to poetry,
fiction, painting, and music; and his undogmatic philosophical
shrewdness all make Romantic Poets, Critics, and Other Madmen a
touchstone of sorts. It is the work of a...worthy successor to the
many figures of genius he so sympathetically honors in this
book.
*Boston Book Review*
[An] engaging new book, Romantic Poets, Critics, and Other Madmen
[is] a collection of long review-essays reprinted from the New York
Review of Books and other journals...Rosen is an exact and delicate
critic, but never pedantic...[His essays are] pondered, subtle, and
humane, and--often--triumphantly right.
*Times Literary Supplement*
Great writers about music are exceedingly uncommon--and those who
have the deep insights of a world-class musician even more so.
Charles Rosen is a prime example of that rare breed, as he is not
only the author of such classic texts as The Classical Style and
The Romantic Generation but a pianist of considerable
accomplishment. From the '50s (when he was the first to record all
of the Debussy Etudes) to more recent years (which have seen discs
of Beethoven and Elliott Carter), Rosen has been an artist of
impact and integrity in the studio. And even with an exhausting
tour schedule--which still finds the 71-year-old New Yorker jetting
to Europe on a couple days' notice--Rosen finds time to publish
writings on music that set the bar imposingly high in terms of
lucidity of style, intellectual reach, and sheer musicality.
Rosen's newest book, Romantic Poets, Critics, and Other Madmen,
finds him investigating the art and ethos of the Romantic era,
including typically insightful material on Schumann and the music
criticism of George Bernard Shaw.
*Billboard*
This latest book, demonstrates Rosen's astonishing range of
cultural reference--but also the essential coherence of his
project, a coherence rooted in the aesthetic ideas of such German
Romantics as Novalis and the Schlegels...All these essays have
their roots in the often-pooh-poohed music and thinking of German
Romanticism, but in every one of them, Rosen's wonderful critical
intelligence is attuned to the dialogue between the work and its
modern interpreters...Rosen is a great persuader.
*The Observer [London]*
Criticism figures as a subject for Rosen partly because of
Romanticism's elevation of it as an art form--paradoxically, by
questioning the possibility of objectivity and by blurring the
boundaries. Reviewing a book of reviews is not, therefore, as
terminally postmodern as it might seem. Those critics whom Rosen
clearly admires, and on whom he writes so well--George Bernard
Shaw, Walter Benjamin and Empson--certainly lay claim to art in the
vitality of their writing and the complexity of their thought.
*Australian Review of Books*
In an era of specialists, Charles Rosen, who is equally conversant
with the music, literature, and art of the Romantic period, belongs
to a dying breed, or at least an increasingly endangered
species--the plain-speaking polymath. Unlike the general run of
academic sectarians, Rosen dips into his vast store of erudition
not primarily to display fancy plumage but always to genuinely
illuminate some murky cultural corner. Romantic Poets, Critics, and
Other Madmen serves up 10 of his essays, each in its way
splendid...[It is] entertaining, incisive, and irremediably
sane...If you wish to compliment the good taste and intelligence of
a friend with literary interests, you would not go wrong by giving
him or her a copy of this book.
*Jerusalem Post*
It is rare to find a critic who allies passion with precision,
enthusiasm with intelligence, who is a masterly close reader yet
can take a synoptic view that pulls together and unifies large
areas of experience. Charles Rosen is such a critic...[In Romantic
Poets, Critics, and Other Madmen] Rosen explores such themes as
madness in poets, the possibility of definitive texts, the
religious revival in early Romanticism, critics William Empson on
intention and Walter Benjamin on the autonomy of art, and the
practice of journalistic reviewing (in a splendid appreciation of
Shaw's music reviews)...Rosen's style is so elegant, his manner so
convivial, that any reader for whom a critical response to art is
nearly as vital as the experience of art itself should find these
essays engaging...When a critic can help us like this in our
relationships to our favorite works of art, simple gratitude is, if
not a sufficient, at least a necessary response.
*San Francisco Chronicle and Examiner*
A quarter-century's worth of trenchant thinking on Romantic culture
from celebrated pianist/musicologist/critic Rosen...These pieces
test contemporary scholarship's vision of great Romantic artists
from a variety of nations and fields...Rosen's superb essay on the
difficult but rewarding Benjamin remains quite sharp 20 years after
its original publication...Especially remarkable, perhaps, is the
tone of intellectual generosity that infuses Rosen's essays--as
much as his Romantic avatars, he has a sure touch in uniting
thought and expression to expand the worlds of his audience's
experience.
*Kirkus Reviews*
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