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American%20Romanticism

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Title: American%20Romanticism


1
AmericanRomanticism
  • 1800 -1860

2
American Romanticism
  • For Rationalists the city was a place of
    civilization and opportunity
  • For Romantics the city was a place of
    immorality and death.
  • For these reasons, the Romantic Journey often
    leads into the countryside.
  • A place of independence, morality, and healthful
    living

3
American Romanticism
  • Sometimes, the journey might be into the mind.
  • The works of Edgar Allen Poe show journeys into
    the imagination.
  • The Romantic journey is both a flight from
    something and a flight to something.

4
The Romantic Sensibility Celebrating Imagination
  • Romantics valued feeling over reason.
  • Romanticism originally a European movement
    began in late 1700s
  • Spread throughout Europe into the 1800s.
  • Came to America slightly later and took somewhat
    different forms

5
Romanticism
  • First grew in response to rationalism.
  • Rationalism had focused on reason and science.
  • Sparked the Industrial Revolution
  • With Industrial Revolution came filthy cities and
    terrible working conditions.
  • Romantics distrusted pure reason and instead
    turned to the imagination.
  • Claimed that the imagination could see and
    understand truths that the rational mind could
    not.

6
Romanticism
  • Romantics valued imagination, feeling, and nature
    over reason, logic, and civilization.
  • Romantics valued poetry above all other works of
    the imagination.
  • They contrasted poetry with science, which they
    viewed as a destroyer of truth.
  • Edgar Allen Poe once called science a vulture
    with wings of dull realities that preyed upon
    the hearts of poets.

7
Romantic Escapism From Dull Realties to Higher
Truths
  • Romantics explored exotic settings
  • In the more natural past or in locations far from
    civilization and industry.
  • Romantics explored supernatural worlds
  • Explored legends and folktales

8
Romantics
  • Tried to reflect on the natural world in order to
    see truth and beauty.
  • This approach is found in many lyric poems
  • In these poems, the speaker discovers in ordinary
    scenes or objects (flower by a stream, bird
    flying overhead) some important deeply felt
    understanding about life.
  • Like the Puritans, Romantics found truth in
    nature
  • But rather than finding moral lessons, Romantics
    found a more general feeling of mental and
    emotional health.

9
Characteristics of American Romanticism
  • Values feeling over reason
  • Places faith in the imagination
  • Shuns civilization and seeks nature
  • Prefers innocence to sophistication
  • Fights for individuals freedom and worth
  • Trusts past wisdom, not progress
  • Reflects on nature to gain spiritual wisdom
  • Finds beauty and truth in supernatural or
    imaginative realms.
  • Sees poetry at the highest work of the
    imagination
  • Is inspired by myth, legend, and folklore.

10
The American Novel and the Wilderness Experience
  • Some American writers imitated English and
    European models of writing.
  • Others believed that America should develop a
    literary style of its own.
  • The great American frontier provided a sense of
    unlimited possibilities that was not available in
    Europe.
  • The first truly American novels looked westward.

11
James Fenimore Cooper (1789 -1851)
  • Wrote about unique American settings and
    characters.
  • Frontier communities
  • American Indians
  • Backwoodsmen
  • Created the first American hero Natty Bumppo
  • This characters simple morality, love of nature,
    and almost superhuman inventiveness make him a
    true Romantic hero.

12
A New Kind of Hero
  • The typical Romantic hero is youthful and
    innocent.
  • He relies on common sense rather than book
    learning and is close to nature.
  • Because women represented marriage and
    civilization (to many writers), Romantic heroes
    are often uncomfortable around them.

13
Romantic Heroes
  • In contrast to Romantic heroes, Ben Franklin
    represents the rationalist hero.
  • He looks to the city to better himself.
  • Today Americans still create Romantic heroes in
    the form of Superman, Luke Skywalker, and Indiana
    Jones, along with dozens of other western,
    detective, and fantasy heroes.

14
Characteristics of the American Romantic Hero
  • Is youthful and innocent
  • Has a strong sense of honor
  • Has knowledge that comes from experience
  • Loves nature and avoids town life
  • Seeks truth in the natural world.

15
American Romantic Poetry Read at Every Fireside
  • Goals of American Romantic poets were different
    from those of Romantic novelists.
  • Novelists looked for new subject matter
  • Poets wanted to prove that Americans were not
    ignorant hicks.
  • To do this, they wrote poems is a style much like
    the poems of England.

16
Fireside Poets
  • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882), John
    Greenleaf Whittier, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and
    James Russell Lowell were known as the Fireside
    Poets.
  • Poems often read aloud by the fireside
  • In their time period and for a long time after,
    they were the most popular poets America ever
    produced.

17
Fireside Poets
  • Because they preferred the old, established
    styles of poetry, the fireside poets were unable
    to recognize the American poetry of the future.
  • In 1855, Whittier read the work of a young poet,
    Walt Whitman, and promptly threw it into the
    fire.
  • After reading the same poetry, Ralph Waldo
    Emerson wrote the young poet a letter.
  • I greet you, Emerson wrote to Whitman, at the
    beginning of a great career.

18
The Transcendentalists True Reality is Spiritual
  • Emerson led a group know at the
    Transcendentalists.
  • These people believed that to find the truth
    about God, the universe, and ones self, one must
    transcend, or go beyond, the everyday experiences
    of the physical world.
  • Transcendentalism was not new
  • It originated in the ancient Greek philosophy of
    idealism.

19
Transcendentalists
  • Idealists said that true reality was found in
    ideas, not in the imperfect physical world.
  • They sought the pure reality the ideal that
    was beneath physical appearances.
  • American Transcendentalists were idealists in a
    more practical sense.
  • They believed that humanity could be perfected,
    and they worked to make this idea a reality.

20
Emerson and Transcendentalism
  • Through his books and lectures, Emerson became
    the best-known member of the Transcendentalists.
  • His transcendentalism added ideas from Europe and
    Asia to a distinctly American base.
  • Emerson drew much of his thought from Puritanism.
  • God revealed himself through the Bible and the
    physical world.
  • This mystical view of the world was passed on to
    American Romantics and to Emerson.

21
Emerson
  • He wrote, Every natural fact is a symbol of some
    spiritual fact.
  • His view of the world came from his intuition,
    not from logic.
  • Intuition is our ability to know things through
    feeling rather reason.
  • In contrast, Franklin saw nature as something to
    be examined scientifically.

22
Emersons Optimistic Outlook
  • Positive thinking (optimism) guided Emerson.
  • Strongly believed that God is good and works
    through nature.
  • If we trust in our own power to know God
    directly, we will see that we, too, are a part of
    the Divine Soul.
  • Emersons optimism appealed to many people who
    lived in a time full of worries about money,
    slavery, and future of our nation.
  • Emerson gave them a comforting message. If the
    world depresses you, look within yourself.
  • The God within will connect you to the peace and
    beauty of the universe.

23
A Transcendental View of the World
  • Everything, including people, is a reflection of
    the divine.
  • The physical world is a doorway to the spiritual
    world.
  • People can use intuition to sense God in nature
    or in their own souls.
  • A person is his or her own best authority.
  • Feeling and intuition are superior to reason and
    intellect.

24
The Dark Romantics
  • Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville, and Edgar
    Allen Poe are known as the Dark Romantics.
  • Because of their gloomy view of the world, some
    people see these writers as anti-Transcendentalist
    s.
  • Dark Romantics had much in common with Emerson
    and his followers.
  • Both groups valued feeling over reason.
  • Both groups saw the events of the world as a
    signs or symbols that pointed beyond.

25
The Dark Romantics
  • Did not agree with the optimism of the
    Transcendentalists.
  • Thought that Emerson took only the bright side of
    Puritanism and ignored the belief in the
    wickedness of humanity.
  • To create a greater balance, the Dark Romantics
    explored both good and evil.
  • Looked at the effects of guilt and sin on the
    mind, body and soul, including madness.
  • Behind the pasteboard masks of polite society,
    they saw the horror of evil.
  • From this vision, the Dark Romantics shaped a
    new, truly American literature.

26
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