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Topic: Friedrich Schlegel


  
 Karl Wilhelm Friedrich von Schlegel - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Friedrich Schlegel's wife, Dorothea, was the author of an unfinished romance, Florentin (180,), a Sammlung romantischer Dichtungen des Mittelalters (2 vols., 1804), a version of Lother und Maller (1805), and a translation of Madame de Staël 's Corinne (1807-1808)--all of which were issued under her husband's name.
A permanent place in the history of German literature belongs to Friedrich Schlegel and his brother August Wilhelm as the critical leaders of the Romantic school, which derived from them most of its governing ideas as to the characteristics of the middle ages, and as to the methods of literary expression.
He was the real founder of the Romantic school; to him more than to any other member of the school we owe the revolutionizing and germinating ideas which influenced so profoundly the development of German literature at the beginning of the 19th century.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Wilhelm_Friedrich_von_Schlegel

  
 Search Results for "Schlegel"
Friedrich Schlegel first used the term romantic to designate a school of literature...
...he came into contact with the German Romantic movement and became a friend of Friedrich Schlegel.
...sonnet came into prominence in Germany during the romantic period in the work of Goethe, Schlegel, Heyse, and others.
http://www.bartleby.com/cgi-bin/texis/webinator/sitesearch?FILTER=col65&query=Schlegel

  
 Carter, ' 'Insurgent Government': Romantic Irony and the Theory of the State' - Irony and Clerisy - Romantic Circles ...
Schlegel published a spirited defense of Forster's work in the form of a Charakteristiken, or pen portrait (Eichner 29), but in so doing was, as Frederick Beiser writes, "a voice crying in the wilderness" (154).
In his reading of Schlegel's aesthetic theories Beiser is primarily concerned with demonstrating how they partake in the Schillerian project of "the aesthetic education"—in the progressive reformist tradition of the German enlightenment (247), and how his theory of romantic poetry constitutes "the aesthetics of republicanism" (260).
In Athenaeum 51 Schlegel works with Schiller's concept of naive art as an art that "is nature," that provides "the completest possible imitation of actuality " (Schiller 274, 275).
http://www.rc.umd.edu/praxis/irony/carter/schlegel.html

  
 [No title]
Friedrich Schlegel's philosophy of life was based upon the theory of supremacy of the artist, the potency of poetry, with its incidental corollaries of disregard for the Kantian ideal of Duty, and aversion to all Puritanism and Protestantism.
He was given a most thorough education, and, while completing his university career, became acquainted with Friedrich Schlegel, and remained his most intimate friend.
In the first volume of the _Athenaeum_, Shakespeare's universality had already been regarded as "the central point of romantic art." As Romanticist, it was Schlegel's office to portray the independent development of the modern English stage, and to defend Shakespeare against the familiar accusations of barbaric crudity and formlessness.
http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/2/0/6/12060/12060.txt

  
 Aquarium - Novalis im Netz: The Life of Novalis (2. Studies)
The brothers Schlegel were the first to acknowledge Goethe in their critical writings, but then they developed a romantic counter-point to him.
Schlegel became the founder of the Romantic movement in literature through his writings, mostly delivered in the form pointed aphorisms or fragments.
Schlegel gave private lectures on European literature to the brothers Boisserée (collectors of German medival art, friends of Goethe; they inspired the completion of the cathedral at Köln).
http://novalis.autorenverzeichnis.de/the_life_of_novalis/life_2_studies.html

  
 Friedrich Daniel Ernst Schleiermacher
This is one of the central themes of his Confidential Letters Concerning Friedrich Schlegel's Lucinde (1800).
In Berlin he met Friedrich and August Wilhelm Schlegel and other romantics, became deeply engaged in the romantic movement, and collaborated with the Schlegel brothers on the short-lived but important literary journal Athenaeum (1798-1800).
Schleiermacher was generally quite self-deprecating about his sensitivity to and knowledge of art (e.g.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/schleiermacher

  
 Book Review
This is a welcome shift, for Romanticism has generally been regarded as a purely literary movement, and this has led to the neglect of the philosophical contributions made by its members, which include thinkers such as Friedrich Schlegel, Friedrich von Hardenberg (Novalis), and Friedrich Hölderlin.
This call for the emancipation of both genders is a central theme of his novel.
Even a cursory look at the work of Novalis and Schlegel, however, reveals that the very figures who coined the term ‘romantic’ were not enemies of science.
http://www.humboldt.edu/~essays/millanrev1.html

  
 Friedrich von Schlegel
Schlegel deeply influenced the early German Romantic Movement - he is generally held to be the person who first established the term romantisch in the literary context.
As a literary critic Schlegel sought not to reveal objective truths, but to write criticism so that the usual discursive prose becomes a work of art itself.
He settled in Paris for a few years with Dorothea Veit, whom he had met in Berlin years before, and who was the daughter of the literary critic Moses Mendelssohn (1729-1786).
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/schlegel.htm

  
 Schlegel, Friedrich von (1772–1829) : Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Online
However, as early as 1797, largely under the influence of Friedrich Schiller, Schlegel began to have doubts about his neoclassicism.
It was also in the late 1790s that Schlegel made his most important contributions to the ethics and politics of Romanticism.
In attempting to express such a grand ideal, the Romantic artist should attempt to cultivate irony, a critical detachment towards his own productions, for any of them are limited and therefore inadequate to express his unlimited ideal.
http://www.rep.routledge.com/article/DC070

  
 Literary Encyclopedia: German Romanticism
A second group of friends, including August Wilhelm Schlegel (1767-1845) and Friedrich von Hardenberg (pen name Novalis, 1772-1801), gathered around Friedrich Schlegel (1772-1829) in Jena, then Berlin, then Jena again, with their intellectual friendship culminating in the so-called Jenenser Romantische Schule (Jena Romantic school) between 1799 and 1801.
Blessed with exceptional intellectual and artistic riches that had come into their own during Romanticism, Germany was able to repay manifold the stimuli it had received at the dawn of the Romantic Age from France and England.
Along with groups at Heidelberg, Berlin, Dresden (Adam Müller, 1779-1829 and Heinrich von Kleist, 1777-1811), and Vienna (where the Schlegel brothers lectured at the University), there was the Schwäbischer Dichterkreis (Swabian group of poets, from 1810) consisting of Ludwig Uhland (1787-1862), Justinus Kerner (1786-1862), and Gustav Schwab (1792-1850), mostly publishing lyrical poetry.
http://www.litencyc.com/php/stopics.php?rec=true&UID=1353

  
 Articles - August Wilhelm von Schlegel
As an original poet Schlegel is unimportant, but as a poetical translator he has rarely been excelled, and in criticism he put into practice the Romantic principle that a critic& first duty is not to judge from the standpoint of superiority, but to understand and to characterize a work of art.
A selection of the writings of both AW and Friedrich Schlegel, edited by O.
Schiller 's periodicals the Horen and the Musenalmanach ; and with his brother Friedrich he conducted the Athenaeum, the organ of the Romantic school.
http://www.x-moto.net/articles/August_Wilhelm_von_Schlegel

  
 Romanticism htm romanticism romantic poetry friedrich william revolution century enlightenment music - KnoliX.com
The Schlegel brothers were also responsible for making Shakespeare into an internationally famous writer, translating his work into German, and promoting his plays as the epitome of the Romantic sensibility.
But it was not until the German poets, critics and brothers August Wilhelm and Friedrich Schlegel used the term that it became a label for a wider cultural movement.
In a general sense, "Romanticism" was the group of related artistic, political, philosophical and social trends arising out of the late 18th and early 19th centuries in Europe.
http://www.knolix.com/a/Romanticism

  
 German Theory and Criticism: 2. Romanticism
This is the principal reason why hermeneutics, the understanding and interpretation of literature and art, became an essential part of Schlegel's literary criticism and why in Schlegel's view literary criticism should also play a role in this educational process.
His opposition of old to new, as Hans Robert Jauss suggests, is thus more than a model of epochal change; it also represents a step toward a more thoroughly Romantic theory of art as a dissociative mode of aesthetic communication.
Because of its flexibility as a medium for both literary and aesthetic criticism, as well as poetic and philosophical expression, this new mode of poetic prose became the dominant mode of discourse, requiring not only greater participation by the reader in the critical and hermeneutic process but also a greater degree of aesthetic sensibility.
http://www.press.jhu.edu/books/hopkins_guide_to_literary_theory/german_theory_and_criticism-_2._romanticism.html

  
 hegel.net - Contemporaries of Hegel
Schlegel was general known with his brother for his involvement the early German Romantic movement.
Since that time, Hölderlin has become even more famous as a poet and is connected to the philosophical world through Martin Heidegger’s elucidations of Hölderlin.
The law specialist of the Hegel School, Gans, wrote a deadly critique of Savingy's major work in the "Jahrbücher für wissenschaftliche Kritik".
http://hegel.net/en/persons.htm

  
 August Wilhelm von Schlegel
Schlegel was one of the first critics to see the importance of social evolution in the history of art, and he was a champion of the
Schlegel, (Karl Wilhelm) Friedrich von (1772-1829) (The Hutchinson Dictionary of the Arts)
Schlegel, August Wilhelm von (1767-1845) (The Hutchinson Dictionary of the Arts)
http://www.infoplease.com/cgi-bin/id/CE046440.html

  
 chapter 1, page 2
Ludwig's interest in religious art dates to his 1818 visit to Rome where he was introduced to a group of German artists known as the Nazarenes.
The original founders of the group - Franz Pforr from Hessen and Friedrich Overbeck from Luebeck - had arrived at the Vienna Academy of Art in 1805 to study painting.
Many German Romantic thinkers, like Friedrich Schlegel, thought of creating a society patterned on a previous age.
http://www.ulib.iupui.edu/kade/springer/Ch1/ch1_p2.html

  
 Literary Encyclopedia: Hardenberg, Friedrich von [Novalis]
This piece displeased King Friedrich Wilhelm III, and the Prussian censor forbade the publication of its concluding aphorisms, which Thomas Mann was to quote in his 1922 address “Von deutscher Republik” [“On the German Republic”] in defense of the Weimar Republic.
Reacting to the Geistliche Lieder [ Spiritual Songs, published 1802] that Hardenberg recited at the November 1799 gathering of the Early Romantics in Jena, Friedrich Schlegel observed that they could be compared only with the most intimate and profound of Goethe’s early lyrics.
These led in turn to his first publication under the name of Novalis, namely the Blüthenstaub [ Pollen ] fragments in the premier issue of the Athenaeum, the journal edited by Friedrich and August Wilhelm Schlegel, in the spring of 1798.
http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=1975

  
 Dictionary of the History of Ideas
Schlegel or Madame de Staël and their particular for-
Schlegel et Madame de Staël, Paris [1938], and Jean-R. de Salis, Sismondi, 1773-1842, Paris [1932].)
Schlegel and knows of Madame de Staël's indebtedness
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/cgi-local/DHI/dhi.cgi?id=dv4-25

  
 Aquarium - Novalis im Netz: The Life of Novalis (5. Career and Works)
Tieck (1773-1853), who had hitherto published some romantic novels and writings probably impressed through his poetical abilities, something which Schlegel lacked.
In the middle of November the group met for a couple of days, visited Jean Paul in Weimar and had, by chance, an afternoon promenade with Goethe.
Heinrich von Ofterdingen becomes in the first part as a poet mature — in the second one as a poet transfigured."
http://novalis.autorenverzeichnis.de/the_life_of_novalis/life_5_career_and_works.html

  
 Hausarbeiten.de: "Ist nicht Aristophanes eine centrifugale Explosion ... " Überlegungen zum Wandel eines ästhetischen ...
Irina Hundt, Geselligkeit im Kreise von Dorothea und Friedrich Schlegel in Paris in den Jahren 1802-1804, in: Hartwig Schultz (Hg.), Salons der Romantik.
Armand Nivelle, La France dans la revue Europa de Friedrich Schlegel, in: Pierre-Andre Bois - Roland Krebs- Jean Moes (Hg.), Les lettres francaises dans les revues allemandes du XVIIIe siècle, Bern 1997, 297-309.
Schlegel et la perfectibilité indéfinie, in: Etudes germaniques 53 (1997), 593-607.
http://www.hausarbeiten.de/faecher/hausarbeit/lit/9880.html

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Friedrich von Schlegel
The outward life of the "Messias" of the Romantic School, as Rahel named him, in its variety, is typical of the Romanticists.
Schlegel essayed all three branches of poetry, but without much success.
Baumgartner, the latest author of a universal literature, thus regarded Friedrich von Schlegel as his guide and master, to whom he believed he owed his chief inspiration.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/13541a.htm

  
 Schlegel, Friedrich von (1772-1829)
Schlegel lectured at the University of Jena (1800-1801) and then went to live with Dorothea (who had divorced her husband) in Paris (1802-1804).
His novel "Lucinde" (1799) was understood to be about this affair and caused a scandal in Berlin.
In 1797 he went to Berlin, where together with his brother he published the journal "Athenäum".
http://www.xs4all.nl/~androom/biography/p024204.htm

  
 EMANUEL VON BAEYER LONDON
Friedrich Schlegel documented the execution of the painting in his notes Die heilige Cäcilia von Ludwig Schnorr (Hormayr’s Archiv, 1823, no. 38, p.
Schnorr named the unknown woman St Cecilia, inspired by a dream.
Schnorr shows in this picture the influence by the new search for religion and its confluence with occultism, which was popular among the intellectuals of his time.
http://www.evbaeyer.com/pages/book05/01.html

  
 Fragments of the Feminine Sublime in Friedrich Schlegel and James Joyce -- Ginnette Verstraete
She relates Schlegel's concepts of irony and of the fragment to his critiques of nineteenth-century bourgeois art and Kant's categories of the beautiful and the sublime.
The book demonstrates how the Romantic (feminine) sublime, as the site where autonomous art generates its own critique, offers us the tools with which to interpret Joyce's postmodern invocations of Romantic art.
This is the first book to extensively study Joyce's work in the context of Germanic Romantic literary theory.
http://www.frontlist.com/detail/0791436284

  
 [No title]
Romanticism August Wilhelm Schlegel, ‘Lectures on Dramatic Arts and Letters’. William Wordsworth, ‘Preface to Lyrical Ballads’.
**Novalis, ‘Pollen.’ Friedrich Schlegel, ‘Essay on the Concept of Republicanism Occasioned by the Kantian Tract ‘Perpetual Peace’’.
**Friedrich Schlegel, ‘Athenaeum Fragments’ (excerpts) in Beiser, ed.
http://www.sas.upenn.edu/~mercerb/MIE.doc

  
 Search Results for Schlegel - Encyclopædia Britannica
Like Coleridge and most Romantic critics of tragedy, Schlegel found his champion in Shakespeare, and, also like them, he was preoccupied with the contrast between Classic and Romantic.
German writer and critic, originator of many of the philosophical ideas that inspired the early German Romantic movement.
Swiss woman of letters and author of a long-influential study on the education of women.
http://www.britannica.com/search?query=Schlegel&submit=Find&source=MWTAB

  
 Friedrich Schleiermacher - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
It was now that he became acquainted with art, literature, science and general culture.
Of this his Confidential Letters on Schlegel's Lucinde, as well as his relationship with
These years were full of literary work, as well as rich in personal and moral progress.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Daniel_Ernst_Schleiermacher

  
 QuoteCha.com - Friedrich Schlegel - All men are somewhat ridiculous and grotesque; just because they are men; and in ...
All men are somewhat ridiculous and grotesque; just because they are men; and in this respect, artists might well be regarded as man multiplied by two.
QuoteCha.com - Friedrich Schlegel - All men are somewhat ridiculous and grotesque; just because they are men; and in this respect, artis
http://www.quotecha.com/quotes/quotation_11406.html

  
 [No title]
In Jena, Schelling became a close friend of Fichte, Schiller, Goethe, August Wilhelm Schlegel (a Romantic poet who translated Shakespeare's plays into German; his brother was a scholar of Indian Studies) and his spouse, Karoline, who acted as a brilliant and intellectual hostess of their salon of Romanticism.
Soon she divorced August Wilhelm Schlegel and married Friedrich Schelling in 1803.
Friedrich Wilhelm IV, the then Prussian ruler, had a strong affinity with Romanticism and wanted to counterbalance Prussia's academic world against the Hegelianism which was still dominant there at that time (after Hegel's death in 1831).
http://www.csudh.edu/phenom_studies/europ19/lect_3.html

  
 White, 'Introduction: Irony and Clerisy' - Irony and Clerisy - Romantic Circles Praxis Series, Romantic Circles
Irony's provenance as a rhetorical term dates back to antiquity, but its usage receives a new birth through the theorizing of Friedrich Schlegel, emerging in his writing as something rather different than the "merely" rhetorical strategy through which one says one thing and means another.
This has been the emphasis of most contemporary readings of Schlegel.
For Schlegel (and in his wake) the divide that characterizes its traditional rhetorical definition becomes an allusive point of departure for rethinking the divided nature of discursivity and subjectivity both.
http://www.rc.umd.edu/praxis/irony/white/ironyintro.html

  
 The History of Indology and Comparative Philology in Germany, 1750-1958
One example of this transition towards more rigorous scholarship was the work of another professor at Berlin, Friedrich Rückert (1788-1866), whose writing reflected both accomplished poetic talent as well as sharp philological skills.
Why did he continue the laborious work on his India book after he was no longer attracted to Indian pantheism?
Schlegel's Indological and comparative philological work will be compared to that of his brother August Wilhelm, Franz Bopp, and Wilhelm von Humboldt.
http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/history/sardesai/classes/chair/indology

  
 CLIO: The Laboratory of Poetry: Chemistry and Poetics in the Work of Friedrich Schlegel
The Laboratory of Poetry, a well-written, carefully argued analysis of Friedrich Schlegel's early theoretical writings (1796-1800), is a noteworthy contribution to the critical literature on Schlegel.
The Laboratory of Poetry: Chemistry and Poetics in the Work of Friedrich Schlegel.
CLIO: The Laboratory of Poetry: Chemistry and Poetics in the Work of Friedrich Schlegel
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_go1873/is_200401/ai_n9083208

  
 Gary Handwerk vita
"Envisioning India: Friedrich Schlegel's Sanskirit Studies and the Emergence of Romantic Historiography," European Romantic Review 9 (1998), 231-242.
Michel Chaouli, The Laboratory of Poetry: Chemistry and Poetics in the Work of Friedrich Schlegel in Clio.
"Friedrich Schlegel and the Romantic Idea of History," IAPL, 1991.
http://depts.washington.edu/engl/people/vita/handwerk_gar.html

  
 The Critical Friedrich Schlegel Edition
"No writer has been more in need of a critical edition, and Schlegel is fortunate in having at last been so well served."
Friedrich Schlegel (1772–1829) was a major figure in German literature, literary criticism, and philosophy who initiated the Romantic movement in Germany.
A project to publish a scholarly, annotated edition of all of Friedrich Schlegel's works was initiated in 1958 by UW professor Ernst Behler
http://www.washington.edu/research/showcase/1958b.html

  
 MSN Encarta - Search Results - Schlegel Friedrich von
See all search results in Photos and more (99)
Schlegel, Friedrich von (1772-1829), German critic and philosopher, who helped spark German participation in the literary movement of romanticism in...
Schiller, Friedrich von (1759-1805), German poet, dramatist, philosopher, and historian, who is regarded as the greatest dramatist in the history of...
http://encarta.msn.com/Schlegel_Friedrich_von.html

  
 On the Study of Greek Poetry by Friedrich Schlegel, 0791448304, Lowest Book Price Finder
Search 85 Bookstores for: On the Study of Greek Poetry by Friedrich Schlegel,
Let us know anything you like or don't like about this website.
On the Study of Greek Poetry by Friedrich Schlegel, 0791448304, Lowest Book Price Finder
http://www.bookfinder4u.co.uk/book_detail/0791448304

  
 Romanticism and Marxism: The Philosophical Development of Literary Theory and Literary History in Walter Benjamin and ...
Informations sur Compricer - Contact - Aide et soutien - Informations sur la société - Mentions légales - Magasins partenaires - liste de tous livres
Romanticism and Marxism: The Philosophical Development of Literary Theory and Literary History in Walter Benjamin and Friedrich Schlegel (Amer Univ) Produits similaires
Romanticism and Marxism: The Philosophical Development of Literary Theory and Literary History in Walter Benjamin and Friedrich Schlegel (Amer Univ)
http://books.compricer.fr/0820403172

  
 Theistic and Non-Theistic Perspectives on Chinese Culture: Friedrich Schlegel (1772-1829), F. W. J. Schelling ...
Schlegel called his lectures the philosophy of history in a straightforward way, while Schelling named his system the philosophy of mythology, his interest being the first stage of history.
In the last year of his life, he lectured at the University of Vienna on the philosophy of history that included China, these lectures were published a few months before his death.
Schlegel, who is mostly remembered today as a romanticist and the author of the philosophical novel Lucinde, represented the Catholic view.
http://www.fl.fju.edu.tw/Bible_Lit/hsia.htm

  
 Seminar
The Laboratory of Poetry: Chemistry and Poetics in the Work of Friedrich Schlegel.
The Laboratory of Poetry: Chemistry and Poetics in the Work of Friedrich Schlegel
However, the book is otherwise exhaustively researched, with appropriate and particular attention paid to the theoretical implications of his work.
http://www.humanities.ualberta.ca/seminar/display.cfm?ReviewID=105

  
 Friedrich Schegel and Jena Romanticism
Schlegel was born in Dresden, and educated in law at the universities of Göttingen and Leipzig.
He also published a number of his lectures, a novel, Lucinde (1799; trans.
Friedrich von Schlegel subsequently edited several other journals and also lectured on philosophy, history, and literature.
http://www.sociologyonline.co.uk/post_essays/PopJena.htm

  
 Novalis - Art History Online Reference and Guide
His works were issued in two volumes by his friends Ludwig Tieck and Friedrich Schlegel (2 vols.
He next studied law at Leipzig, when he formed a friendship with Friedrich Schlegel, and finally at Wittenberg, where, in 1794, he took his degree.
From the gymnasium of Eisleben he passed, in 1790, as a student of philosophy, to the University of Jena, where he was befriended by Friedrich Schiller.
http://www.arthistoryclub.com/art_history/Novalis

  
 Friedrich Schlegel
Bestimmt war für Friedrich Schlegel sein Bruder August Wilhelm Schlegel sein wichtigster Verwandter.
Am Ende des Jahrhunderts war Friedrich sehr beschäftigt.
"Friedrich Schlegel." Dictionary of Literary Biography Volume 90: German writers in the Age of Goethe, 1789-1832.
http://www.orst.edu/instruct/ger341/stave.htm

  
 Publisher description for Library of Congress control number 2001006620
Publisher description for The laboratory of poetry : chemistry and poetics in the work of Friedrich Schlegel / Michel Chaouli.
By focusing on the work of Friedrich Schlegel (1772--1829), The Laboratory of Poetry demonstrates the degree to which romantic poetics, in its language and concepts, relies on the chemistry of its day.
In finely detailed close readings, Chaouli shows us Schlegel developing and practicing a highly experimental form of writing in which the elements of language -- words, syllables, letters, graphic marks -- are subjected to "eternally dividing and mixing forces."
http://www.loc.gov/catdir/description/jhu051/2001006620.html

  
 Friedrich Schlegel - History: The subject of history is the gradu
Friedrich Schlegel - History: The subject of history is the gradu
http://www.spicyquotes.com/html/Friedrich_Schlegel_History.html

  
 Infoplease Search: schlegel friedrich
(Encyclopedia) Preller, Friedrich, 1804–78, German painter and etcher, professor at the Weimar Academy.
(Encyclopedia) Schlegel, Friedrich von, 1772–1829, German philosopher, critic, and writer, most prominent...
(Almanac - People) Schlegel, Friedrich von philosopher Birthplace: Hanover, Germany Born: 1772 Died: 1829 Information...
http://www.infoplease.com/search.php3?query=Schlegel+Friedrich

  
 BookkooB: On the Study of Greek Poetry - Friedrich Schlegel
View other editions of On the Study of Greek Poetry.
Books Related to On the Study of Greek Poetry Friedrich Schlegel
BookkooB: On the Study of Greek Poetry - Friedrich Schlegel
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 Friedrich Schlegel - Wikipedia
Johann Adolf Schlegel (1721-1793) in Hannover zur Welt, verbrachte aber große Teile seiner Kindheit bei einem Onkel und bei seinem älteren Bruder
Friedrich Schlegel war neben seinem Bruder August Wilhelm einer der Begründer der modernen Geisteswissenschaft und wichtiger Vertreter der
Friedrich Schlegel kam als Sohn des lutherischen Pastors
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Schlegel

  
 Friedrich Schlegel und Novalis: Biographie einer Romatikerfreundschaft in ihren Briefen. Auf Grund neuer Briefe ...
Friedrich Schlegel und Novalis: Biographie einer Romatikerfreundschaft in ihren Briefen.
SCHLEGEL, FRIEDRICH; PREITZ, MAX Friedrich Schlegel und Novalis: Biographie einer Romatikerfreundschaft in ihren Briefen.
Auf Grund neuer Briefe Schlegels herausgegeben vo M Preitz.
http://www.antiqbook.co.uk/boox/plu/PAQ56264.shtml

  
 Friedrich von Schlegel
Früher als sein Bruder entdeckte Friedrich Schlegel, der zwischen 1802 und 1804 in Paris Vorlesungen hielt, die indische Sprache und Literatur ("Über die Sprache und Weisheit der Inder", 1808).
Sie verließ 1798 ihren Mann und lebte mit Schlegel zusammen.
In seinem Roman "Lucinde", der 1799 erschien, war die Hauptfigur unschwer als Ebenbild Dorotheas zu erkennen.
http://www.geschichte.2me.net/bio/cethegus/s/schlegelf.html

  
 Friedrich Schlegel: Progressive Universalpoesie
Vor allem in den Fragmenten, die noch im ersten Band des Athenäums ohne Nennung des Verfassers als Gemeinschaftswerk Friedrich und August Wilhelm Schlegels sowie Novalis&; und Schleiermachers erscheinen, werden grundlegende Vorstellungen zu einer Poetik der Romantik formuliert.
Hier verweist das Fragmentarische nicht mehr auf die Welt, sondern nur auf das Individuum.
Besondere Bedeutung für die Entwicklung poetologischer Vorstellungen erlangt das 116.
http://www.uni-essen.de/literaturwissenschaft-aktiv/Vorlesungen/poetik/schlegelprog.htm

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