The dissertation addresses a key problem in Pasternak scholarship: Pasternak's paradoxical attitude toward Romanticism. While proudly proclaiming his ties to Romantic writers, Pasternak claims to reject the "romantic manner". The focus of this study is Pasternak's relationship to the work of representatives of three generations within German Romanticism, seen as a paradigm for his relationship to the Romantic movement as a whole. Analysis of Pasternak's reception of the early Romanticism of Novalis, the "second-generation" Romanticism of E. T. A. Hoffmann, and the late- or post-Romanticism of Heinrich Heine, using the methods of subtextual analysis developed by Taranovsky, Ronen, and Smirnov, reveals that a coherent, if complex, understandi...
Paper delivered at the 20th Annual Meeting of the South Central Modern Language Assocation on Novemb...
My D.Phil, dissertation sheds new light on German literary decadence around 1900, its universal conc...
Russian artists of the early twentieth century focused not merely on the production of their own art...
The goal of this dissertation is to document Pasternak's reception of literature from three periods ...
Boris Pasternak debuted at the onset of the 20th century, when Russian art witnessed radical transfo...
This study of Boris Pasternak's "Christmas myth " aims to establish new perspectives ...
This volume of sharply focused essays by an international team of scholars deals not only with the m...
The article examines Walter Benjamin’s dissertation Der Begriff der Kunstkritik in der deutschen Rom...
The intention of this thesis is to help clarify the confusion existing in literary criticism about ...
Heinrich Heine famously identified German Romantic authors with the “resuscitation of the Middle Age...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authori...
In my dissertation I examine a group of modernist novels that attempt to braid together two seemingl...
The German romantic movement was the result of defective culture, of bodily and mental derangement, ...
Widely regarded as one of the foremost cultural critics of the last century, Walter Benjamin's relat...
This study describes the triangular literary interaction of Tsvetaeva, Pasternak, and Rilke in ter...
Paper delivered at the 20th Annual Meeting of the South Central Modern Language Assocation on Novemb...
My D.Phil, dissertation sheds new light on German literary decadence around 1900, its universal conc...
Russian artists of the early twentieth century focused not merely on the production of their own art...
The goal of this dissertation is to document Pasternak's reception of literature from three periods ...
Boris Pasternak debuted at the onset of the 20th century, when Russian art witnessed radical transfo...
This study of Boris Pasternak's "Christmas myth " aims to establish new perspectives ...
This volume of sharply focused essays by an international team of scholars deals not only with the m...
The article examines Walter Benjamin’s dissertation Der Begriff der Kunstkritik in der deutschen Rom...
The intention of this thesis is to help clarify the confusion existing in literary criticism about ...
Heinrich Heine famously identified German Romantic authors with the “resuscitation of the Middle Age...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authori...
In my dissertation I examine a group of modernist novels that attempt to braid together two seemingl...
The German romantic movement was the result of defective culture, of bodily and mental derangement, ...
Widely regarded as one of the foremost cultural critics of the last century, Walter Benjamin's relat...
This study describes the triangular literary interaction of Tsvetaeva, Pasternak, and Rilke in ter...
Paper delivered at the 20th Annual Meeting of the South Central Modern Language Assocation on Novemb...
My D.Phil, dissertation sheds new light on German literary decadence around 1900, its universal conc...
Russian artists of the early twentieth century focused not merely on the production of their own art...