Peter Gay is Sterling Professor of History Emeritus, Yale University, and former director of the New York Public Library Center for Scholars and Writers. He is the author of dozens of books and has won numerous awards for his scholarship, including the National Book Award and a Gold Medal from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He lives in New York City.
"With his usual deft, even chatty style, Peter Gay leads us through
the paradoxes of the major European Romantics and documents their
impact on Modernism. There is no page in his book that is not
thoughtful and witty."—Geoffrey Hartman, author of The Eighth Day:
Poems Old and New
*Geoffrey Hartman*
“In this instructive and insightful book, a capstone to a career
that has now spanned more than six decades, Peter Gay muses with
characteristic brilliance and learning about the deep connections
between Romanticism and Modernism, and how they have shaped the way
the modern age thinks and feels.”—David A. Bell, Princeton
University
*David A. Bell*
“With Peter Gay's characteristic elegance and erudition, Why the
Romantics Matter celebrates the power of Romanticism from the late
eighteenth century to the early twentieth—a movement whose energies
are inseparable from the self-image of men and women today.”—David
Bromwich, Yale University
*David Bromwich*
‘Until now the Romantic period was almost the only one about which
prolific cultural historian Gay (now in his 90’s) had not written.
Part of the Yale Why X Matters series, his erudite and
idiosyncratic narrative argues the importance of Beethoven, Wilde
and Kadinsky (his favoured exemplars, among many) to the developing
story of art.’—Peter Swaab, the Sunday Telegraph.
*The Sunday Telegraph*
“Highly readable.”—Robert Fulford, National Post
*National Post*
Winner of the 2015 Jean-Pierre Barricelli Prize given by the
International Conference on Romanticism.
*International Conference on Romanticism*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |