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lateromantic

Late Romantic is a term used to describe the later phase of Romanticism in both music and literature, roughly spanning the late 19th century into the early 20th century. It signals a continuation and intensification of Romantic ideals—intense emotion, personal expression, a fascination with nature, the supernatural, and national or exotic subject matter—while also giving way to the stylistic shifts that would lead to modernism. The label is not rigid, and scholars may classify works differently, with some viewing late Romanticism as a bridge to post-Romantic or early modernist approaches.

In music, late Romantic typically covers approximately the 1890s to the early decades of the 20th century.

In literature, late Romanticism persists in poetry and prose into the fin de siècle, stressing the imagination,

Overall, late Romantic represents a transitional period that preserves core Romantic sensibilities while expanding formal and

Composers
expanded
orchestras,
experimented
with
richer
chromatic
harmony,
and
pursued
expansive,
often
programmatic
or
narratively
driven
forms.
The
style
emphasizes
emotional
breadth,
individuality,
and
a
continued
belief
in
the
expressive
potential
of
traditional
tonal
centers,
even
as
new
harmonic
and
formal
ideas
emerged.
Notable
figures
often
associated
with
late
Romantic
music
include
Gustav
Mahler,
Richard
Strauss,
Pyotr
Ilyich
Tchaikovsky
(by
some
accounts),
Jean
Sibelius,
and
Sergei
Rachmaninoff,
among
others.
Their
symphonies,
operas,
tone
poems,
and
song
cycles
illustrate
the
era’s
blend
of
lush
sonorities
and
heightened
subjectivity.
inner
life,
and
the
sublime.
Authors
retain
Romantic
preoccupations
with
nature,
emotion,
and
individual
genius
while
engaging
with
broader
cultural
shifts,
such
as
symbolism,
decadence,
and
a
move
toward
realism.
The
result
is
a
literary
late
Romantic
strand
that
helped
shape
later
modernist
sensibilities.
thematic
possibilities,
influencing
subsequent
artistic
movements.