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Realism, Regionalism, and Naturalism

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Depicted in journals, diaries, speeches, and short stories. Stephen Crane. Red Badge of Courage- most famous Civil War novel 'An Episode of War' and 'War is Kind' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Realism, Regionalism, and Naturalism


1
Realism, Regionalism, and Naturalism
  • Unit 4 Division, Reconciliation, and Expansion
    (1850-1914)

2
The Industrial Revolution
  • Americans began to leave their rural homes and
    frontier life for urban cities and factory jobs
  • Northerners thrived on commerce, cheap
    transportation, and bustling activities such as
    education, banking, science, and reform

3
DIVISION
  • Southerners was defined by plantations and crops
    (sugar, rice, and tobacco)
  • Disagreement between N/S over slavery not new,
    however, Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 inflamed the
    division
  • Harpers Ferry in 1859 intensified the strife as
    John Brown was executed for treason

4
Division Escalated as . . .
  • The Union was dissolved
  • The West was expanded
  • The Frontier disappeared

5
Talk to Me
  • What additional information can you add to the
    idea that the North and South were divided or the
    effects of Industrialization?

6
Rags to Riches
  • Every man was a potential Andrew Carnegie, yet
  • Trappings of American life electricity,
    telephones, automobiles, motion pictures, and
    phonographs.
  • Then there was mass production, skyscrapers,
    department stores, air pollution, crime, and
    slums
  • Immigration fueled urban growth and cheap labor
  • New extremes of wealth and poverty

7
Criticisms of America
  • When French prime minister Georges Clemenceau
    visited, he said the nation had gone from a stage
    of barbarism to one of decadence -- without
    achieving any civilization between the two.
  • Although, America had money and factories, it
    lacked sophistication.

8
Hence, the Gilded Age and Muckrackers were born
  • "What is the chief end of man?--to get rich. In
    what way?--dishonestly if we can honestly if we
    must." -- Mark
    Twain-1871
  • The Gilded Age implies a thin veneer of glitter
    over something of poor quality.
  • President Rooseve.t coined term Muckrackers as
    he accused journalists looking only downward as
    they stir filth and not seeing heavenly crown
    above

9
Literature of the Period
  • Literary Civil War waged between Romantics,
    Realists, and Naturalists
  • HOW should fictional characters be presented in
    relation to external forces?

10
Perceptions of the Individual
  • Romantics (Emerson and Longfellow) viewed humans
    as a god who triumph over adversity
  • Realists (Twain and Chopin) viewed humans simply
    people with limited ability who can only react to
    outside forces
  • Naturalists ( Crane and London) viewed humans as
    helpless objects of determinism

11
Realism in Literature
  • Realism depicted realistic details of ordinary
    people (speech, dress, and behavior), loneliness,
    cultural isolation, and customs
  • Writing from this period was presented as
    slice of life

12
Characteristics of Realism
  • CHARACTERS
  • are more important than action and plot
  • make complex ethical choices
  • attempt to control their destinies rather then
    simply react

13
  • What information have you learned in history that
    could have influenced the realist writers?

14
PLOT
  • emphasizes verisimilitude, even at the expense of
    a well-made plot.
  • avoids the sensational, dramatic elements of
    romanticism.
  • Focuses on the lives of ordinary people rejected
    heroic and adventurous
  • Anti-materialism rejected new class system
  • Found meaning in the common place
  • Stressed the actual as opposed to the imagined
  • Literature from this period has been criticized
    as crude, base, and unimaginative

15
Popular Fiction
  • Slave Voices
  • Wartime voices
  • Frontier Voices

16
African American Experience
  • Harriet Beecher Stowes Uncle Toms Cabin was the
    1st book to sell 1 million copies
  • Frederick Douglass, an escaped slave, published
    The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass
    indicts slavery
  • Sojourner Truths Aint I a Woman and Narrative
    of Sojourner Truth
  • Paul Laurence Dunbars We Wear the Mask
  • W.E.B. Duboiss The Souls of Black Folk

17
Wartime Experience
  • Depicted in journals, diaries, speeches, and
    short stories
  • Stephen Crane
  • Red Badge of Courage- most famous Civil War
    novel
  • An Episode of War and War is Kind
  • Mary Chestnut journals from Dixie
  • Chief Josephs I Will Fight No More

18
Frontier Experience
  • Depicted in journals, short stories, novels and
    poems
  • Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens) one of the greatest
    American novelists.humorists
  • -Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras
    County
  • -Adventures of Tom Sawyer
  • -Adventures of Huckleberry
  • Willa Cather O Pioneers!
  • Famous for using vernacular, exaggeration, and
    humor

19
Regionalism
  • Mass production and streamlined distribution
    caused people to fear that local folkways and
    traditions would be forgotten
  • So, regional writers rushed to capture the
    local color by showing the breakdown of
    traditional values and growing plight of the
    urban poor

20
Characteristics of Regionalism
  • Uses regional dialect
  • Uses vivid description of the landscape
  • Uses local color to highlight characteristics and
    details unique to a specific area
  • Captures physical environment
  • Captures mood of the time and place
  • Depicts the ways in which people talk and how
    they think.

21
Regionalists
  • Mark Twain best known example
  • Bret Harte (1836-1902)
  • - Outcasts of Poker Flat
  • Kate Chopin (1851-1904)
  • -The Awakening
  • Story of an Hour
  • Willa Cather (1873-1947)
  • - A Wagner Matinee
  • - won Pulitzer Prize

22
Naturalism
  • A offshoot of Realism
  • Depicts real people in real situations
  • BUT fate, heredity, environment, physical drives,
    and economic circumstances decide ones destiny
  • So, despite aims to change a specific social
    problem, nature always wins
  • Hence, people have no control over events or
    lives.
  • And, life is a losing battle against an uncaring
    universe
  • Freewill is an illusion

23
Naturalism - Concepts
  • The naturalist writerdissects human
    behaviorobjectively like a scientist.
  • The characters have limited choices and
    motivations and live by instinct.
  • Dominant themes survival, fate, violence,
    nature as an indifferent force

24
Thinking About Home
  • Create a storyline in which a naturalist includes
    regionalism and local color in one work?

25
Naturalist Writers
  • Jack London
  • Call of the Wild (tame dog forced to revert to
    his original primitive state)
  • To Build a Fire (survival of the fittest)

26
CP Comprehension Check
  • 1. What American writers responded to the Civil
    War?
  • 2. What were drawbacks to Americans
    industrialization and expansion?
  • 3. What are the basic characteristics of Realism?
  • 4. What event turned American writers toward
    Regionalism? Why?
  • 5. What did Naturalists attempt to do?
  • 6. In your opinion, which literary movement seems
    more interesting Romanticism or Realism? Why?

27
Gifted Comprehension Check
  • The shift from Romanticism to Realism brought
    about new literary forms, new styles, and most
    important, new attitudes in writers and readers.
    Write a brief essay in which you compare and
    contrast the basic attitudes and beliefs of the
    Romantic writers with those of the realist
    writers. Consider, for example, the writers
    subjects, characters, and attitudes towards human
    nature and their views on the purpose of
    literature.

28
Works Cited
  • Artwork of Cassett retrieved from
    http//www.artlex.com/ArtLex/ij/impressionism.Cass
    att.html
  • Penrose, Patricia. American Realism. American
    Collection. http//ncteamericancollection.org/amer
    _realism.htm
  • Center for Civil War Photography.
    http//www.civilwarphotography.org/index.html
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