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The Encounter :

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British poet, who spent his life in the Lake District of Northern England. ... There are verismo (realistic) operas like Umberto Giordano's Andrea Ch nier ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Encounter :


1
The Encounter
  • Romanticism
  • Realism

2
  • Authors of Romanticism
  • - William Wordsworth
  • - William Blake

3
William Wordsworth (1770-1850)
  • British poet, who spent his life in the Lake
    District of Northern England. William Wordsworth
    started with Samuel Taylor Coleridge the English
    Romantic movement with their collection LYRICAL
    BALLADS in 1798. When many poets still wrote
    about ancient heroes in grandiloquent style,
    Wordsworth focused on the nature, children, the
    poor, common people, and used ordinary words to
    express his personal feelings. His definition of
    poetry as "the spontaneous overflow of powerful
    feelings arising from "emotion recollected in
    tranquillity" was shared by a number of his
    followers.

4
William Blake (1757-1827)
  • British poet, painter, visionary mystic, and
    engraver, who illustrated and printed his own
    books. Blake proclaimed the supremacy of the
    imagination over the rationalism and materialism
    of the 18th-century. He joined for a time the
    Swedenborgian Church of the New Jerusalem in
    London and considered Newtonian science to be
    superstitious nonsense. Misunderstanding shadowed
    his career as a writer and artist and it was left
    to later generations to recognize his importance.

5
What is
  • Romanticism

6
definition
  • Romanticism dominated cultural thought
  • from the last decade of the 18th century
  • well into the first decades of the 20th
  • century.

7
  • 1) The Romanticists' own aspiration and ideals
    are in sharp contrast to the common sordid daily
    life under capitalism. Their writings are filled
    with strong-willed heroes or even titanic images,
    formidable events and tragic situations, powerful
    conflicting passions and exotic pictures.
    Sometimes they resorted to symbolic methods, with
    the active romanticists, symbolic pictures
    represent a vague ideal of some future society
    while with the passive romanticists, these
    pictures often take on a mystic colour.

8
  • 2). The romanticists paid great attention to the
    spiritual and emotional life of man. Personified
    nature plays an important role in the pages of
    their works. Terror, passion, and the Sublime (an
    idea associated with religious awe, vastness,
    natural magnificence, and strong emotion which
    fascinated 18th-cent. literary critics and
    aestheticians) are essential concepts in early
    Romanticism as is the sense of primitive mystery
    rediscovered in the Celtic bardic verse of
    Macpherson's 'Ossian', the folk ballads
    collected by Percy, and the medieval poetry
    forged by Chatterton (whom Southey edited). 
    Foreign sources were also vital Goethe's The
    Sorrows of Young Werther 1774) the ghostly
    ballads of Burger (Lenore, 1773) the verse
    dramas of Schiller (The Robbers, 1781) and the
    philosophical criticism of A. W. Schlegel.

9
  • 3) The tone of Romanticism was shaped by the
    naked emotionalism of Rousseau's Julie, ou la
    nouvelle Heloise (1761), and the exotic legends
    and mythology found in Oriental and Homeric
    literatures and 17th-cent. travel writers. The
    stylistic keynote of Romanticism is intensity,
    and its watchword is 'Imagination'. Remembered
    childhood, unrequited love, and the exiled hero
    were constant themes.

10
  • 4) Romanticism expressed an unending revolt
    against classical form, conservative morality,
    authoritarian government, personal insincerity,
    and human moderation.  The Romantics saw and felt
    things brilliantly afresh.  They virtually
    invented certain landscapes the Lakes, the
    Alps, the bays of Italy.  They were strenuous
    walkers, hill-climbers, sea-bathers, or
    river-lovers.  They had a new intuition for the
    primal power of the wild landscape, the spiritual
    correspondence between Man and Nature, and the
    aesthetic principle of 'organic' form (seen at
    their noblest in Wordsworth's Prelude or J. M.
    W. Turner', paintings).  In their critical
    writings and lectures they described poetry and
    drama with new psychological appreciation (the
    character of Hamlet, for example) they discussed
    dreams, dramatic illusion, Romantic sensibility,
    the process of creativity, the limits of
    Classicism and Reason, and the dynamic nature of
    the Imagination. 

11
  • 5) The second generation of Romanticists absorbed
    these tumultuous influences, wrote swiftly,
    travelled widely (Greece, Switzerland, Italy),
    and died prematurely their life-stories and
    letters became almost as important for
    Romanticism as their poetry. They in turn
    inspired autobiographical prose-writers such as
    Hazlitt, De Quincey, and Lamb while the
    historical imagination found a champion in Sir W.
    Scott.

12
Authors of Realism
  • - Robert Frost
  • - John Milton

13
Robert Frost(1874-1963)
  • American poet, one of the finest of rural New
    England's 20th century pastoral poets. Frost
    published his first books in Great Britain in the
    1910s, but he soon became in his own country the
    most read and constantly anthologized poet, whose
    work was made familiar in classrooms and lecture
    platforms. Frost was awarded the Pulitzer Prize
    four times. Nature and Frost's rural surroundings
    were for him a source for insights "from delight
    to wisdom", or as he also said "Literature
    begins with geography."

14
John Milton (1562? 1647)
  • The phases of Milton's life closely parallel
    the major historical divisions of Stuart
    Britain--the Caroline ancien régime, the English
    Commonwealth and the Restoration--and it is
    important to situate his poetry and politics
    historically in order to see how both spring from
    the philosophical and religious beliefs Milton
    developed during the English Revolution.2 At
    his death in 1674, blind, impoverished, and yet
    unrepentant for his political choices, Milton had
    attained Europe-wide notoriety for his radical
    political and religious beliefs. Especially after
    the Glorious Revolution, Paradise Lost and his
    political writings would bring him lasting fame
    as the greatest poet of the sublime and an
    unalloyed champion of liberty.

15
What is
  • Realism

16
definition
  • Realism in art and literature may be
    described as an attempt to describe human
    behaviour and surroundings or to represent
    figures and objects exactly as they act or appear
    in life. Attempts at realism have been made
    periodically throughout history in all the arts
    the term is, however, generally restricted to a
    movement that began in the mid-19th century, in
    reaction to the highly subjective approach of
    Romanticism. The difference between realism and
    naturalism is harder to define, and the two terms
    are often used interchangeably. The distinction
    lies in the fact that realism is concerned
    directly with what is absorbed by the senses
    naturalism, a term more properly applied to
    literature, attempts to apply scientific theories
    to art. 

17
In Fiction
  • Realism's most important influences have been
    on fiction and the theater. It is perhaps
    unsurprising that its origins can be traced to
    France, where the dominant official neoclassicism
    had put up a long struggle against Romanticism.
    Since the 18th century the French have
    traditionally viewed themselves as rationalists,
    and this prevailing attitude in intellectual
    circles meant that Romanticism led an uneasy
    existence in France even when allied with the
    major revolutionary movements of 1789 and 1830.

18
Literature 
  • Realist literature is defined particularly as
    the fiction produced in Europe and the United
    States from about 1840 until the 1890s, when
    realism was superseded by naturalism. This form
    of realism began in France in the novels of
    Gustave Flaubert and the short stories of Guy de
    Maupassant. In Russia, realism was represented in
    the plays and short stories of Anton Chekhov. The
    novelist George Eliot introduced realism into
    English fiction as she declared in Adam Bede
    (1859), her purpose was to give a "faithful
    representation of commonplace things". One
    realist author represented on this site is the
    American novelist Mark Twain. 

19
In Music and Art
  • As intellectual and artistic movements
    19th-Century Realism and Naturalism are both
    responses to Romanticism but are not really
    comparable to it in scope or influence.
  • For one thing, "realism" is not a term strictly
    applicable to music. There are verismo
    (realistic) operas like Umberto Giordano's Andrea
    Chénier created in the last decade of the 19th
    century in Italy, but it is their plots rather
    than their music which can be said to participate
    in the movement toward realism. Since "pure"
    untexted music is not usually representational
    (with the controversial exception of "program"
    music), it cannot be said to be more or less
    realistic.
  • In contrast, art may be said to have had many
    realistic aspects before this time. The still
    lifes and domestic art of Jean-Baptiste-Siméon
    Chardin1 (1699-1779) anticipate many of the
    concerns of the 19th-Century Realists, and he in
    turn owes a debt to the Netherland school of
    still-life painting of the century before him,
    and one can find similar detailed renderings of
    everyday objects even on the walls of 1st-century
    Pompeii. Realism is a recurrent theme in art
    which becomes a coherent movement only after
    1850 and even then it struggles against the
    overwhelming popularity of Romanticism.
  • In mid-19th century France, Gustave Courbet2 set
    forth a program of realistic painting as a
    self-conscious alternative to the dominant
    Romantic style, building on earlier work by the
    painters of the Barbizon School (of which the
    most famous member was Jean-François Millet),
    which had attempted to reproduce landscapes and
    village life as directly and accurately as
    possible. Impressionism can be seen as a
    development which grew out of Realism, but in its
    turn still had to battle the more popular
    Romanticism. Realism has never entirely displaced
    the popular taste for Romantic art, as any number
    of hotel-room paintings, paperback book covers
    and calendars testify. It became just one more
    style among others.
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