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The Rise of Realism The Civil War to 1914

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Title: The Rise of Realism The Civil War to 1914


1
The Rise of RealismThe Civil War to 1914
Feature Menu
Interactive Time Line Milestone Sojourner
Truth Milestone Westward Expansion
Milestone The Civil War Milestone The Rise
of Realism Milestone Tuskegee Institute
Milestone The Red Badge of Courage What Have You
Learned?
2
The Rise of Realism
Choose a link on the time line to go to a
milestone.
1850 Sojourner Truth
1895 The Red Badge of Courage
18611865 The Civil War
18651914 The Rise of Realism
1870
1860
1890
1900
1880
1850
1881 Tuskegee Institute
18601900 Westward Expansion
3
Sojourner Truth
Abolitionist and Activist
  • Born a slave freed in 1827
  • Changed name to reflect mission as traveling
    preacher
  • c. 1850Dictated Narrative of Sojourner Truth
  • 1851Delivered Aint I a Woman? speech

Listen to an excerpt of Aint I a Woman?
4
Westward Expansion
Changing the West Forever
  • 1862Homestead Act promises 160 acres of land to
    each family of settlers.
  • 1869Transcontinental railroad is completed.
  • 1871Indian Appropriation Act nullifies all
    treaties with American Indians.

5
The Civil War
Multiple Causes
  • War resulted from decades of sectional conflict.
  • South produced cash crops for the North.
  • South depended on North for financial,
    manufacturing, commercial services.
  • South relied on nearly 4 million slaves as its
    labor force.
  • North valued power of federal government South
    believed in states rights.

6
The Civil War
New Forms of Warfare
  • Infantry carried new, more accurate rifles.
  • Cavalry riders faced certain death attacking
    infantry.
  • Toll of frontal and cavalry assaults led to use
    of trench warfare.
  • More than 600,000 soldiers died.

7
The Civil War
End of Slavery
  • Emancipation Proclamation declared that slaves in
    Confederate states were free.
  • Thirteenth Amendment freed all slaves in the U.S.
  • Even though slaves had been freed, fight for
    equality was just beginning.

Deep River
8
The Civil War
Harriet Tubman
  • Was a fugitive slave herself
  • Was a conductor on the Underground Railroad
    made nineteen trips into slave territory,
    rescuing more than three hundred people
  • Served as a Union scout and spy during the Civil
    War

9
The Civil War
Underground Railroad
  • Was a network of abolitionists who helped escaped
    slaves reach the North
  • Helped approximately 40,000 slaves reach freedom
    between 1810 and 1850

10
The Civil War
Literature
  • The primary forms of war literature were journals
    and letters.
  • None of the prominent writers of the time served
    in the war.
  • The horror of war required a new literary
    formrealism.

11
The Civil War
Prominent Writers
  • Ralph Waldo Emerson was in Concord,
    Massachusetts, knitting for soldiers and writing
    patriotic lectures.
  • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was raising his
    children after his wifes death.
  • Oliver Wendell Holmes was working as a professor
    at Harvard.
  • William Cullen Bryant was working as editor of
    the New York Evening Post.

12
The Rise of Realism
Realists New View of the World
  • Rejected larger-than-life hero of Romantic
    literature
  • Depicted ordinary characters and realistic events
  • Emphasized characters from cities and lower
    classes
  • Sought to explain why people behave as they do

13
The Rise of Realism
Regionalism
Kate Chopin
  • Emphasized a specific geographic setting
  • Often sentimental in depictions of characters and
    locations
  • Prominent authors Sarah Orne Jewett, Kate
    Chopin, Bret Harte, Mark Twain

Mark Twain
14
The Rise of Realism
Naturalism
Frank Norris
  • Attempted to analyze human behavior objectively
  • Believed human behavior determined by heredity
    and environment
  • Viewed life as a losing battle against the
    universe
  • Prominent authors William Dean Howells, Frank
    Norris

William Dean Howells
15
The Rise of Realism
Psychological Realism
Henry James
  • Focused on character motivation and characters at
    moments of stress
  • Studied complex social and psychological
    situations
  • Prominent authors Henry James, Stephen Crane

Stephen Crane
16
Tuskegee Institute
Booker T. Washington
  • Founded Tuskegee Institute, which had 1,500
    students at the time of his death
  • Believed interests of African Americans were best
    served through vocational education
  • Generated controversy by supporting economic,
    rather than political progress

17
The Red Badge of Courage
Stephen Crane
  • Published The Red Badge of Courage in 1895
  • Born six years after end of war
  • Based writings on stories told by veterans
  • Considered psychological realist, naturalist, and
    ironist

18
What Have You Learned?
Indicate whether the following statements refer
to the time before, during, or after the Civil
War.
______ Tuskegee Institute is founded. ______
Sojourner Truth dictates her Narrative. ______
Homestead Act gives 160 acres to each family of
settlers. ______ Stephen Crane publishes The Red
Badge of Courage.
after
before
during
after
19
The End
20
Viewing the Art
Home, Sweet Home Winslow Homer (18361910)
painted realistic scenes of American life. Homer
followed the Union army during its campaign
against the South.
Activity What details in Homers painting
support the irony suggested in the title, Home,
Sweet Home?
Home Sweet Home
21
Winslow Homer began his career as a lithographer
and pictorial reporter, winning fame for his
illustrations of Civil War scenes for Harpers
Weekly, a popular magazine.
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