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Publications of Thomas Pfau :chronological alphabetical combined listing:
%% Books @book{fds214459, Title = {Minding the Modern: Human Agency, Intellectual Traditions & Responsible Knowledge}, Pages = {692 pages}, Publisher = {University of Notre Dame Press}, Year = {2013}, Month = {October}, Key = {fds214459} } %% Edited @misc{fds362899, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Incomprehensible Certainty Metaphysics and Hermeneutics of the Image}, Pages = {784 pages}, Year = {2022}, Month = {June}, ISBN = {9780268202484}, Abstract = {Like Pfau's previous book, Minding the Modern, Incomprehensible Certainty is a major work. With over fifty illustrations, the book will interest students and scholars of philosophy, theology, literature, and art history.}, Key = {fds362899} } @misc{fds332854, Title = {Judgment and Action Fragments toward a History}, Pages = {360 pages}, Publisher = {Northwestern University Press}, Editor = {Pfau, T and Soni, V}, Year = {2017}, Month = {December}, ISBN = {9780810136335}, Key = {fds332854} } @misc{fds286170, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Minding the modern: Human agency, intellectual traditions, and responsible knowledge}, Pages = {1-675}, Year = {2013}, Month = {January}, ISBN = {9780268038403}, Abstract = {Thomas Pfau argues that the loss of foundational concepts in classical and medieval Aristotelian philosophy caused a fateful separation between reason and will in European thought. Pfau traces the evolution and eventual deterioration of key concepts of human agency—will, person, judgment, action—from antiquity through Scholasticism and on to eighteenth-century moral theory and its critical revision in the works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Featuring extended critical discussions of Aristotle, Gnosticism, Augustine, Aquinas, Ockham, Hobbes, Shaftesbury, Mandeville, Hutcheson, Hume, Adam Smith, and Coleridge, this study contends that the humanistic concepts they seek to elucidate acquire meaning and significance only inasmuch as we are prepared positively to engage (rather than historicize) their previous usages. Beginning with the rise of theological (and, eventually, secular) voluntarism, modern thought appears increasingly reluctant and, in time unable to engage the deep history of its own underlying conceptions, thus leaving our understanding of the nature and function of humanistic inquiry increasingly frayed and incoherent. One consequence of this shift is to leave the moral self-expression of intellectual elites and ordinary citizens alike stunted, which in turn has fueled the widespread notion that moral and ethical concerns are but a special branch of inquiry largely determined by opinion rather than dialogical reasoning, judgment, and practice.}, Key = {fds286170} } @misc{fds306040, Author = {Pfau, T and Mitchell, R}, Title = {Romanticism and Modernity}, Pages = {246-246}, Publisher = {Routledge}, Year = {2011}, Month = {November}, Key = {fds306040} } @misc{fds286177, Author = {Pfau, T and Mitchell, R}, Title = {Romanticism and Modernity}, Volume = {21}, Pages = {267-273}, Publisher = {Routledge}, Editor = {Pfau, T and Mitchell, R}, Year = {2011}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10509585.2010.484623}, Doi = {10.1080/10509585.2010.484623}, Key = {fds286177} } @misc{fds306041, Title = {Medium and Message in German Modernism}, Volume = {2}, Pages = {250 pp.-250 pp.}, Editor = {Pfau, T}, Year = {2006}, url = {http://www.js-modcult.bham.ac.uk/editor/welcome.asp}, Key = {fds306041} } @misc{fds286169, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Romantic Moods: Paranoia, Trauma, and Melancholy, 1790-1840.}, Publisher = {Johns Hopkins University Press}, Year = {2005}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/RomanticMoodsIntro-2005.pdf}, Abstract = {The study studies mostly lyric forms as imaginative encryptions of Romanticism’s changing political, economic, and cultural conditions. The study correlates paranoia, trauma, and melancholy with discrete phases of British and German Romanticism. Figures central to the study include Burke, Godwin, Wordsworth, and Keats in England, as well as Kant, Hegel, Joseph von Eichendorff, and Heinrich Heine in Germany.}, Key = {fds286169} } @misc{fds306042, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Lessons of Romanticism: A Critical Companion}, Publisher = {an anthology of twenty-one essays, Durham: Duke UP}, Year = {1998}, Key = {fds306042} } @misc{fds286168, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Wordsworth’s Profession: Form, Class, and the Logic of Romantic Cultural Production}, Pages = {xiii + 460 pages}, Publisher = {Stanford UP}, Year = {1997}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/Stanford1997Book-Intro.pdf}, Key = {fds286168} } @misc{fds6787, Author = {T. Pfau}, Title = {Textual and Cultural Dissolution in English Romanticism}, Journal = {a special issue of South Atlantic Quarterly}, Volume = {95}, Number = {iii}, Year = {1996}, Month = {Summer}, Key = {fds6787} } @misc{fds306043, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Idealism and the Endgames of Theory: Three Essays by F. W. J. Schelling}, Pages = {xiv + 293-xiv + 293}, Publisher = {State U of New York P}, Year = {1994}, Key = {fds306043} } @misc{fds306044, Author = {Pfau, T and translator}, Title = {Friedrich Hölderlin: Essays and Letters on Theory}, Pages = {xiv + 186-xiv + 186}, Publisher = {State U of New York P}, Year = {1987}, Key = {fds306044} } %% Essays/Articles/Chapters in Books @article{fds373535, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Response to My Interlocutors}, Journal = {Modern Theology}, Volume = {40}, Number = {2}, Pages = {478-495}, Year = {2024}, Month = {April}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/moth.12903}, Doi = {10.1111/moth.12903}, Key = {fds373535} } @article{fds371698, Author = {Aers, D and Pfau, T}, Title = {Exploring Christian Literature in the Contemporary and Secular University}, Journal = {Christianity and Literature}, Volume = {70}, Number = {3}, Pages = {263-275}, Year = {2021}, Month = {September}, Abstract = {Both of us teach in the Duke English Department and hold secondary appointments in the Duke Divinity School. In this essay, we reflect on impediments to teaching Christian literature in contemporary English departments, in particu-lar the naturalistic, anti-metaphysical dogma pervading humanistic inquiry, yet also the widespread theological illiteracy among today’s undergraduates and graduates. Still, students usually embrace focused ethical and theological inquiry, as well as the attention to textual and hermeneutic issues called for by much Christian literature across the centuries. We conclude by outlining options for a more productive future alignment of literary and theological inquiry and pedagogy.}, Key = {fds371698} } @article{fds358101, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Kantian Aesthetics as "soft" Iconoclasm}, Journal = {Logos (United States)}, Volume = {24}, Number = {3}, Pages = {69-88}, Year = {2021}, Month = {June}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/log.2021.0017}, Doi = {10.1353/log.2021.0017}, Key = {fds358101} } @article{fds357308, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Absolute Gegebenheit: Image as aesthetic Urphanomen in Husserl and Rilke}, Pages = {227-260}, Booktitle = {Phenomenology to the Letter: Husserl and Literature}, Year = {2020}, Month = {November}, ISBN = {9783110648386}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110654585-011}, Abstract = {My essay opens with a brief review of Husserl's 1905 lectures on "Phantasie und Bildbewusstsein. " It then moves on to consider how, in his short monograph on Rodin and the letters on Cezanne, Rilke develops a phenomenology of image experience that complements Husserl's noematic focus with concentration on the noetic dimension of aesthetic experience in Rilke's writings on art and his Neue Gedichte. What is definitive of the latter is a confrontation with the absolute givenness of images and their material presuppositions: color and light. In their mute yet insistent materiality, Rodin's sculptures and Cezanne's canvases raise the possibility that the noematic may be anterior to the noetic. For in their alien, silent, and unfathomable "thingness, " these aesthetic phenomena compel consciousness to suspend its quest for a lexical or referential decoding of the image object. Instead, Rilke sees the beholder of Rodin's sculptures becoming the unsuspecting witness and virtual collaborator in the thing's primordial creation: "[Rodin] hatte ihn gemacht, wie Gott den ersten Menschen gemacht hat [...] namenloses Leben. [...] Da ubersetzt sich [...] wahrend der Arbeit das Stoffliche immer mehr in Sachliches und Namenloses. " In its encounter with the aesthetic phenomenon, the noetic function approaches a condition of mystic silence: "Es entsteht eine Stille; die Stille, die um Dinge ist. Der zu nichts gedrangten Dinge. " Anticipating Husserl's idea of a "transcendental reduction" (epoche), Rilke finds in Cezanne's paintings prima facie evidence of what he calls "die Dingwerdung, die durch sein eigenes Erlebnis an dem Gegenstand bis ins Unzerstorbare hinein gesteigerte Wirklichkeit. "}, Doi = {10.1515/9783110654585-011}, Key = {fds357308} } @article{fds339822, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {“Superabundant being”: Disambiguating Rilke and Heidegger}, Journal = {Modern Theology}, Volume = {35}, Number = {1}, Pages = {23-42}, Publisher = {WILEY}, Year = {2019}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/moth.12458}, Abstract = {Rilke’s impact on the generation of writers reshaping philosophy and theology during the interwar years is arguably without parallel. Within this constellation, the case of Heidegger as a reader of Rilke presents unique challenges. For Rilke’s poetry neither quite allows for a wholly appropriative reading such as, for better or worse, Heidegger accords Hölderlin’s oeuvre; nor can Heidegger quite bring himself to subject Rilke’s poetry to critical appraisal. Instead, Heidegger’s analysis of Dasein as worked out in Part I of Being and Time (1927) and in his lectures on The Basic Concepts of Metaphysics (1929) seems haunted by an intellectual and expressive debt to Rilke that he can neither acknowledge nor fully resolve. For to do so would be to confront a possibility of human finitude, so luminously traced in Rilke’s Duino Elegies (1922), still defined by moments of transcendence - moments that can be captured in the fleeting plenitude of poetic intuition (Anschauung) and lyric image (Bild). Whereas von Balthasar, in volume 3 of his Apokalypse der deutschen Seele (1939), reads Rilke as fundamentally embracing Heidegger’s notion of strictly immanent and finite Dasein, I argue that the oeuvre of the later Rilke, without being reclaimed for a metaphysical, let alone religious position, nevertheless is shaped, both intellectually and expressively, by insistent, if enigmatic, moments of transcendence.}, Doi = {10.1111/moth.12458}, Key = {fds339822} } @article{fds356840, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {“Seeing and being seen coincide” freedom as contemplation in Nicholas of Cusa and G. M. Hopkins}, Journal = {Logos (United States)}, Volume = {22}, Number = {4}, Pages = {20-41}, Publisher = {Project Muse}, Year = {2019}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/log.2019.0028}, Doi = {10.1353/log.2019.0028}, Key = {fds356840} } @article{fds356841, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Expanding Romanticism's Spatiotemporal, Disciplinary, and Conceptual Boundaries}, Journal = {Keats-Shelley Journal}, Volume = {68}, Pages = {160-162}, Year = {2019}, Month = {January}, Key = {fds356841} } @article{fds328241, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {On attention}, Journal = {Salmagundi}, Volume = {2017-Spring}, Number = {194}, Pages = {145-163}, Year = {2017}, Month = {March}, Key = {fds328241} } @article{fds323221, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {"Botched execution" or historical inevitability: Conceptual dilemmas in Brad S. Gregory's the unintended reformation}, Journal = {Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies}, Volume = {46}, Number = {3}, Pages = {603-628}, Year = {2016}, Month = {September}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/10829636-3644062}, Doi = {10.1215/10829636-3644062}, Key = {fds323221} } @article{fds328242, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {A Modern Coleridge: Cultivation, Addiction, Habits}, Journal = {STUDIES IN ROMANTICISM}, Volume = {55}, Number = {1}, Pages = {134-138}, Year = {2016}, Key = {fds328242} } @article{fds286107, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Cosmopolitan Sociality and the Bildungsroman}, Journal = {Novel}, Volume = {48}, Number = {1}, Pages = {136-139}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2015}, Month = {May}, ISSN = {0029-5132}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000353667900010&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.1215/00295132-2860453}, Key = {fds286107} } @article{fds286126, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Rational Theology and the Catholic Critique of Modernity, 1780-1830}, Booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook on European Romanticism}, Editor = {Paul, HKC and London}, Year = {2014}, Month = {October}, Key = {fds286126} } @article{fds286125, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Wagner hören im Zeitalter kultureller Überdetermination: Adorno’s Versuch über Wagner}, Booktitle = {Jenseits von Bayreuth: Richard Wagner Heute}, Publisher = {Fink Verlag}, Address = {Munich}, Editor = {Boernchen, S and Mein, G}, Year = {2014}, Month = {March}, Key = {fds286125} } @article{fds286124, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {’A certain mediocrity' Moral Sentiments and Early Behaviorism in A. Smith’s Theory of Moral Sentiments}, Booktitle = {Romanticism and the Emotions}, Publisher = {Cambridge UP}, Editor = {Faflak, J and Sha, R}, Year = {2014}, Month = {February}, Key = {fds286124} } @article{fds286167, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {History without Hermeneutics: Brad Gregory’s Unintended Modernity}, Journal = {The Immanent Frame}, Year = {2013}, Month = {November}, url = {http://blogs.ssrc.org/tif/2013/11/06/history-without-hermeneutics-brad-gregorys-unintended-modernity/}, Key = {fds286167} } @article{fds286142, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {review of Tilottama Rajan, Romantic Narrative (Johns Hopkins UP, 2010)}, Journal = {The Eighteenth Century: Theory & Interpretation}, Year = {2013}, Month = {October}, url = {http://www.academia.edu/2218249/Review_of_Tilottama_Rajan_Romantic_Narrative}, Abstract = {forthcoming}, Key = {fds286142} } @article{fds286166, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {A Note on the pre-History of European Nihilism: Eroticism and Damaged Life in Don Giovanni}, Volume = {2}, Year = {2013}, Month = {October}, url = {https://www.academia.edu/2167614/_A_Note_on_the_pre-History_of_European_Nihilism_Eroticism_and_Damaged_Life_in_Don_Giovanni_}, Key = {fds286166} } @article{fds286174, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Meta language and visual experience in The Stechlin}, Journal = {German Quarterly}, Volume = {86}, Number = {4}, Pages = {421-443}, Publisher = {WILEY}, Year = {2013}, Month = {October}, ISSN = {0016-8831}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gequ.10190}, Doi = {10.1111/gequ.10190}, Key = {fds286174} } @article{fds286164, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Epochenwandel mit metaphysischen Anklängen: Metasprache und Bilderfahrung in Der Stechlin}, Journal = {German Quarterly}, Volume = {86}, Number = {4}, Pages = {420-442}, Year = {2013}, url = {https://www.academia.edu/4250292/_Epochenwandel_..._mit_metaphysischen_Anklangen_Metasprache_und_Bilderfahrung_in_Der_Stechlin._}, Key = {fds286164} } @article{fds286159, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Mourning Modernity:: Classical Antiquity, Romantic Theory, and Elegiac Form}, Year = {2012}, Month = {September}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199228133.013.0032}, Abstract = {This article looks at literary theory. It locates that problematic integral in modernity's dramatically altered experience and conception of time. While the centrality of time to modern theory is hardly in doubt, an acutely temporal dimension also shapes elegiac form and its broader aesthetic significance, in particular at the turn from Classicism to Romanticism. It then views the elegiac as the defining characteristic of aesthetic production in modernity. Mdernity's method-based 'world-picture' as it emerges from the canonical writings of Bacon, Descartes, and Leibniz for the most part understands time as merely 'lapsing' and incessantly receding into a 'past' now conceived as history. In Germany, the rise of modern aesthetics and literary theory correlates with a sustained revaluation of antiquity. The true object of 'mourning' is also addressed.}, Doi = {10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199228133.013.0032}, Key = {fds286159} } @article{fds286141, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {review of David Collings, Monstrous Society: Reciprocity, Discipline, and the Political Uncanny at the end of Early Modern England (Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell UP)}, Journal = {European Romantic Review}, Volume = {23}, Number = {1}, Pages = {68-73}, Year = {2012}, Month = {March}, Key = {fds286141} } @article{fds286106, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {A certain mediocrity: Adam Smith’s moral behaviorism}, Pages = {48-75}, Booktitle = {Romanticism and the Emotions}, Publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, Year = {2012}, Month = {January}, ISBN = {9781107052390}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781107280564.003}, Abstract = {A distinguishing feature of Smith's Theory of Moral Sentiments is its striking reversal of emphasis, away from the Humean drama of volatile and non-cognitive passions and toward reaffirming the continuity of a more settled kind of affect. In an attempt at retreating from the dead-end of Hume's epistemological skepticism, Smith's proposes to re-describe the passions by correlating them with a firmly empirical, at times actuarial understanding of reason manifested in established customs, prevailing manners, average forms of behavior, and a mimetic conception of virtue. Viewing his arguments as post-metaphysical, yet also wishing to move beyond the rationalist, emotivist, and skeptical critiques of metaphysics that had dominated since the Restoration, Adam Smith seeks to overcome the antagonism of will and intellect – a dilemma that, unbeknownst to him, modernity had not so much discovered as created. To David Marshall, Smith “seems less concerned about the constitution of the self ” and indeed “presupposes a certain instability of the self; it depends upon an eclipsing of identity, a transfer of persons.” Marshall's compact formula risks obscuring, however, that to construe sociality as a product of continued imaginative substitution constitutes something of a logical paradox. For “how can one become another person without suffering the dramatic change that is self-liquidation?” Furthermore, “if my identity is caught up with yours, and yours with another's, and so in a perpetually spawning web of affiliations, how can I ever know that your approving glance is your glance, rather than the effect of an unreadable palimpsest of selves?” After all, any such knowledge hinges on “entering into another experience while retaining enough rational capacity of one's own to assess what one finds there. The cognitive distance which such judgments require cuts against the grain of an imaginary ethics.”.}, Doi = {10.1017/CBO9781107280564.003}, Key = {fds286106} } @article{fds286163, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {The Appearance of Stimmung: Play as Virtual Rationality}, Booktitle = {Stimmung: zur Wiederkehr einer ästhetischen Kategorie?}, Publisher = {Wilhelm Fink Verlag}, Address = {Munich, Germany}, Editor = {Gisbertz, A}, Year = {2011}, Month = {March}, url = {https://web.duke.edu/secmod/pfaucv/Stimmung_2011.pdf}, Key = {fds286163} } @article{fds286186, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Paul H. Fry, Wordsworth and the Poetry of What We AreWordsworth and the Poetry of What We Are. Paul H. Fry . New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2008. Pp. xvi+240.}, Journal = {Modern Philology}, Volume = {108}, Number = {3}, Pages = {E191-E194}, Publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, Year = {2011}, Month = {February}, ISSN = {0026-8232}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000292928000012&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.1086/659005}, Key = {fds286186} } @article{fds286165, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Rethinking the image: With some reflections on G. M. Hopkins}, Journal = {Yearbook of Comparative Literature}, Volume = {57}, Pages = {117-147}, Year = {2011}, Month = {January}, Key = {fds286165} } @article{fds286112, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {The Bildungsroman}, Pages = {124-132}, Booktitle = {The Blackwell Encylopedia of Romantic Literature}, Publisher = {Blackwell}, Editor = {Burwick, F and Goslee, N and Hoeveler, D}, Year = {2011}, url = {http://www.academia.edu/2163233/_The_Bildungsroman._}, Key = {fds286112} } @article{fds286140, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Review of Paul Fry, Wordsworth and the Poetry of What We Are}, Volume = {108}, Number = {3}, Pages = {191-94}, Year = {2011}, url = {http://www.academia.edu/2218231/Review_of_Paul_Fry_Wordsworth_and_the_Poetry_of_What_We_Are}, Key = {fds286140} } @article{fds305348, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {William Paley}, Booktitle = {Blackwell Encyclopedia of Romantic Literature, 4 vols.}, Publisher = {Blackwell}, Editor = {Burwick, F and Goslee, N}, Year = {2011}, ISBN = {1405188103}, url = {http://www.academia.edu/2163240/_William_Paley._}, Key = {fds305348} } @article{fds286178, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Bildungsspiele: Vicissitudes of socialization in Wilhelm Meister's apprenticeship}, Journal = {European Romantic Review}, Volume = {21}, Number = {5}, Pages = {567-587}, Publisher = {Informa UK Limited}, Year = {2010}, Month = {October}, ISSN = {1050-9585}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10509585.2010.499006}, Abstract = {This essay scrutinizes the narrative logic of Goethe's Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship (1796), widely regarded as the most paradigmatic instance of the European Bildungsroman. Of particular concern is whether the formal and psychological self-organization of Goethe's narrative and its protagonist can still be articulated as an entelechy, that is, as a manifestation of a teleological framework whose (ontological) authority is absolute and independent of its fulfilment by a specific narrative. Focusing on the ubiquity of "play" (Spiel) throughout the novel, this essay concludes that, appearances notwithstanding, the Aristotelian/Thomist framework is no longer operative in Goethe's novel. Rather, Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship - herein differing from Goethe's botanical writings of the same period - presents us with an emergentist rather than teleological model of narrative rationality, that is, a progression that is neither predictable nor susceptible of repetition. © 2010 Taylor & Francis.}, Doi = {10.1080/10509585.2010.499006}, Key = {fds286178} } @article{fds286179, Author = {Pfau, T and Mitchell, R}, Title = {European Romantic Review: Introduction}, Journal = {European Romantic Review}, Volume = {21}, Number = {5}, Pages = {545-551}, Publisher = {Informa UK Limited}, Year = {2010}, Month = {October}, ISSN = {1050-9585}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10509585.2010.499004}, Doi = {10.1080/10509585.2010.499004}, Key = {fds286179} } @article{fds286105, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Between sentimentality and phantasmagoria: German lyric poetry, 1830–1890}, Volume = {9}, Pages = {207-250}, Booktitle = {German Literature of the Nineteenth Century, 1832-1899}, Year = {2010}, Month = {January}, ISBN = {9781571132505}, Abstract = {Während sich nun diese [romantische] Schule ihrem Ableben näherte, veränderte sich mehr und mehr die Physiognomie der Zeit. Die Revolution, der Liberalismus, die Technik, die materiellen Tendenzen, die Cultur, die Alles beleckt, die Philosophie, die den letzten Rest des Unmittelbaren in die Vermittlung des Denkens hereinzuziehensystematisch fortfuhr, der Geschäftsdrang, der uns von Morgen bis Abend an den Arbeitsstuhl fesselt und der zehnten Muse, der langen Weile, ihr bischen Lebenslust vollends zu erdrücken droht: Alles dieß verschwor sich gegen die poëtische Stimmung und stellte vor die letzte Wiese, auf der ein Dichter schlendern mochte, den Schlagbaum der Sorge. (Theodor Vischer) [As the Romantic school was nearing its end, the overall profile of the era seemed increasingly altered. Revolution; liberalism; technology; the material orientation of culture whose influence extends everywhere; a philosophy continually striving to storm the last bastions of immediacy with the mediations of systematic thought; and the pressure of an economic life that fetters us to our desks and threatens to throttle the last bit of pleasurable life out of the tenthmuse — boredom: all these tendencies conspired against the poetic mood by erecting a gate of anxious concern in front of the pasture in which a poet might wish to roam one last time.] Supplement or Impediment of Cognition: Emotion and Lyric Form after Hegel Were one pressed to name a single overarching and dominant feature of German lyric poetry after 1830, it would probably have to be the genre's enduring uncertainty as to its own social legitimacy and efficacy.}, Key = {fds286105} } @article{fds286182, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {The letter of judgment: Practical reason in Aristotle, the Stoics, and Rousseau}, Journal = {Eighteenth Century}, Volume = {51}, Number = {3}, Pages = {289-316}, Year = {2010}, Month = {January}, ISSN = {0193-5380}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000208342800002&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Abstract = {This essay explores the revival of ancient conceptions of "judgment" in Rousseau's La Nouvelle Heloise. In contrast to the reductionist and potentially irrational thrust of "decision" and "opinion" in modern political theory (e.g., Carl Schmitt), Aristotelian "judgment" does not involve the assertion of a subjective view. Rather, it unfolds as sustained, inter-subjective deliberation that proceeds from a first, subjective perception (gnomē) of a concrete object towards a reasoned grasp (prohairēsis) of its underlying universal form. In ways further emphasized by the later Stoics, especially Seneca (whose work is of major influence on Rousseau), judgment thus presupposes our being "explicit" about the proposition to which we "assent" qua judgment. The intellectualist nature of judgment in ancient philosophy shows its function to be emphatically political, rather than inward and subjective. Though often appraised as the very apex of eighteenth-century sentimentalism, Rousseau's Nouvelle Heloise in fact uses the dialectical structure of epistolary exchange to stage the inter-subjective, deliberative, and increasingly explicit character of judgment. In so doing, it opposes the modern contraction of prohairēsis to an instance of idiosyncratic "choice" or emotively grounded "preference." Implicitly reviving the teleological framework of Aristotelian and Stoic judgment, the exchanges between Julie and St. Preux show judgment to be concerned not with choosing ends but only with assessing whether specific means are commensurable with the meaning of eudaimonia; and the dialectic nature of epistolary exchange is itself crucial in enabling the protagonists to become more aware of the meaning of that end. Copyright © 2010 University of Pennsylvania Press. All rights reserved.}, Key = {fds286182} } @article{fds286183, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {"All is leaf": Difference, metamorphosis, and Goethe's phenomenology of knowledge}, Journal = {Studies in Romanticism}, Volume = {49}, Number = {1}, Pages = {3-41}, Year = {2010}, Month = {January}, ISSN = {0039-3762}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000280174600001&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.1353/srm.2010.0035}, Key = {fds286183} } @article{fds286113, Author = {Mitchell, R and Pfau, T}, Title = {“Romanticism and Form” special issue}, Journal = {European Romantic Review}, Volume = {21}, Number = {5}, Year = {2010}, Key = {fds286113} } @article{fds286114, Author = {Mitchell, R and Pfau, T}, Title = {NASSR 2009 Conference Volume}, Journal = {European Romantic Review}, Volume = {21}, Number = {3}, Year = {2010}, Key = {fds286114} } @article{fds286160, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Bildung: Etiology, Function, Structure (with some reflections on Beethoven)}, Pages = {123-41}, Booktitle = {Die Romantik: ein Gründungsmythos der EuropEuropäischen Moderne}, Publisher = {Bonner Universitätsverlag}, Address = {Bonn, Germany}, Editor = {Gaier, U and al, E}, Year = {2010}, url = {http://duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/Romantik-Gruendungsmythos-Essay.pdf}, Key = {fds286160} } @article{fds305347, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Bildung: Etiology, Function, Structure (with some reflections on Beethoven)}, Pages = {123-41}, Booktitle = {Die Romantik: ein Gründungsmythos der EuropEuropäischen Moderne}, Publisher = {Bonner Universitätsverlag}, Editor = {Gaier, U}, Year = {2010}, url = {http://duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/Romantik-Gruendungsmythos-Essay.pdf}, Key = {fds305347} } @article{fds286120, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Mourning Modernity: Classical Antiquity, Romantic Theory, and Elegiac Form}, Booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook on the Elegy}, Year = {2009}, url = {http://duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/Romantik-Gruendungsmythos-Essay.pdf}, Key = {fds286120} } @article{fds286139, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Review of Colin Jager The Book of God: Secularization and Design in the Romantic Era}, Journal = {Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net, no. 25}, Publisher = {Philadelphia: U of Pennsylvania Press, 2007}, Year = {2009}, url = {http://www.erudit.org/revue/ravon/2009/v/n54/038767ar.html?lang=en}, Key = {fds286139} } @article{fds286196, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {The Wordsworthian Enlightenment: Romantic Poetry and the Ecology of Reading}, Journal = {STUDIES IN ROMANTICISM}, Volume = {48}, Number = {1}, Pages = {159-165}, Year = {2009}, ISSN = {0039-3762}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000268904900007&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Key = {fds286196} } @article{fds286184, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Romantic Theory: Forms of Reflexivity in the Romantic Era}, Journal = {Comparative Literature}, Volume = {60}, Number = {3}, Pages = {290-294}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2008}, Month = {June}, ISSN = {0010-4124}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000259559200007&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.1215/-60-3-290}, Key = {fds286184} } @article{fds286176, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Beyond liberal Utopia: Freedom as the problem of modernity}, Journal = {European Romantic Review}, Volume = {19}, Number = {2}, Pages = {83-103}, Publisher = {Informa UK Limited}, Year = {2008}, Month = {April}, ISSN = {1050-9585}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10509580802030243}, Abstract = {This essay critiques the concept of the punctual or autonomous self that served as the foundation of classical liberalism and its moral philosophy, beginning in the work of A. Smith, T. Paine, and I. Kant. Grounded in the language of rights, personal liberty, and rational self-possession, the modern individual is paradoxically characterized as a unique agent and as formally equivalent to all other such beings. Furthermore, its political and epistemological claims rest on unexamined assumptions about freedom that would be severely challenged by the pessimistic turn of much nineteenth-century literary and philosophical narrative.}, Doi = {10.1080/10509580802030243}, Key = {fds286176} } @article{fds286138, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Review of Leon Chai, "Romantic Theory: Forms of Reflexivity in the Revolutionary Era"}, Journal = {Comparative Literature}, Volume = {60}, Number = {3}, Pages = {290-94}, Year = {2008}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/CompLit-ChaiReview.pdf}, Key = {fds286138} } @article{fds286173, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {From Autonomous Subjects to Self-Regulating Structures: Rationality and Development in German Idealism}, Pages = {101-122}, Publisher = {BLACKWELL PUBLISHING LTD}, Year = {2007}, Month = {November}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9780470996607.ch7}, Doi = {10.1002/9780470996607.ch7}, Key = {fds286173} } @article{fds286175, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Of ends and endings: Teleological and variational models of romantic narrative}, Journal = {European Romantic Review}, Volume = {18}, Number = {2}, Pages = {231-241}, Publisher = {Informa UK Limited}, Year = {2007}, Month = {Spring}, ISSN = {1050-9585}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10509580701297984}, Abstract = {This essay sketches the antithesis between a teleological and a variational model of development (Bildung) in nineteenth-century thought, with a particular focus on narrative. I argue that, in the course of that century, the initially dynamic logic of Bildung is gradually vanquished by an institutional model that shifts away from Goethe's contingent, open-ended logic of development and towards a notion of Bildung as the virtual and soon canonical property of information.}, Doi = {10.1080/10509580701297984}, Key = {fds286175} } @article{fds286188, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {The philosophy of Shipwreck: Gnosticism, skepticism, and Coleridge's catastrophic modernity}, Journal = {MLN - Modern Language Notes}, Volume = {122}, Number = {5}, Pages = {949-1004}, Publisher = {Johns Hopkins University Press}, Year = {2007}, Month = {Winter}, ISSN = {0026-7910}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000253608200001&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.1353/mln.2008.0042}, Key = {fds286188} } @article{fds286136, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Review of The Wordsworthian Enlightenment, ed. Helen R. Elam & Frances Ferguson (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 2005)}, Journal = {Romantic Circles}, Year = {2007}, url = {http://www.rc.umd.edu/reviews/}, Key = {fds286136} } @article{fds286137, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Review of George S. Williamson, The Longing for Myth in Germany: Religion and Aesthetic Culture from Romanticism to Nietzsche (Chicago: U of Chicago Press)}, Journal = {European Romantic Review}, Volume = {18}, Number = {3}, Pages = {439-44}, Year = {2007}, Month = {Spring}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/ERR-WilliamsonReview.pdf}, Key = {fds286137} } @article{fds286150, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Beyond the Suburbs of the Mind: The Political and Aesthetic Economy of the Body in Malthus and Wordsworth}, Journal = {South Atlantic Quarterly}, Volume = {95}, Pages = {629-69}, Year = {2007}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/SAQ1996.pdf}, Key = {fds286150} } @article{fds286157, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Beyond Liberal Utopia: Freedom in the Nineteenth Century}, Journal = {European Romantic Review}, Volume = {19}, Number = {1}, Year = {2007}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/ERR2008-Essay.pdf}, Key = {fds286157} } @article{fds286158, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {The Melancholy Gift: Freedom in Nineteenth-Century Thought}, Journal = {Romantic Praxis}, Year = {2007}, url = {http://www.rc.umd.edu/praxis/philcult/pfau/pfau.html}, Key = {fds286158} } @article{fds365836, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Editor’s Introduction: Medium and Message in German Modernism}, Journal = {Modernist Cultures}, Volume = {1}, Number = {2}, Pages = {69-71}, Year = {2005}, Month = {October}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/E2041102209000069}, Doi = {10.3366/E2041102209000069}, Key = {fds365836} } @article{fds365837, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {From Mediation to Medium: Aesthetic and Anthropological Dimensions of the Image (Bild) and the Crisis of Bildung in German Modernism}, Journal = {Modernist Cultures}, Volume = {1}, Number = {2}, Pages = {141-180}, Year = {2005}, Month = {October}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/E2041102209000094}, Doi = {10.3366/E2041102209000094}, Key = {fds365837} } @article{fds286111, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Rationality as Bewegung: From Kantian Autonomy to Hegel’s Self-Regulating System}, Booktitle = {The Blackwell Companion to European Romanticism}, Publisher = {Blackwell}, Editor = {Ferber, M}, Year = {2005}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/EuropRomant-Essay.pdf}, Key = {fds286111} } @article{fds286118, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Nineteenth-Century Lyric German Poetry}, Volume = {9}, Series = {vol 9 of Camden House History of German Literature}, Pages = {201-242}, Booktitle = {Camden House History of German Literature, volume 9}, Publisher = {Camden House}, Editor = {Koelb, C and Downing, E}, Year = {2005}, Month = {Spring}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/CamdenHouse-Essay.pdf}, Key = {fds286118} } @article{fds286119, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {From Autonomous Subjects to Self-Regulating Structures: Rationality and Development in German Idealism}, Series = {Blackwell Companions}, Booktitle = {in "A Companion to European Romanticism"}, Publisher = {Blackwell}, Editor = {Ferber, M}, Year = {2004}, Key = {fds286119} } @article{fds286189, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {The Rhetoric of Romantic Prophecy}, Journal = {Comparative Literature}, Volume = {55}, Number = {4}, Pages = {360-363}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2003}, Month = {September}, ISSN = {0010-4124}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000188743200009&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.1215/-55-4-360}, Key = {fds286189} } @article{fds286180, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Conjuring history: Lyric cliché, conservative fantasy, and traumatic awakening in German romanticism}, Journal = {South Atlantic Quarterly}, Volume = {102}, Number = {1}, Pages = {53-92}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2003}, Month = {Winter}, ISSN = {0038-2876}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000181913500003&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.1215/00382876-102-1-53}, Key = {fds286180} } @article{fds286133, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Review of Angela Esterhammer’s The Romantic Performative: Language and Action in British and German Romanticism}, Journal = {Criticism 44.1 (2003): 72-76}, Publisher = {Stanford: Stanford UP, 2000}, Year = {2003}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/Criticism-EsterhammerReview.pdf}, Key = {fds286133} } @article{fds286134, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Review of Ian Balfour’s The Rhetoric of Romantic Prophecy}, Journal = {Comparative Literature}, Publisher = {Stanford: Stanford UP, 2002}, Year = {2003}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/CompLit-BalfourReview.pdf}, Key = {fds286134} } @article{fds286135, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Review of Emerson R. Marks, Taming the Chaos: English Poetic Diction Theory since the Renaissance}, Journal = {MLQ (2003) .}, Volume = {60}, Number = {2}, Pages = {265-67}, Year = {2003}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/MLQ-MarksReview.pdf}, Key = {fds286135} } @article{fds286155, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {"From Autonomous Subjects to Self-Regulating Structures: Rationality and Development in German Idealism"}, Publisher = {Blackwell}, Editor = {Romanticism, BCT}, Year = {2003}, Key = {fds286155} } @article{fds286192, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {The Romantic Performative: Language and Action in British and German Romanticism (review)}, Journal = {Criticism}, Volume = {44}, Number = {1}, Pages = {72-76}, Publisher = {Project MUSE}, Year = {2002}, ISSN = {0011-1589}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000179452200005&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.1353/crt.2002.0009}, Key = {fds286192} } @article{fds305346, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Nachtigallenwahnsinn and Rabbinismus: Heine’s Literary Provocation to German-Jewish Cultural Identity}, Pages = {427-44}, Booktitle = {Romantic Poetry: Comparative History of Literatures in European Languages}, Publisher = {John Benjamins}, Editor = {Esterhammer, A}, Year = {2002}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/CompEuropLit2002-Essay.pdf}, Key = {fds305346} } @article{fds286185, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {The voice of critique: Aesthetic cognition after Kant}, Journal = {Modern Language Quarterly}, Volume = {60}, Number = {3}, Pages = {321-352}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {1999}, Month = {September}, ISSN = {0026-7929}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000085015400002&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.1215/00267929-60-3-321}, Key = {fds286185} } @article{fds286190, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Taming the Chaos: English Poetic Diction Theory Since the Renaissance}, Journal = {Modern Language Quarterly}, Volume = {60}, Number = {2}, Pages = {265-267}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {1999}, Month = {June}, ISSN = {0026-7929}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000081247100006&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.1215/00267929-60-2-265}, Key = {fds286190} } @article{fds286132, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Review of Terence A. Hoagwood’s Politics, Philosophy, and the Production of Romantic Texts}, Journal = {Studies in Romanticism}, Volume = {38}, Number = {4}, Pages = {692-98}, Publisher = {Carbondale: Northern Illinois UP, 1996}, Year = {1999}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/SIR-HoagwoodReview.pdf}, Key = {fds286132} } @article{fds286187, Author = {Pfau, T and Hoagwood, TA}, Title = {Politics, Philosophy, and the Production of Romantic Texts}, Journal = {Studies in Romanticism}, Volume = {38}, Number = {4}, Pages = {692-692}, Publisher = {JSTOR}, Year = {1999}, ISSN = {0039-3762}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000085940300011&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.2307/25601422}, Key = {fds286187} } @article{fds286153, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Reading beyond Redemption: Historicism, Irony, and the Lessons of Romanticism}, Journal = {Critical Introduction to Lessons of Romanticism, Duke UP}, Pages = {1-37}, Editor = {Pfau, T and Gleckner, RF}, Year = {1998}, Key = {fds286153} } @article{fds286110, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Paranoia Historicized: Legal Fantasy, Social Change, and Satiric Meta-Commentary in the 1794 Treason Trials}, Pages = {221 pages}, Booktitle = {Romanticism, Radicalism, and the Press}, Publisher = {Wayne State University Press}, Editor = {Behrendt, SC}, Year = {1997}, ISBN = {9780814325681}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/Paranoia1996-Essay.pdf}, Key = {fds286110} } @article{fds286151, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Paranoian Historicized: Legal Fantasy, Social Change, and Satiric Meta-Commentary in the 1794 Treason Trials}, Booktitle = {Romanticism, Radicalism, and the Press}, Publisher = {Detroit: Wayne State UP}, Editor = {Behrendt, SC}, Year = {1997}, Key = {fds286151} } @article{fds286152, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Bringing about the Past: Prophetic Memory in Kant, Godwin, and Blake}, Journal = {Romantic Proxis}, Year = {1997}, url = {http://www.rc.umd.edu/praxis/conspiracy/contcs.html}, Key = {fds286152} } @article{fds305345, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Paranoian Historicized: Legal Fantasy, Social Change, and Satiric Meta-Commentary in the 1794 Treason Trials}, Booktitle = {Romanticism, Radicalism, and the Press}, Publisher = {Detroit: Wayne State UP}, Editor = {Behrendt, SC}, Year = {1997}, Key = {fds305345} } @article{fds365174, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {'Positive Infamy': Surveillance, Ascendancy, and Pedagogyin Andrew Bell and Mary Wollstonecraft}, Journal = {Romanticism}, Volume = {2}, Number = {2}, Pages = {220-242}, Year = {1996}, Month = {January}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/rom.1996.2.2.220}, Doi = {10.3366/rom.1996.2.2.220}, Key = {fds365174} } @article{fds286149, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {'Searching their Hearts': Romantic Pedagogy, Social Ascendancy, and the Pleasures of Surveillance in Andrew Bell and Mary Wollstonecraft}, Journal = {Romanticism}, Volume = {2}, Number = {ii}, Pages = {220-46}, Year = {1996}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/Romanticism1996-Essay.pdf}, Key = {fds286149} } @article{fds286193, Author = {Pfau, T and Kercsmar, RR}, Title = {Rhetorical and cultural dissolution in Romanticism - Introduction}, Journal = {SOUTH ATLANTIC QUARTERLY}, Volume = {95}, Number = {3}, Pages = {571-573}, Year = {1996}, ISSN = {0038-2876}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:A1996VQ77100001&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Key = {fds286193} } @article{fds286194, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {''Beyond the suburbs of the mind'': The political and aesthetic disciplining of the Romantic body}, Journal = {SOUTH ATLANTIC QUARTERLY}, Volume = {95}, Number = {3}, Pages = {629-669}, Year = {1996}, Month = {Summer}, ISSN = {0038-2876}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:A1996VQ77100004&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Key = {fds286194} } @article{fds286131, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Review of Martha Woodmansee’s The Author, Art, and the Market: Rereading the History of Aesthetics}, Journal = {Studies in Romanticism}, Volume = {34}, Pages = {490-95}, Publisher = {New York: Columbia UP}, Year = {1995}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/SiR-WoodmanseeReview.pdf}, Key = {fds286131} } @article{fds286148, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Immediacy and Dissolution: Reflections on Moral Theory and the Logic of Critical Discourse}, Booktitle = {Intersections: Nineteenth-Century Philosophy and Contemporary Theory}, Publisher = {Albany: State U of New York P}, Editor = {Rajan, T and Clark, D}, Year = {1995}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/Intersections1996-Essay.pdf}, Key = {fds286148} } @article{fds286181, Author = {Pfau, T and Woodmansee, M}, Title = {The Author, Art, and the Market: Rereading the History of Aesthetics}, Journal = {Studies in Romanticism}, Volume = {34}, Number = {3}, Pages = {490-490}, Publisher = {JSTOR}, Year = {1995}, ISSN = {0039-3762}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:A1995TV99600011&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.2307/25601133}, Key = {fds286181} } @article{fds305344, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Immediacy and Dissolution: Reflections on Moral Theory and the Logic of Critical Discourse}, Booktitle = {Intersections: Nineteenth-Century Philosophy and Contemporary Theory}, Publisher = {Albany: State U of New York P}, Editor = {Rajan, T and Clark, D}, Year = {1995}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/Intersections1996-Essay.pdf}, Key = {fds305344} } @article{fds286195, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {"Elementary Feelings" and "Distorted Language": The Pragmatics of Culture in Wordsworth's Preface to Lyrical Ballads}, Journal = {New Literary History}, Volume = {24}, Number = {1}, Pages = {125-125}, Publisher = {JSTOR}, Year = {1993}, ISSN = {0028-6087}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:A1993KL01400010&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.2307/469275}, Key = {fds286195} } @article{fds286147, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {The Pragmatics of Genre: Moral Theory and Lyric Authorship in Hegel and Wordsworth}, Journal = {Cardozo Arts and Entertainment Review}, Volume = {10}, Number = {ii}, Pages = {397-422}, Year = {1992}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/CardozoAELaw1992-Essay.pdf}, Key = {fds286147} } @article{fds6797, Title = {Tropes of Desire: Figuring the 'Insufficient Void' of Self-Consciousness in Shelley's Epipsychidion}, Journal = {Keats-Shelley Journal}, Volume = {XL}, Pages = {99-126}, Year = {1991}, Key = {fds6797} } @article{fds286191, Author = {PFAU, T}, Title = {TROPES OF DESIRE, FIGURING THE INSUFFICIENT VOID OF SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS IN SHELLEY 'EPIPSYCHIDION'}, Journal = {KEATS-SHELLEY JOURNAL}, Volume = {40}, Pages = {99-126}, Year = {1991}, ISSN = {0453-4387}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:A1991GW59600007&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Key = {fds286191} } @article{fds286108, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Review of Wordsworth's Art of Allusion by Edward Stein}, Journal = {Studies in Romanticism}, Volume = {29}, Pages = {496-499}, Year = {1990}, ISSN = {0039-3762}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/SiR-SteinReview.pdf}, Key = {fds286108} } @article{fds286129, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Review of Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe and Jean Luc Nancy’s The Literary Absolute}, Journal = {Studies in Romanticism}, Volume = {29}, Number = {2}, Pages = {309-13}, Year = {1990}, url = {http://http/www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/SiR-LacoueNancyReview.pdf}, Key = {fds286129} } @article{fds286130, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Review of Edwin Stein’s Woodworth’s Art of Illusion}, Journal = {Studies in Romanticism}, Volume = {29}, Pages = {496-99}, Year = {1990}, Key = {fds286130} } @article{fds286146, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Immediacy and the Text: Friedrich Schleiermacher’s Theory of Style and Interpretation}, Journal = {Journal of the History of Ideas}, Volume = {51}, Number = {i}, Pages = {51-73}, Year = {1990}, Key = {fds286146} } @article{fds286128, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Review of Winfried Menninghaus’s Unendliche Verdopplung: Die Grundlegung der fruhromantischen Kunsttheorie im Begriff absoluter Selbstreflexion}, Journal = {MLN (German Issue)}, Volume = {104}, Number = {3}, Pages = {729-33}, Year = {1989}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/MLN-MenninghausReview.pdf}, Key = {fds286128} } @article{fds286145, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Thinking before Totality: Kritik, Ubersetzung, and the Language of Interpretation in the early Walter Benjamin}, Journal = {MLN (Comparative Literature Issue)}, Volume = {103}, Number = {5}, Pages = {1072-97}, Year = {1988}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/MLN1988-Essay.pdf}, Key = {fds286145} } @article{fds286127, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Review of Andrej Warminski’s Readings in Interpretation: Holderlin, Hegel, and Heidegger}, Journal = {MLN (Comparative Literature Issue)}, Volume = {102}, Number = {5}, Pages = {1212-15}, Year = {1987}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/MLN-WarminskiReview.pdf}, Key = {fds286127} } @article{fds286144, Author = {Pfau, T}, Title = {Rhetoric and the Existential: Romantic Studies and the Question of the Subject}, Journal = {Studies in Romanticism}, Volume = {26}, Pages = {487-512}, Year = {1987}, url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/secmod/pfaucv/SiR1987.pdf}, Key = {fds286144} }