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Conservatism, Romanticism and Revolution

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Title: Conservatism, Romanticism and Revolution


1
Conservatism, Romanticism and Revolution
  • -Key Concepts-

2
I. Some Qualifications of the Dual Revolution
  • Triumph of this revolution was by no means
    certain
  • Not some gigantic, historical steamroller
  • The influence of regional, cultural variance
  • The Old Regime was very capable of defending its
    privileges
  • The tremendous intellectual challenge of the
    Dual Revolution

3
II. Reaction to Revolution Conservatism
4
A. A Natural Order of Society
  • Conservatism as a 19th century ideology
  • Edmund Burke as the leading spokesman
  • Society is the partnership of the living, the
    dead and the yet to be born

5
A. A Natural Order of Society (cont)
  • Civilization depends upon continuity and order
  • Special privileges to higher classes to maintain
    social order
  • Openness to gradual change

6
B. Growing Distrust of Reason
  • Foundation for the emergence of romanticism
  • Essence of human experience is subjective and
    emotional
  • Human knowledge is a puny thing compared to other
    great historical forces
  • Society is an organic whole not suitable to
    piecemeal reform
  • Individual Rights are dangerous efforts at
    selfishnesscommunity is more important

7
C. Fascination with History and Christian
Philosophy
  • People and society are not abstractions divorced
    from historical settings
  • History is a stabilizing force for an unstable
    society
  • The French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars
    were evidence of human sinman is not good by
    nature
  • The fear of God is a good way to curb mans sin

8
D. A Special Home in Germany
  • Reaction against Napoleons conquests
  • Liberalism and Nationalism represented an extreme
    threat for Germany and Austria
  • Quadruple Alliance Austria, Prussia, Russia and
    Great Britain
  • This Alliance was interested in providing
    stability in all of Europe in the wake of the
    French Revolution

9
E. Conservatism in Action The Congress of Vienna
  • European Peace Conference, 1814-1815
  • Symbol of Aristocratic Resurgence
  • Conservatism Embodied Austrias Metternich
  • Hates both liberalism and nationalism

10
E. The Congress of Vienna (cont)
  • The importance of the Balance of Power in
    European Politics
  • Compromise with Revolution
  • Growing conservatism 1820s and 1830s
  • -- Peterloo Massacre (1819)

11
III. The German Confederation
  • Foolish to restore the Holy Roman Empire
  • Sign of rising German nationalism
  • 38 German states presided over by Austria
  • Basic constitutional framework with
    representative assembly meeting in Frankfurt
  • University Repression
  • --Carlsbad Decrees (1819)

12
IV. The Romantic Movement
  • Began in 1790s and peaked in 1820s
  • A movement of northern Europe, especially Great
    Britain and Germany
  • Complex and varied movement
  • A reaction against classicism

13
A. Romantic Themes
  • Rejected rigid artistic laws and ancient artistic
    rules
  • Feelings and imagination as valid, if not more
    valid, than reason and order
  • Individuals have unique, endless potential

14
A. Romantic Themes (cont)
  • Self-realization comes through artArtists are
    the true philosophers
  • Inclined to extremes
  • Drawn to danger and adventure
  • Rejection of traditional society

15
A. Romantic Themes (cont)
  • Suicide and madness not uncommon
  • Rejected materialism in pursuit of spiritual
    heights
  • Yearned for the unknown and the unknowable
  • Nature was both wild and awe-inspiring

16
A. Romantic Themes (cont)
  • Fascinated by color and diversity
  • History is the art of change over time
  • The uniqueness of cultures was emphasized

17
A. Romantic Themes (cont)
  • In rejecting society, romantics found a wide
    variety of escapes
  • Loved the world of childrenspontaneity and their
    sense of wonder
  • Special focus on the fantastic and unusual

18
B. Romantic Literature
  • Main genre poetry
  • William Wordsworth (1770-1850) and Samuel Taylor
    Coleridge (1772-1834)
  • Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832)
  • Johann Goethe (1749-1832)

19
B. Romantic Literature (cont)
  • Victor Hugo (1802-1885)
  • Mary Shelley (1797-1851)
  • --Frankenstein
  • George Sand (1804-1876)

20
C. Romantic Music (cont)
  • Free expression and emotional intensity realized
    most fully in music
  • Music became a sublime end in itself
  • Ludwig von Beethoven (1770-1827)

21
B. Romantic Music (cont)
  • Chopin and melancholy, exultation and dreaminess
    in his music
  • Wagners operas were wild, earth-shaking,
    fantastic and extreme

22
D. The Romantic Hero
  • Definition
  • Greatest Example Lord Byron
  • Tremendously popular among the European reading
    public
  • Youth imitated his haughtiness and rebelliousness

23
E. Political Implications
  • Romanticism could reinforce the great themes of
    political liberalism
  • --Beethovens Third Symphony
  • Romanticism could also reinforce the great themes
    of political conservatism

24
E. Political Implications (cont)
  • Contributed to growing nationalism
  • --Johann Herder and historicism
  • --The volk.
  • Relationship of liberalism to nationalism
  • Romanticism the great paradox

25
V. Nationalism A Growing Threat to Conservative
Empires
  • The nature of the Austro-Hungarian Empire
  • --Hapsburg Monarchy
  • Nationalism within the German Confederation
  • Prussia Focus on Pan-Germanic Hopes

26
V. Nationalism as a Threat (cont)
  • The Hohenzollern Dynasty and Frederick William
    III
  • Big Germany or Little Germany?
  • Italian Nationalism
  • --Joseph Mazzini
  • --Young Italy Movement

27
VI. Revolution in the 1830s
  • An explosive mix liberalism and nationalism
  • Revolution in Paris Again
  • King Louis-Philippe
  • Reform in Great Britain
  • --Reform Bill of 1832
  • Conservatism on the run

28
VII. Revolutions in 1848
  • Paris, Again
  • -- June Days
  • Shock waves spread over Europe
  • Prussia and Austria
  • Celebration in the streets
  • Disunity The Revolutionary failure
  • Return of a new Conservatism

29
VIII. The Modernization of Western Governments
after 1848
  • State-focused politics
  • Public opinion now taken into account
  • Alliance with nationalism and the middle class
  • The Process in Action
  • --Prussia
  • --The Dual Monarchy of Austria and Hungary
  • --The Ringstrasse

30
VIII. Modernization of Western Governments (cont)
  • A changing concept of economic and political
    liberalism
  • Narrow and selfish for some
  • Broad and humane for others
  • --John Stuart Mill, On Liberty (1859)
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