2 - The initial situation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 March 2010
Summary
Jeder Künstler findet bestimmte ‘optische’ Möglichkeiten vor, an die er gebunden ist … Das Sehen an sich hat seine Geschichte, und die Aufdeckung dieser ‘optischen Schichten’ muss als die elementarste Aufgabe der Kunstgeschichte betrachtet werden.
Every artist finds himself faced with a number of ‘optic’ [visual] possibilities to which he is bound … Human perception has its history, and the disclosure of the historical ‘strata of perception’ no doubt is and has to be the art historian's primary task.
Heinrich Wölfflin, Kunstgeschichtliche Grundbegriffe, Munich, 1923, introduction.It would be out of place here to study all the radical changes in the approach to poetry and the new trends in intellectual development which – via various early romantic stages and tendencies – led to English romanticism, and hence also contributed to the rise of the English verse narrative. The literature on the subject would fill a library, and any abbreviated outline would carry with it the risk of simplification and distortion. It is, however, undoubtedly necessary to isolate from the myriad developmental trends those which were instrumental in the creation and rise to popularity of the genre under discussion. In the interests of brevity, the poetological change with which every connoisseur of eighteenth-century culture will be familiar will be given in summary form, indicating the implications for the romantic tale in verse.
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- Romantic Verse NarrativeThe History of a Genre, pp. 36 - 54Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1991