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Etymology of the word: romance

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Title: Etymology of the word: romance


1
Etymology of the word romance
  • c.1300, "story of a hero's adventures,"
  • also (c.1330), from O.Fr. romanz "verse
    narrative," originally an adverb,
  • "to write in a Romance language"
  • "of or in the Roman style,"
  • The connecting notion is that medieval vernacular
    tales were usually about chivalric adventure.
  • Literary sense extended by 1667 to "a love
    story."
  • Meaning "adventurous quality" first recorded 1801
  • that of "love affair, idealistic quality" is
    from 1916.
  • The verb meaning "court as a lover" is from 1942.

2
Romanticism1800-1850
  • In reaction to the period known as the
    Enlightenment (Deism), when science and cold
    reason were exalted, many artists and thinkers
    began to embrace a philosophy that worshipped the
    imagination
  • our emotions help the external world make sense,
    and they give it meaning
  • portrays the uncommon
  • extraordinary people in unusual circumstances
    (Star Wars trilogy)

3
  • Nature was God and was very good
  • Original sin was mans separation from Nature
  • Human intuition replaced the Holy Spirit
  • Photo courtesy of srqpix's photostream

4
  • Truth and the good, although changing, are
    relatively durable
  • EXAMPLES
  • James Fenimore Cooper
  • Washington Irving

5
Frontier Hero
  • Traits of a frontier hero
  • Coarseness and strength
  • Acuteness, inquisitiveness
  • Practical, inventive
  • Quick to find methods around problems
  • Masterful grasp of the material world
  • Restless, nervous energy
  • Dominant individualism
  • Buoyancy and exuberance
  • List compiled by Frederick Jackson Turner

6
SUB-GENRES of Romanticism Gothic/Romantic
Pessimism
  • Use of supernatural
  • Dark landscapes, depressed characters
  • EXAMPLE
  • Edgar Allan Poe
  • Image courtesy of nolandgrab.org/archives/frank_ge
    hry/

7
Romanticism and Poe
  • Rejection of rational in favor of emotional
  • Setting in obscure, unknown place
  • Emphasis on the strange, bizarre, unusual or
    unexpected
  • Idealization of love
  • Love as something pure and noble that will last
    beyond death

8
Poes Contributions to literature
  • Perfected the short story
  • Length short enough to be read in one sitting
  • Inspired future detective stories
  • Single emotional effect one particular mood
    should dominate
  • Poetry mood is melancholy usually produced by
    the death of a beautiful woman
  • Fiction mood is horror or terror

9
SUB-GENRES of Romanticism Transcendentalism
  • optimism - believed that man was basically good
  • individualism
  • plain living
  • EXAMPLES
  • Ralph Waldo Emerson
  • Henry David Thoreau

10
Transcendentalist beliefs
  • individual should act according to their
    innermost personal beliefs rather than follow the
    dictates of society
  • each person is inherently good, capable of making
    rational decisions and is worthy of respect

11
Transcendentalists of the day were angered by
  • social conformity
  • materialism
  • lack of moral commitment

Photos courtesy of www.marclamonthill.com/date/2
007/10 and the Seattle Examiner
12
Ralph Waldo Emerson
  • led New England Transcendental Movement
  • advocated self-reliance, self-trust, and
    individuality
  • Trust thyself every heart vibrates to that iron
    string.

13
Henry David Thoreau
  • Famous follower of Emerson
  • Walden Pond experiment
  • Testing transcendental ideals
  • Lived in a cabin he built
  • Stayed 26 months

14
  • Gathered material for Walden, the book that
    immortalized him
  • I went to the woods because I wished to live
    deliberately, to front only the essential facts
    of life and see if I could not learn what it had
    to teach, and not when I came to die discover
    that I had not lived.

15
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16
SUB-GENRES of Romanticism Anti-Transcendentalism
  • disagreed with Transcendentalist beliefs
  • the inherent goodness of man
  • the worship of nature
  • EXAMPLES
  • Nathaniel Hawthorne
  • Herman Melville

17
Hawthorne
  • Ancestors
  • Major William Hathorne active role in
    persecution of Quakers
  • Judge John Hathorne one of the judges ordering
    the execution of 20 persons during Salem witch
    trials

18
Hawthorne cont.
  • Religion
  • sympathized with many Puritan values and
    viewpoints
  • rejected faith in Christ and trust in the Bible
  • chose moral realism over optimistic naiveté
    (transcendentalism)
  • believed in the depravity of man (original sin)
  • believed that evil leaves its mark on generation
    after generation

19
Hawthorne cont.
  • Writing
  • 12 year period of isolation (age 21-33)
  • human isolation was a theme he explored again and
    again
  • The Scarlet Letter a story of sin and guilt
  • The mysteries of the human heart and the question
    of human evil are the true subjects of
    Hawthornes writing

20
Hawthorne cont.
  • Writing Style Romantic Pessimism
  • Allegory a story with a literal and an implied
    level of meaning
  • Ambiguity doubleness or inconclusiveness of
    meaning (unresolved puzzles)
  • Ambivalence coexistence of conflicting feelings
    or attitudes of an author or a reader (Puritanism
    love/hate relationship)

21
Realism 1865-1914
  • Historical context
  • A. Civil War brings demand for a "truer" type of
    literature that doesn't idealize people or places
  • B. People in society defined by "class"
    materialism
  • C. Reflect ideas of Darwin (survival of the
    fittest) and Marx (how money and class structure
    control a nation)

22
  • focused on the details of ordinary lives,
    refusing to idealize life
  • Reality is a world with no purpose, no meaning
    (beyond what can be seen) and no order
  • Use terms such as dignity and human rights
    and power

23
  • Bad things happen all the time to good people
  • There is no God or force for good
  • Tell it like it is
  • Still sought some meaning as long as it was
    something that could be seen or felt

24
  • Most famous woman of her day
  • Uncle Toms Cabin
  • Most influential book of the 19th Century
  • First to sell one million copies
  • One of the most effective documents of
    propaganda helped fuel the Civil War

25
  • Walt Whitman
  • First publication of Leaves of Grass stirred up
    controversy
  • Not only the content but his liberties with
    poetic tradition
  • Invented FREE VERSE
  • Simplicity better than fanciness
  • Subject matter as broad as life itself

26
  • Diction is in the natural vernacular
  • Not heightened or poetic tone may be comic,
    satiric, or matter of fact
  • Use of symbolism is controlled and limited
  • Realists depend more on use of images
  • Objectivity in presentation
  • Becomes even more important
  • Obvious authorial comments or intrusions diminish
    as the century progresses

27
Romanticism Realism
emphasize the ideal characters tend to be clearly heroic or clearly evil and bigger than life, they tend to represent ideal types, they are extraordinary environments can include supernatural settings or may include ambiguously "unreal" events and circumstances language tends towards the formal and/or poetic emphasize the real main characters tend to not be "heroes," they are average people, common people, more complex, flawed, and imperfect environments are natural and ordinary language includes realistic dialects and more common speech 
28
  • Samuel Langhorne Clemens widely thought to be
    the greatest American humorist and one of our
    greatest novelists
  • Used vernacular, exaggeration, deadpan narrator
    to create humor
  • Adventures of Tom Sawyer
  • Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (one of Americas
    most influential novels)

29
Naturalism1865-1953
  • If God exists, He is ineffective
  • God is either uninterested or downright mean
  • How could anyone who experienced World War I
    believe in a loving, living God?
  • Nature is unpredictable and evil

30
  • Human life is transient as are Truth and Good
  • There is no final authority
  • EXAMPLES
  • Jack London
  • Stephen Crane
  • A man said to the universe "Sir, I exist!" 
    "However," replied the universe, "The fact has
    not created in me A sense of obligation."

31
Local Colorists1865-1895
  • fiction and poetry that focuses on the
    characters, dialect, customs, topography, and
    other features particular to a specific region
  • contributed to the reunification of the country
    after the Civil War and to the building of
    national identity

32
Setting
  • emphasis frequently on nature and its
    limitations frequently remote and inaccessible
  • setting is integral to the story and may
    sometimes become a character in itself

Image courtesy of www.holidaystowales.co.uk
33
Characters
  • tend to be concerned with the character of the
    district or region rather than with individuals
  • characters may become character types, sometimes
    quaint or stereotypical
  • characters are marked by their adherence to the
    old ways, by dialect, and by particular
    personality traits central to the region

34
Plots
  • It has been said that "nothing happens" in local
    color stories by women authors, and often very
    little does happen
  • may include lots of storytelling and revolve
    around the community and its rituals

35
Themes
  • Many local color stories share an antipathy
    (feeling of dislike) to change and a certain
    degree of nostalgia (fondness) for an always-past
    golden age
  • EXAMPLES
  • Walt Whitman
  • Emily Dickinson
  • Kate Chopin

36
  • Realism focused on details of ordinary lives
    refusing to idealize life
  • Local Color located fiction and poetry in
    specific geographical location emphasized
    landscape, customs, dialect, dress, etc.
  • Naturalism extended realism further seeking to
    present what the author sees w/o making judgments

37
Genre Perceived the individual as Romantics a
god Realists simply a person Naturalists a
helpless object
38
Modernism 1900-1940
  • Rejected traditional themes and subject matter
  • Focused on alienated individuals rather than
    heroes of society
  • Themes of impermanence and change
  • Use of understatement and irony to reveal
    important emotions and ideas

Image courtesy of www.deanfan4ever.com
39
  • Use of stream-of-consciousness technique to
    further plot by showing the conflicts from both
    inside and outside the characters
  • EXAMPLES
  • T.S. Eliot John Steinbeck
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald Ernest Hemingway
  • Robert Frost Carl Sandburg
  • e. e. cummings Langston Hughes
  • Zora Neale Hurston
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