Historian Simon Schama explores the enduring and powerful legacy that the Romantics have left on the modern world.Historian Simon Schama explores the enduring and powerful legacy that the Romantics have left on the modern world.Historian Simon Schama explores the enduring and powerful legacy that the Romantics have left on the modern world.
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Having very much enjoyed Simon Schama's very long but very well-paced "A History of Britain", I was disappointed by this long-winded and dubious attempt to connect the Romantics to the present day.
Simon Schama's thesis: "You may think our modern world was born yesterday. But it wasn't. Not even the day before yesterday. Democracy in the streets and the rise of people power... the raw passion of national belonging... good and bad... our obsession with the self, with our own psychology and the dark recesses of the human mind... even our love of nature, with our concern for the future of the planet... all of this was the creation of the Romantics."
As another (more knowledgeable) reviewer writes: "[...] the first episode narrative essentially suggests the Romantics invented the right to protest, completely overlooking all of history's previous protests during feudalism [...]".
Not only am I not convinced that Simon Schama's thesis is correct, but an argument that could have been made in a single programme of at most 90 minutes, is stretched out to 3 hours. For example, the analysis of The Raft of the Medusa by Théodore Géricault just goes on and on and adds no real weight to Simon Schama's thesis.
This feels very much like it was an attempt to produce 3 hours of programming, rather than a meaningful and impartial attempt to assess the relevance of the Romantics to life in the present day.
Simon Schama's thesis: "You may think our modern world was born yesterday. But it wasn't. Not even the day before yesterday. Democracy in the streets and the rise of people power... the raw passion of national belonging... good and bad... our obsession with the self, with our own psychology and the dark recesses of the human mind... even our love of nature, with our concern for the future of the planet... all of this was the creation of the Romantics."
As another (more knowledgeable) reviewer writes: "[...] the first episode narrative essentially suggests the Romantics invented the right to protest, completely overlooking all of history's previous protests during feudalism [...]".
Not only am I not convinced that Simon Schama's thesis is correct, but an argument that could have been made in a single programme of at most 90 minutes, is stretched out to 3 hours. For example, the analysis of The Raft of the Medusa by Théodore Géricault just goes on and on and adds no real weight to Simon Schama's thesis.
This feels very much like it was an attempt to produce 3 hours of programming, rather than a meaningful and impartial attempt to assess the relevance of the Romantics to life in the present day.
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