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The Romantic Period

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Blake produced his companion books, ... Mary Wollstonecraft, and Thomas De Quincey. Novelists included Mary Shelley, Jane Austin, and Sir Walter Scott * * ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Romantic Period


1
The Romantic Period
  • 1780-1830

2
Sources of Inspiration
  • Examination of inner feelings, emotions,
    imagination
  • The literature of the Middle Ages

3
Attitudes and Interests
  • Idealistic
  • Interested in the mysterious and supernatural
  • Concerned with the particular
  • Sought to develop new forms of expression
  • Romanticized the past
  • Tended toward excess and spontaneity
  • Appreciated folk traditions

4
Social Concerns
  • Desired radical change
  • Favored democracy
  • Concerned with the common people
  • Concerned with the individual
  • Felt that nature should be untamed

5
Two Generations of Poets
  • 1st Generation included Robert Burns, William
    Blake, William Wordsworth, and Samuel Taylor
    Coleridge.
  • 2nd Generation included George Gordon, Lord
    Byron, Percy Shelley, and John Keats.

6
Leaders of the Time
  • Robert Burns and William Blake were the
    forerunners of the romantic literature in their
    subject matter, themes, and style.
  • Burns published his Poems Chiefly in the Scottish
    Dialect (1896).
  • Blake produced his companion books, Songs of
    Innocence and Songs of Experience.

7
The Official Beginning
  • The poets William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor
    Coleridge teamed up to publish Lyrical Ballads
    (1798).
  • This publication marks the official beginning of
    the Romantic Period in English literature.

8
Romantic Prose Writers
  • Essayists included Charles Lamb, William Hazlitt,
    Mary Wollstonecraft, and Thomas De Quincey.
  • Novelists included Mary Shelley, Jane Austin, and
    Sir Walter Scott
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