Romantic movement - translation to spanish
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Romantic movement - translation to spanish

ARTISTIC, LITERARY, MUSICAL, AND INTELLECTUAL MOVEMENT
Romantic literature; Romantic movement; Romantic period; Romanticists; Romantism; Romantic era; Romantic Era; American romanticism; American Romantism; Romantic school; Romantics; Romantic art; Romanticism (art); Romanticism (literature); Romanticist; The Romantic Period; Age of Romanticism; Romantist; Romanticism in literature; Romantic-period; Romantic Movement; Romantic age; Folkloric idealism; Romantic Age; Romantic Period; Romantic visual arts; Romantic painting; Romantic style; The Romantic age; Romantic painter; Everyday life in early 19th-century Spain; How people lived in spain during the romanticism; How people lived in Spain during the Romanticism; Preromanticism; Pre-romanticism; Romantic originality; Romantic architecture
  • ''Adam Mickiewicz on the Ayu-Dag'']], by [[Walenty Wańkowicz]], 1828
  • Portuguese poet, novelist, politician and playwright [[Almeida Garrett]] (1799–1854)
  • [[Anne-Louis Girodet de Roussy-Trioson]], ''[[Ossian]] receiving the Ghosts of the French Heroes'' (1800–02), Musée national de Malmaison et Bois-Préau, [[Château de Malmaison]]
  • [[Ludwig van Beethoven]], painted by [[Joseph Karl Stieler]], 1820
  • 1813}}. The [[Byronic hero]] first reached the wider public in Byron's semi-autobiographical epic narrative poem ''[[Childe Harold's Pilgrimage]]'' (1812–1818).
  • [[Caspar David Friedrich]], ''[[Wanderer above the Sea of Fog]]'', 1818
  • ''Cavalier gaulois'' by [[Antoine-Augustin Préault]], [[Pont d'Iéna]], Paris
  • [[Henry Wallis]], ''[[The Death of Chatterton]]'' 1856, by suicide at 17 in 1770
  • The Course of Empire]]: The Savage State'' (1 of 5), 1836
  • [[Dennis Malone Carter]], ''Decatur Boarding the Tripolitan Gunboat'', 1878. Romanticist vision of the Battle of Tripoli, during the [[First Barbary War]]. It represents the moment when the American war hero [[Stephen Decatur]] was fighting hand-to-hand against the Muslim pirate captain.
  • Orientalist]] subject from a play by [[Lord Byron]]
  • Title page of Volume III of ''[[Des Knaben Wunderhorn]]'', 1808
  • [[Frédéric Chopin]] in 1838 by [[Eugène Delacroix]]
  • [[Hans Gude]], ''Fra Hardanger'', 1847. Example of [[Norwegian romantic nationalism]].
  • [[Akseli Gallen-Kallela]], ''The Forging of the Sampo'', 1893. An artist from Finland deriving inspiration from the Finnish "national epic", the ''[[Kalevala]]''
  • A print exemplifying the contrast between neoclassical vs. romantic styles of landscape and architecture (or the "Grecian" and the "Gothic" as they are termed here), 1816
  • Palazzo Reale]], [[Turin]]
  • Italian poet [[Isabella di Morra]], sometimes cited as a precursor of Romantic poets<ref>Gaetana Marrone, Paolo Puppa, ''Encyclopedia of Italian Literary Studies: A–J'', [[Taylor & Francis]], 2007, p. 1242</ref>
  • J. J. Grandville]]
  • Tennyson]]; like many [[Victorian painting]]s, romantic but not Romantic.
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  • "Three National Bards" of Polish literature]]—a major figure in the Polish Romantic period, and the father of modern Polish drama.
  • [[Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres]], ''Portrait of [[Niccolò Paganini]]'', 1819
  • Kingdom of Poland]], against the [[Russian Empire]]
  • [[Robert Burns]] in [[Alexander Nasmyth]]'s portrait of 1787
  • [[Philipp Otto Runge]], ''The Morning'', 1808
  • Raeburn]]'s portrait of [[Walter Scott]] in 1822
  • [[Egide Charles Gustave Wappers]], ''Episode of the Belgian Revolution of 1830'', 1834, Musée d'Art Ancien, Brussels. A romantic vision by a Belgian painter.
  • Songs of Innocence and Experience]]'', 1794
  • [[William Wordsworth]] ''(pictured)'' and [[Samuel Taylor Coleridge]] helped to launch the Romantic Age in English literature in 1798 with their joint publication ''[[Lyrical Ballads]]''

Romantic movement         
movimiento romántico
romanticism         
(n.) = romanticismo
Ex: To find what documents the library has on romanticism in literature the enquirer will have to search through all entries at 809.91.
romanticist         
(n.) = romanticista
Ex: This book is an uncompromising exposure of the ideological mist that envelops romantics and romanticists.

Definition

romanticism
1.
Romanticism is attitudes, ideals and feelings which are romantic rather than realistic.
Her determined romanticism was worrying me...
? realism
N-UNCOUNT
2.
Romanticism is the artistic movement of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries which was concerned with the expression of the individual's feelings and emotions.
N-UNCOUNT

Wikipedia

Romanticism

Romanticism (also known as the Romantic movement or Romantic era) was an artistic, literary, musical, and intellectual movement that originated in Europe towards the end of the 18th century; in most areas it was at its peak in the approximate period from 1800 to 1850. Romanticism was characterized by its emphasis on emotion and individualism, clandestine literature, paganism, idealization of nature, suspicion of science and industrialization, as well as glorification of the past with a strong preference for the medieval rather than the classical. It was partly a reaction to the Industrial Revolution, the social and political norms of the Age of Enlightenment, but also the scientific rationalization of nature. It was embodied most strongly in the visual arts, music and literature; it had a major impact on historiography, education, chess, social sciences and the natural sciences. It had a significant and complex effect on politics, with romantic thinkers influencing conservatism, liberalism, radicalism and nationalism.

The movement emphasized intense emotion as an authentic source of aesthetic experience, placing new emphasis on such emotions as fear, horror, terror and awe — especially that experienced in confronting the new aesthetic categories of the sublime and beauty of nature. It elevated folk art and ancient custom to something noble, but also spontaneity as a desirable characteristic (as in the musical impromptu). In contrast to the rationalism and classicism of the Enlightenment, Romanticism revived medievalism and elements of art and narrative perceived as authentically medieval in an attempt to escape population growth, early urban sprawl, and industrialism.

Although the movement was rooted in the German Sturm und Drang movement, which preferred intuition and emotion to the rationalism of the Enlightenment, the events and ideologies of the French Revolution were also proximate factors since many of the early Romantics were cultural revolutionaries and sympathetic to the revolution. Romanticism assigned a high value to the achievements of "heroic" individualists and artists, whose examples, it maintained, would raise the quality of society. It also promoted the individual imagination as a critical authority allowed of freedom from classical notions of form in art. There was a strong recourse to historical and natural inevitability, a Zeitgeist, in the representation of its ideas. In the second half of the 19th century, Realism was offered as a polar opposite to Romanticism. The decline of Romanticism during this time was associated with multiple processes, including social and political changes.

Examples of use of Romantic movement
1. So remember that other great tenet of the Romantic movement: the willing suspension of disbelief.
2. "We accepted that Dove Cottage is a special place for the Romantic Movement," he added.
3. Before the Romantic movement, people thought places like the Lake District or the Scottish Highlands ugly, disordered and frightening.
4. "It became a very, very romantic movement," said Fawaz Gerges, an expert on Islamic militancy at Sarah Lawrence College.
5. Art, artifice, artisan . . . it was the Romantic Movement that rescued art from the mundane, because for millennia we humans treated artists as commonplace or even deceiving.