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- Post-romanticism abstract "Post-romanticism or Postromanticism refers to a range of cultural endeavors and attitudes emerging in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, after the period of Romanticism.Herman Melville and Thomas Carlyle are post-Romantic writers. Flaubert's Madame Bovary is a post-Romantic novel. The period of post-romanticism in poetry is defined as the late nineteenth century, and includes the poetry of Tennyson.".
- Post-romanticism wikiPageExternalLink 36.3-4.pappas.pdf.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageID "3613832".
- Post-romanticism wikiPageLength "3501".
- Post-romanticism wikiPageOutDegree "26".
- Post-romanticism wikiPageRevisionID "697318541".
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Alexander_Scriabin.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Alfred,_Lord_Tennyson.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Arnold_Schoenberg.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Berger_(composer).
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Baroque_music.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Bluebeards_Castle.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Béla_Bartók.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Art_movements.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Classical_music.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Claudia_Moscovici.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Consonance_and_dissonance.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Giacomo_Puccini.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Gustave_Flaubert.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Hans_Pfitzner.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Harmony.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Herman_Melville.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink La_jeune_France.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Madame_Bovary.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Music.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Musical_form.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Neoromanticism_(music).
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Richard_Strauss.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Romantic_music.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Romanticism.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Sergei_Rachmaninoff.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Carlyle.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLinkText "Post-Romantic".
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLinkText "Post-Romantics".
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLinkText "Post-romantic".
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLinkText "Post-romanticism".
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLinkText "Post-romanticism#Post-Romanticism in music".
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLinkText "post-Romantic".
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLinkText "post-Romanticism".
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLinkText "post-romantic".
- Post-romanticism wikiPageWikiLinkText "post-romanticism".
- Post-romanticism wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Art-movement-stub.
- Post-romanticism wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Post-romanticism subject Category:Art_movements.
- Post-romanticism hypernym Writers.
- Post-romanticism type MusicGenre.
- Post-romanticism type Person.
- Post-romanticism type Movement.
- Post-romanticism type Redirect.
- Post-romanticism type Theory.
- Post-romanticism comment "Post-romanticism or Postromanticism refers to a range of cultural endeavors and attitudes emerging in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, after the period of Romanticism.Herman Melville and Thomas Carlyle are post-Romantic writers. Flaubert's Madame Bovary is a post-Romantic novel. The period of post-romanticism in poetry is defined as the late nineteenth century, and includes the poetry of Tennyson.".
- Post-romanticism label "Post-romanticism".
- Post-romanticism sameAs Q3782252.
- Post-romanticism sameAs Postromanticisme.
- Post-romanticism sameAs Posromanticismo.
- Post-romanticism sameAs m.09p_xf.
- Post-romanticism sameAs Q3782252.
- Post-romanticism sameAs 后浪漫主义.
- Post-romanticism wasDerivedFrom Post-romanticism?oldid=697318541.
- Post-romanticism isPrimaryTopicOf Post-romanticism.