Title: The Rise of Realism: 1850-1900
1The Rise of Realism1850-1900
- The only reason for the existence of a novel is
that it does attempt to represent life. - -Henry James
Prisoners from the Front, Winslow Homer, 1922.
2People, places, Things1850 - 1900
- What are some of the important events?
- Who are some authors of this period?
- What are some of the important works of this time?
3Realism A Very Minute Fidelity
- Realism dominated fiction in America from the
late 19th century until the middle of the 20th. - The Realists
- were writers who sought to portray real life
without filtering it through personal feelings,
romanticism, or idealism - wanted to be as accurate as possible when
depicting people, places, and things. Think of
Realism as the photography of writing.
4A Reaction to Romanticism
- Realism is a reaction to idealized romantic
novels of the previous period. - Romanticism Recall
- Edgar Allan Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Ralph Waldo
Emerson, and Henry David Thoreau.
Fallen Monarchs, William Bliss Backer, 1886.
5Characteristics
- Realistic writing is characterized by
- honest, believable characters
- realistic dialogue
- events in the story that seem possible in real
life - characters that are driven by real motives and
emotions - characters that dont change without sufficient
reason - objectivity.
Young Soldier, Winslow Homer, 1861.
6Realism vs. Romanticism
7The Civil War
- Casualties, 1861-1865
- Federal 664,928
- Confederate 483,026
- Battles destroyed farms and homes.
- Cities were bombarded and burned.
- Shermans March to the Sea
- Suddenly, life wasnt so nice.
- The romantic heroes of the past werent cutting
it anymore.
Four dead soldiers in the woods near Little Round
Top, Alexander Gardner, 1863.
8The Civil War, cont.
- Journalistic accounts of the Civil War developed
a taste for realistic writing. - Increased use of photography also helped shaped
Americas taste for realistic depictions.
Body of a Confederate Soldier Near Mrs. Alsop's
House, 1864.
9Naturalism
- Naturalism holds the same view as Realism with
the addition of - Man has LITTLE control over his fate
- Life is NEVER perfect problems exist in society
- Life is ALMOST NEVER fair
- Good ALMOST NEVER wins over Evil
Hiding in the Haycocks, William Bliss Baker, 1881.
- Nature does not care about the plight of man.
10Naturalism, cont.
- A man said to the universe
- Sir, I exist!
- However, replied the universe,
- The fact has not created in me
- A sense of obligation.
- - Stephen Crane
- How does this poem espouse the tenants of
Naturalism?
11Regionalism
- Regionalism has ALL the characteristics of
Realism PLUS - using regional dialects
- descriptions of a local area or region
- local cultures and customs.
- Writers attempt to make the reader feel theyve
been to an area without actually going there.
Champions of the Mississippi, Currier Ives.
12Stephen Crane
- Associated with the Naturalist movement
- b. 1871 (remember this date)
- Youngest of fourteen children often ill as a
child - First work published in 1893
- Maggie A Girl of the Streets
- Financial failure
13Stephen Crane, cont.
- The Red Badge of Courage (1895)
- A novel about the Civil War told through the
point of view of a young private. - The highlight of his literary career.
- Remember his birth date?
- Wrote numerous stories and poems and worked as a
newspaper correspondent (Nothing as popular as
Red Badge, however.)
- Stephen Crane in Athens, 1897.
14Stephen Crane, cont.
- While enroute to Cuba in 1896, Crane met Cora
Taylor (a hostess). - The pair journeyed to Greece in 1897 to cover the
Greco-Turkish War. - Unfortunately, Crane spent the rest of his life
plagued by both finical and health struggles. - Diagnosed with tuberculosis, he died in a
sanitarium in Germany in 1900. - He was only twenty-eight years old.
15Ambrose Bierce
- b. 1842
- Father Marcus Aurelius Bierce
- an eccentric and unsuccessful farmer
- Fought on the side of the Union during the Civil
War - Part of Shermans March to the Sea
- Severely wounded and cited for bravery fifteen
times - Left the army, moved to San Francisco, began to
write for newspapers
Ambrose Bierce, 1892.
16Ambrose Bierce, cont.
- Worked for several newspapers in San Francisco
- Married in 1871, separated in 1888
- (Bierce discovered compromising letters from an
admirer of his wife.) - The Devils Dictionary, 1906.
- d. 1914
- ((we think))
Ambrose Bierce, J.H.E. Parington.
17Ambrose Bierce, cont.
- Bierce left America in 1913 to report on (or
perhaps join) the Mexican Revolution. - In one of his last letters, Bierce wrote the
following to his niece, Lora - Good-bye if you hear of my being stood up
against a Mexican stone wall and shot to rags
please know that I think that a pretty good way
to depart this life. It beats old age, disease,
or falling down the cellar stairs. - And that was the last anyone heard from him...
18The Devils Dictionary
- Bore, n. A person who talks when you wish him to
listen. - Cannon, n. An instrument employed in the
rectification of national boundaries. - Circus, n. A place where horses, ponies and
elephants are permitted to see men, women and
children acting the fool. - Clarionet, n. An instrument of torture operated
by a person with cotton in his ears. There are
two instruments that are worse than a clarionet
two clarionets.
19The Devils Dictionary, cont.
- Corporation, n. An ingenious device for obtaining
individual profit without individual
responsibility. - Idiot, n. A member of a large and powerful tribe
whose influence in human affairs has always been
dominant and controlling. - Love, n. A temporary insanity curable by
marriage. - Novel, n. A short story padded.
- Telephone, n. An invention of the devil which
has the advantages of making a disagreeable
person keep his distance.
20The Devils Dictionary, cont.
- Vote, n. The instrument and symbol of a freeman's
power to make a fool of himself and a wreck of
his country. - Yankee, n. In Europe, an American. In the
Northern States of our Union, a New Englander. In
the Southern States the word is unknown. - Zeal, n. A certain nervous disorder afflicting
the young and inexperienced.
21Jack London
- b. 1876
- As a boy, he was largely uncared for by his
parents (495). - In his teens, he
- was an oyster pirate
- sailed on a schooner
- went seal-hunting
- wrote for several newspapers
- prospected for gold in the Klondike.
- Portrait of Jack London, Arnold Genthe.
22Jack London, Cont.
- London left the Klondike after only a year due to
illness. - His time in the Klondike, however, convinced him
that life is a struggle in which the strong
survive and the weak do not (495), a perspective
which highly influenced his work. - His story To Build a Fire is based on his
experiences in the Klondike.
23Jack London, cont.
- The Call of the Wild (1903) is his most famous
work. - The Call of the Wild is the story of a sled dog
named Buck who escapes to freedom. - In his later years, Londons health deteriorated
due to alcoholism. - d. 1916
- London overdosed on narcotics in November of 1916
and lapsed into a coma. - He died the following evening at the age of forty.
24Works Consulted
- Arpin, Gary Q. The Rise of Realism The Civil
War and Postwar Period. Elements of
Literature. Austin Holt, Rinehart Winston,
2000. 408-422. - Vanderziel, Jeffery. "Civil War Statistics." The
American Civil War. 2001. 17 Feb 2009
lthttp//www.phil.muni.cz/vndrzl/amstudies/ civil
war_stats.htmgt.