Pirholt 'brings together semiotics and politics' (p. 178) in Romanticism in a hitherto unseen way. He has written a brief, yet difficult book that in its best places -- these are many -- recalls Bengt Algot Sorensen's seminal work on aesthetic theory in the eighteenth century.
ORBIS LITTERARUM
What [the] ancient intellectual tradition [of mimesis], and later Goethe and the Romantics (whose work Pirholt compellingly explores), all have in common is the priority -- and the differing inflections -- they give to the imagination. JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN STUDIES Pirholt . . . shows his brilliance . . . with his virtuosic explications de texte. His 'intertextual' sense must also be emphasized, for instance in his subtle sounding of Brentano's reworking of Ovid's myth of Narcissus and Echo.
GERMAN STUDIES REVIEW