Romanticism in a sentence as a noun

Yes, there's a romanticism of the culture of being cutting edge.

My geek romanticism just happens to look a bit further back.

Thanks,It helps that I see some romanticism in shipping physical goods.

Author in his romanticism sees how these people get the work done and how everybody looks up to them - while there in the spotlight.

Men were/are afforded to be outcasts or underdogs, socially; there's some romanticism to it. I'm not sure the same has applied for women, but maybe that's changing.

On the gun rights side, there's often a romanticism about the firearm that's just as emotional and absent the view of cold rationality.

Kindly dead the romanticism of starving and being pushed to the brink...realize the first, last, and only thing that matters is providing a solution for a human want.

This alone doesn't fix anything but for me it's important to not fall into the romanticism of depression as if it's deep and meaningful or "more real" than being happy.

Saying they aren't because others toil in obscurity is some hopeless romanticism about hacker culture.

The romanticism that is attached to the suffering artist is incredibly frustrating and, I think, dangerous.

Let's not make silly romanticism about the differences between isotonic words.

Isn't this what denotes an era or school of design/architecture/art though, like realism, romanticism, bauhaus, modernism, industrialism, etc?

Individualist attempts to address systemic issues are mostly romanticism.

Romanticism definitions

noun

impractical romantic ideals and attitudes

noun

a movement in literature and art during the late 18th and early 19th centuries that celebrated nature rather than civilization; "Romanticism valued imagination and emotion over rationality"

See also: Romanticism

noun

an exciting and mysterious quality (as of a heroic time or adventure)

See also: romance