Title: The Early Eighteenth Century: American Romanticism 18201865
1The Early Eighteenth Century American
Romanticism (1820-1865)
2America and Utopia from its very beginning the
language of utopia has been used to describe the
American experiment.
- 1603 For we must consider that we shall be as a
city upon a hill. The eyes of all people are upon
us. So that if we shall deal falsely with our God
in this work we have undertaken, and so cause Him
to withdraw His present help from us, we shall be
made a story and a by-word through the world
(Winthrop). - 1776 We hold these truths to be self-evident,
that all men are created equal, that they are
endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable
Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and
the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these
rights, Governments are instituted among Men,
deriving their just powers from the consent of
the governed, (Jefferson 11). - 1963 This is our hope. With this faith we
will be able to transform the jangling discords
of our nation into a beautiful symphony of
brotherhood. With this faith we will be able to
work together, to pray together, to struggle
together, to go to jail together, to stand up for
freedom together, knowing that we will be free
one day (King). - 2008 Two hundred and twenty one years ago, in a
hall that still stands across the street, a group
of men gathered and, with these simple words,
launched America's improbable experiment in
democracy. Farmers and scholars statesmen and
patriots who had traveled across an ocean to
escape tyranny and persecution finally made real
their declaration of independence at a
Philadelphia convention that lasted through the
spring of 1787 (Obama).
3Key Events that Shaped 1820-1865
- 1820 Missouri Compromise (No slavery in
Louisiana north of 36 30 except in Missouri) - 1823 Monroe Doctrine (Warns all European nations
not to colonize America) - 1830 Indian Removal Act
- 1831 Trail of Tears
- 1837 Financial panic and failures of numerous
banks lead to severe unemployment, which persists
until the 1840s. - 1844 Telegraph invented by Samuel Morse
- 1846-8 Mexican American War
- 1848 Seneca Falls Convention (Inaugurates
campaign for womens rights) - 1848-9 California Gold Rush
- 1857 Dread Scott v Sanford decision (Supreme
Court denies African Americans Citizenship) - 1861-65 Civil War
- 1863 Emancipation Proclamation
4Cultural Issues that Shaped American in the Early
18th Century
- American Romanticism
- Industrialization
- Manifest Destiny
- Slavery and the Civil War
- The Woman Question
5American Romanticism
- Both place and time were changed, and I dwelt
nearer to those parts of the universe and to
those eras in history which had most attracted
me. Where I lived was as far off as many a region
viewed nightly by astronomers. We are wont to
imagine rare and delectable places in some remote
and more celestial corner of the system, behind
the constellation of Cassiopeias Chair, far from
noise and disturbance. I discovered that my house
actually had its site in such a withdrawn, but
forever new and unprofaned part of the universe
(Thoreau 59).
6Some Characteristics of American Romanticism
- Romantic thinkers emphasize the importance of
imagination and feeling in reaction to the
premium placed on reason during the 18th century.
They believed that the particular and specific
individual was more important than universal
laws. - Many Romantics represented the primitive and
untrammeled over the artificial or developed as
an aesthetic ideal in their paintings, writing,
and social theory. - The Romantic period is marked by Protestantism in
political action-stressing above all the Rights
of Man - In Europe and America, Romantic philosophy
included radical assault on virtually all social
institutions. Fundamental hierarchies of
government, notions of sovereignty, once emblems
of social and literary stability, now exemplified
the dead hand of the past. (Harpers Ferry is a
useful example) - Many Romantics stressed a hope for the future and
belief in innate goodness of man and were wary of
the danger of institutional restraint. - Because the Romantic movement included many women
and former slaves, it stressed a development of
theory of political rights for those previously
excluded.
7Key Terms in American Romanticism
- Transcendentalism
- Pastoral
- Sublime
8Pastoral
- According to theorist Lawrence Buell the pastoral
is, in the loose sense of being preoccupied with
nature and rurality as setting, theme and value
in contradistinction from society and the
urbanthe pastoral refers not to the specific
set of obsolescent conventions of the eclogue
tradition, but to all literature-poetry or prose,
fiction or non-fiction-that celebrates the ethos
of nature/rurality over against the ethos of town
city. This domain includes for present purposes
all degrees of rusticity from farm to wilderness
(463).
9Transcendentalism
- A New England movement which flourished from
1835-60. It had its roots in Romanticism and in
post-Kantian idealism by which Coleridge was
influenced. It had a considerable influence on
American art and literature, Basically religious,
it emphasized the role and importance of the
individual conscience, and the value of intuition
in matters of moral guidance and inspiration. The
actual terms was coined by opponents of the
movement but accepted by its members (Ralph Waldo
Emersion is one of the leaders, published The
Transcendentalists in 1841). The group were also
social reformers. Some members, besides Emerson,
were famous and include Bronson Alcott, Henry
David Thoreau and Nathaniel Hawthorne (DLLT
936).
10Sublime
- According to Romantic writers, the sublime
caused the reader to experience elestasis
("transport"). Edmund Burke developed this line
of thought further in his influential essay, The
Sublime and the Beautiful (1757). Here, he
distinguished the sublime from the beautiful by
suggesting that the sublime was not a stylistic
quality but the powerful depiction of subjects
that were vast, obscure, and powerful. These
sublime topics or subjects evoked "delightful
horror" in the viewer or reader, a combination of
terror and amazed pleasure. (DLLT 874).
11Industrialization
- In its most basic form, the Industrial
Revolution can be defined as the shift in
manufacturing that resulted from the invention of
power-driven machinery to replace hand labor.
Although its origins are hard to pin down
exactly, the shift in manufacture covers roughly
1770 to 1840 in both Europe and America.
12Characteristics and Implications of the
Industrial Revolution
- No attempt was made to regulate the shift from
the old economic world like that of the
Pilgrims (Mercantile Capitalism) to the new,
since even liberal reformers were committed to
the philosophy of Laissez-faire-let do or let
alone out lined in Adam Smiths Wealth of
Nations. - Under the theory of Laissez-faire, general
welfare can be ensure only through free operation
of economic laws, and government should maintain
a strict policy of noninterference to leave
manufacturers to pursue, unfettered, their
private interests - For the great majority of the laboring class, the
results of laissez-faire and the freedom of
contract it secured were inadequate wages and
long hours of work under harsh discipline in
sordid conditions-insurance, laws restricting
child labor, minimum wage, environmental
concerns, insurance, etc. did not exist. - While conditions for the poor worsened, the
landed and mercantile class enjoyed prosperity
owning to the market success.
13Manifest Destiny
- According to the Oxford English Dictionary
manifest destiny n. (also with capital initials)
orig. U.S. (now hist.) is the doctrine or belief
that the expansion of the United States
throughout the American continents was both
justified and inevitable. For example John
OSullivin commented in 1845, Our manifest
destiny is to overspread the continent allotted
by Providence for the free development of our
yearly multiplying millions (OED).
14Characteristics and Implications of Manifest
Destiny
- The period from 1820 to 1865 saw a dizzying
growth in the nations population and territorial
reach increasing urbanization and the expansion
of railroads, canals, and other forms of
transportation that allowed for more extensive
economical forms of distribution. - The nations population of approximately four
million in 1790 jumped to thirty million by 1860,
in part because of the massive emigration from
Ireland and elsewhere in Europe that occurred
during the 1840s and 1850s. - Territorial space available to this burgeoning
population dramatically increased following the
war with Mexico (1846-48), which added 1.2
million square miles of land to the 1.8 million
square miles that the nation held before the war
this is the area that would become Texas,
California, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, and parts of
New Mexico, Colorado, and Wyoming. - In 1838 the Cherokees were forcibly removed by
federal troops under General Winfred Scott. They
were sent on what would be called the Trail of
Tears to present day Oklahoma. During the winter
march an estimated 4,000 people of 13,000 died.
15Slavery and the Civil War
- A politics of antislavery has an important place
in the careers of a number of the American
Romantic writers. For example, when the Fugitive
Slave Law of 1850 was enforced in Boston in 1851
Thoreau publicly delivered the followingSlavery
and servility have produced no sweet-scented
flower annually, to charm the senses of men, for
they have no real life they are merely a
decaying and a death, offensive to all healthy
nostrils. We do not complain that they live, but
that they do not get buried. Let the living bury
them even they are good for manure (Thoreau).
16Characteristics and Implications of Slavery and
the Civil War
- In 1859 John Browns violent raid on Harpers
Ferry failed to initiate a slave rebellion in the
South, but his action was later used during the
civil war as an example of the holy war against
slavery that would fulfill the promise of
freedom guaranteed in the Declaration. - While some Romantic Abolitionists advocated the
need for the Civil War, many, like Ralph Waldo
Emerson, had little notion of the suffering and
destruction involved in the conflict that would
eventually kill over 600,000 Americans before
Grants surrender to Lee in 1865. - While the fourteenth amendment granted former
slaves the right to Due Process and Equal
Protection, laws like Dread Scott v. Sanford
(1857) kept former slaves from being recognized
as citizens. Instead of a rise in education and
standard of living for former slaves, the
post-Civil War era was marked by the resurgence
of segregationist practices and anti-black
violence, most notably lynching.
17The Woman Question
- Elizabeth Cady Stanton stated in Declaration of
Sentiments and Resolutions We hold these truths
to be self-evident that all men and women are
created equal that they are endowed by their
Creator with certain inalienable rights that
among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness that to secure these rights
governments are instituted, deriving their just
powers from the consent of the governed (Stanton
687).
18Characteristics and Implications 19th century
Womens Rights
- The fact that women had such a significant place
in urban reform movements is not surprising,
given that urban reform centered on creating
homelike, domestically attractive conditions for
the poor, and that another major reform effort of
the pre-civil war period centered on womens
rights. - In 1848, at the first womens rights convention
in Seneca Falls, New York, Elizabeth Cady
Stantons resounding Declaration of Sentiments
invoked Jeffersons Declaration, substituting
male for British tyrannical authority to show how
the nations social institutions and legal codes
mainly severed the interests of Americas white
male citizenry. - That same year , the New York State Legislature,
in response to critics like Stanton, passed the
nations most liberalized married womens
property act, which made it legal for women to
maintain control over the property they brought
to the marriage. - Although Cady Stanton and Suzan B. Anthony began
the struggle for national suffrage in the United
States, national voting rights for American women
did not exist until the nineteenth amendment was
ratified in 1920.
19Henry David Thoreau
- His interest in the flower or the bird lay very
deep in his mind, and was connected with Nature,
-- and the meaning of Nature was never attempted
to be defined by him. ... His power of
observation seemed to indicate additional senses.
He saw as with a microscope, heard as with an
ear-trumpet, and his memory was a photographic
register of all he saw and heard (Emerson).
20Characteristics/Background Henry David Thoreau
- Henry David Thoreau aspired to write great
literature by adventuring at home, traveling as
he put it, a good deal in Concord, Massachusetts.
As travelers tgo around the world and report
natural objects and phenomena, so let another
stay at home and report the phenomena of his own
life (Norton Anthology 825). - In 1843, Thoreaus brother John died of lockjaw
in his arms. His brothers death inspired the
elegiac A Week on the Concord and Merrimack
Rivers that he wrote during his stay at Walden
Pond, and which was initially poorly received. - Between 1847 and 1854 Thoreau produced as many as
seven full revisions of Walden, which was finally
published in 1854. - Thoreau died of Tuberculosis in 1862 at the age
of 44. - Recognition of Thoreau as an important writer was
slow in coming, but by 1906 he was becoming
widely recognized as a social philosopher,
naturalist, and an the author of one of the
masterpieces of American fiction. - In 1906 Mahatma Gandhi read Civil Disobedience,
and later acknowledged its important influence on
his thinking about how best to achieve Indian
independence. Later in the century, Martin Luther
Luther King Jr. would similarly attest to the
crucial influence of Thoreau on his adoption of
nonviolent civil disobedience as a key to the
Civil Rights Movement in the Untied States.
21Walden Pond
- "Walden Pond Past and Present"