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    • German literary and cultural movement

      • Weimar Classicism (German: Weimarer Klassik) was a German literary and cultural movement, whose practitioners established a new humanism from the synthesis of ideas from Romanticism, Classicism, and the Age of Enlightenment. It was named after the city of Weimar, Germany, because the leading authors of Weimar Classicism lived there.
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  2. Weimar Classicism (German: Weimarer Klassik) was a German literary and cultural movement, whose practitioners established a new humanism from the synthesis of ideas from Romanticism, Classicism, and the Age of Enlightenment.

  3. Feb 5, 2013 · What is Classicism? Antiquity and Weimar Classicism; The Correspondents' Noncorrespondence: Goethe, Schiller and the Briefwechsel; Johann Gottfried Herder: The Weimar Classic Back of the (City)Church; Drama and Theatrical Practice in Weimar Classicism; German Classical Poetry; The Novel in Weimar Classicism: Symbolic Form and Symbolic Pregnance

  4. The Middle High German cultural highpoint around 1200 is known as “Staufische [for Hohenstauffen] Klassik”; the literary works of Goethe and Schiller during their Weimar years (or rather a portion thereof) are known as “Weimarer Klassik”; and Viennese Classicism designates the pinnacle of European and German music: the epoch of Haydn ...

    • Dieter Borchmeyer
    • 2005
  5. Weimar Classicism (German: Weimarer Klassik) was a German literary and cultural movement, whose practitioners established a new humanism from the synthesis of ideas from Romanticism, Classicism, and the Age of Enlightenment.

  6. In Germany, Weimar Classicism (roughly the period from Goethe's return to Germany from Italy in 1788 to the death of his friend and collaborator Schiller in 1805) is widely regarded as an apogee of literary art.

  7. In Germany, Weimar Classicism (roughly the period from Goethe's return to Germany from Italy in 1788 to the death of his friend and collaborator Schiller in 1805) is widely regarded as an apogee of literary art.

  8. Weimar Classicism is one of the more disputed periods of literary history. The distinction of also possessing a classical period was first arrogated for German literature in the nineteenth century under the pressure of strong national feeling.

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