ROMANTIC PERIOD IN ENGLISH LITERATURE: 1785-1830 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 26
About This Presentation
Title:

ROMANTIC PERIOD IN ENGLISH LITERATURE: 1785-1830

Description:

Title: ROMANTIC PERIOD IN ENGLISH LITERATURE: 1785-1830 Author: mckennmm Last modified by: PA Department of Education Classrooms for the Future Created Date – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:390
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: mck47
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: ROMANTIC PERIOD IN ENGLISH LITERATURE: 1785-1830


1
ROMANTIC PERIOD IN ENGLISH LITERATURE 1785-1830
  • A BRIEF OVERVIEW

2
SOCIAL POLITICAL CONTEXT
  • A PERIOD OF GREAT CHANGE IN ENGLAND
  • AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY WITH POWERFUL LANDHOLDING
    ARISTOCRACY WAS GIVING WAY TO MODERN INDUSTRIAL
    NATION OF LARGE-SCALE EMPLOYERS AND A GROWING,
    RESTLESS MIDDLE CLASS.

3
PERIOD OF CHANGE
  • AMERICAN FRENCH REVOLUTIONS WERE HUGELY
    IMPORTANT ELEMENTS OF THE POLITICAL LANDSCAPE.
  • THREATS TO EXISTING SOCIAL STRUCTURE WERE BEING
    POSED BY NEW, REVOLUTIONARY IDEAS.

4
PERIOD OF CHANGE
  • A TIME OF HARSH POLITICAL REPRESSION IN ENGLAND,
    IN SPITE OF NEED FOR CHANGES BROUGHT ABOUT BY THE
    INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION.

5
PERIOD OF CHANGE
  • MILL TOWNS GREW
  • THE LANDSCAPE WAS INCREASINGLY SUBDIVIDED
  • FACTORIES SPEWED POLLUTION OVER SLUMS
  • THE POPULATION WAS INCREASINGLY DIVIDED INTO
    RICH POOR.

6
PERIOD OF CHANGE
  • REFORMS DID NOT OCCUR BECAUSE THE PHILOSOPHY OF
    LAISSEZ-FAIRE (LET ALONE) PREVAILED.

7
LACK OF REFORM
  • CONSEQUENCES OF THE LACK OF REFORM
  • LOW WAGES
  • HORRIBLE WORKING CONDITIONS
  • LARGE-SCALE EMPLOYMENT OF WOMEN CHILDREN IN
    BRUTALLY HARD OCCUPATIONS (SUCH AS COAL MINING).

8
LACK OF REFORM
  • IN THE FACE OF TECHNOLOGICAL UNEMPLOYMENT
    POVERTY, WORKERS (WHO COULD NOT VOTE) HAD TO
    RESORT TO PROTESTS RIOTS, INCURRING FURTHER
    REPRESSION.
  • BUT WHILE THE POOR SUFFERED, THE LEISURE CLASS
    PROSPERED.

9
PLIGHT OF WOMEN
  • TREATMENT OF WOMEN OF ALL CLASSES
  • WERE REGARDED AS INFERIOR TO MEN
  • WERE UNDEREDUCATED
  • HAD LIMITED VOCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES
  • WERE SUBJECT TO A STRICT CODE OF SEXUAL BEHAVIOR
  • HAD ALMOST NO LEGAL RIGHTS.
  • OVERALL, THE CAUSE OF WOMENS RIGHTS WAS LARGELY
    IGNORED.

10
ROMANTICISM IN LITERATURE
  • TERM ROMANTICISM IS DIFFICULT TO DEFINE BECAUSE
    OF THE VARIETY OF LITERARY ACHIEVEMENTS, AND
    WRITERS OF THE PERIOD WERE ONLY LATER LABELLED
    ROMANTIC.

11
ROMANTICISM IN LITERATURE
  • BUT MANY WRITERS HAD A SENSE OF THE SPIRIT OF
    THE AGE
  • A GREAT RELEASE OF CREATIVE ENERGY WAS OCCURING
    AS ACCOMPANIMENT TO POLITICAL SOCIAL
    REVOLUTION.
  • IT WAS SEEN AS AN AGE OF NEW BEGINNINGS
    LIMITLESS POSSIBILITIES.

12
POETIC THEORY PRACTICE
  • WILLIAM WORDSWORTH TRIED TO ARTICULATE THE SPIRIT
    OF THE NEW POETRY IN THE PREFACE TO LYRICAL
    BALLADS (1800, 1802).

13
CONCEPT OF POETRY, THE POET
  • POETRY WAS SEEN AS THE SPONTANEOUS OVERFLOW OF
    POWERFUL FEELINGS THE ESSENCE OF POETRY WAS THE
    MIND, EMOTIONS, IMAGINATION OF THE POET (NOT
    THE OUTER WORLD).
  • GREATLY CONTRASTED WITH THE REASON, BALANCE, AND
    LOGIC THAT CHARACTERIZED THE LITERATURE OF THE
    ENLIGHTENMENT.

14
POETRY THE POET
  • FIRST-PERSON LYRIC POEM BECAME THE MAJOR ROMANTIC
    LITERARY FORM, WITH I OFTEN REFERRING DIRECTLY
    TO THE POET.
  • THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE SELF BECAME A MAJOR TOPIC
    OF ROMANTIC POETRY.

15
POETRY THE POET
  • POETS OFTEN SAW THEMSELVES AS PROPHETS IN A TIME
    OF CRISIS, REVISING THE PROMISE OF DIVINE
    REDEMPTION IN TERMS OF A HEAVEN ON EARTH.

16
POETIC SPONTANEITY, FREEDOM
  • INITIAL ACT OF POETIC COMPOSITION MUST ARISE FROM
    IMPULSE
  • FREE FROM THE RULES INHERITED FROM THE PAST
  • RELY ON INSTINCT, INTUITION, FEELING.

17
ROMANTICISM NATURE
  • ACCURATE OBSERVATION DESCRIPTION OF WILD NATURE
    BECOMES EXTREMELY IMPORTANT
  • NATURE SERVES AS A STIMULUS TO THINKING TO THE
    RESOLUTION OF PERSONAL PROBLEMS CRISES.

18
ROMANTICISM NATURE
  • LANDSCAPE WAS OFTEN GIVEN HUMAN QUALITIES OR SEEN
    AS A SYSTEM OF SYMBOLS REVEALING THE NATURE OF
    GOD.
  • CLOSENESS WITH NATURE WAS SEEN AS BRINGING OUT
    HUMANITYS INNATE GOODNESS.

19
GLORIFICATION OF THE COMMONPLACE
  • HUMBLE, RUSTIC SUBJECT MATTER PLAIN STYLE
    BECAME THE PRINCIPAL SUBJECT MEDIUM OF POETRY.
  • POETS SOUGHT TO REFRESH READERS SENSE OF WONDER
    ABOUT THE ORDINARY THINGS OF EXISTENCE, TO MAKE
    THE OLD WORLD SEEM NEW.

20
THE SUPERNATURAL STRANGE
  • MANY ROMANTIC POEMS EXPLORE THE REALM OF MYSTERY
    MAGIC
  • INCORPORATE MATERIALS FROM FOLKLORE, SUPERSTITION
  • OFTEN SET IN DISTANT OR FARAWAY PLACES.

21
THE SUPERNATURAL STRANGE
  • RENEWED INTEREST IN THE MIDDLE AGES (AND THE
    BALLAD FORM) AS A BEAUTIFUL, EXOTIC, MYSTERIOUS,
    BYGONE ERA.
  • THERE WAS ALSO GREAT INTEREST IN UNUSUAL MODES OF
    EXPERIENCE
  • VISIONARY STATES OF CONSCIOUSNESS
  • HYPNOTISM
  • DREAMS
  • DRUG-INDUCED STATES

22
INDIVIDUALISM STRIVING
  • HUMAN BEINGS WERE SEEN AS ESSENTIALLY NOBLE
    GOOD.
  • HUMANS BEINGS WERE CORRUPTED BY SOCIETY.
  • HUMANS POSSESSED GREAT POWER POTENTIAL THAT HAD
    FORMERLY BEEN ASCRIBED ONLY TO GOD.

23
INDIVIDUALISM
  • THERE WAS A GREAT BELIEF IN DEMOCRATIC IDEALS
  • CONCERN FOR HUMAN LIBERTY
  • GREAT OUTCRY AGAINST VARIOUS FORMS OF TYRANNY.

24
INDIVIDUALISM
  • THE HUMAN MIND WAS SEEN AS CREATING (AT LEAST IN
    PART) THE WORLD AROUND IT
  • HUMAN MIND BELIEVED TO HAVE ACCESS TO THE
    INFINITE VIA THE FACULTY OF IMAGINATION.

25
INDIVIDUALISM
  • REFUSING TO ACCEPT LIMITATIONS, HUMAN BEINGS SET
    INFINITE, INACCESSIBLE GOALS, THUS MAKING FAILURE
    IMPERFECTION GLORIOUS ACCOMPLISHMENTS.

26
INDIVIDUALISM
  • THIS REFUSAL TO ACCEPT LIMITATIONS FOUND
    EXPRESSION IN BOLD POETIC EXPERIMENTATION.
  • MANY WRITERS DELIBERATELY ISOLATED THEMSELVES
    FROM SOCIETY TO FOCUS ON THEIR INDIVIDUAL VISION.
  • THEME OF EXILE WAS COMMON WITH THE ROMANTIC
    NONCONFORMIST OFTEN SEEN AS A GREAT SINNER OR
    OUTLAW.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com