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Description
(Short description)
This dissertation documents Pasternak's reception of literature from three periods within German Romanticism: the early Romanticism of the Jena School's literary representative, Friedrich von Hardenberg (Novalis), the "second-generation" Romanticism of E.T.A. Hoffmann; and the end and rejection of German Romanticism, represented by Heinrich Heine.
(Text)
The goal of this dissertation is to document Pasternak's reception of literature from three periods within German Romanticism: the early Romanticism of the Jena School's greatest literary representative, Friedrich von Hardenberg, whose pseudonym was Novalis; the "second-generation" Romanticism of E.T.A. Hoffmann; and the end and eventual rejection of German Romanticism, represented by Heinrich Heine. Revised version of the author's thesis (Ph. D.). University of Michigan, 1996. In kyrillischer Schrift
(Table of content)
PASTERNAK AND GERMAN ROMANTICISM - PASTERNAK AND NOVALIS - PASTERNAK AND HOFFM ANN - PASTERNAK AND HEINE