Title: The Romantic Period
1The Romantic Period
2 Monarchies and Empires
3France The House of Bourbon
4France The House of Bourbon
Bourbon Dynasty1643 - 1715Â Â Louis XIV (the Sun
King) 1715 - 1774Â Â Louis XV (the Beloved)1774
- 1792Â Â Louis XVIFirst Republic 1792-1804
Louis XVIIBonaparte Dynasty First Empire
1804-1815 Napoleon Bourbon Dynasty
Restored1815-1824 Louis XVIII
5Spain The House of Bourbon
6(No Transcript)
7Russia The Romanovs
8(No Transcript)
9 England The House of Hanover
10(No Transcript)
11ROMANTIC REVOLUTIONS
12American Revolution1775-1783
- 1763 Britain began to impose taxes upon the
colonies which were viewed as illegal - Broad intellectual and social shifts
- republican ideals liberty and rights as central
values, makes the people as a whole sovereign,
rejects aristocracy and inherited political
power, expects citizens to be independent and
calls on them to perform civic duties, and is
strongly opposed to corruption. - liberal democracy representative democracy
(with free and fair elections) along with the
protection of minorities, the rule of law, a
separation of powers, and protection of liberties
(thus the name liberal) of speech, assembly,
religion, and property. - Colonies alliance with France
- 1776 Declaration of Independence
- 1787 Constitution and Bill of Rights
13Tom Paine1737-1809
- Quaker
- Met Ben Franklin in London who advised him to
move to America - 1776 Common Sense attacked British monarchy
and argued for American independence - 1787 Returned to Britain
- 1791 The Rights of Man proposed universal male
suffrage, progressive taxes, family allowances,
old age pensions, maternity grants and abolition
of House of Lords - 1792 Became a French citizen and elected to
National Convention opposed execution of Louis
XVI - 1794 Age of Reason questioned truth of Old
Testament and Christianity - 1802 returned to America
Auguste Milliere, Thomas Paine National Portrait
Gallery, London
14French Revolution and Napoleon1789-1815
- 1789 Fall of Bastille and Declaration of the
Rights of Man - 1792 September Massacres of imprisoned nobility
- 1793 The Reign of Terror
- Execution of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette
- France declared war against Britain
- 1794 Fall of Robespierre
- 1804 Napoleon crowned Emperor of France
- 1815 Napoleons defeat at Waterloo
15Jean-Pierre Louis Laurent Houel (1735-1813),
Prise de la Bastille ("The storm of the
Bastille").
16Eugene Delacroix Liberty Leading the People
171812 Napoleon in his study
1797The Young General
Images of Napoleon By Jacques Louis David
1800 Napoleon at St. Bernard
1804 The coronation
18Jacques Louis David, 1805-07 The coronation of
the Emperor Napoleon I
19Edmund Burke1729-97
- Anglo-Irish statesman and philosopher
- 1756 A Vindication of Natural Society A View
of the Miseries and Evils Arising to Mankind
treatise on anarchy - 1757 A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of
Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful treatise
on aesthetics - 1765-94 Whig member of House of Commons
- Opposed absolute monarchy and supported American
colonies against the king - 1790 Reflections on the Revolution in France
saw French Revolution as a violent rebellion
against tradition which would end in disaster.
Joshua Reynolds, Edmund Burke Scottish National
Portrait Gallery
20Mary Wollstonecraft1759-97
- Professional writer, philosopher and feminist
- 1790 Vindication of the Rights of Men response
to Burke in defense of the ideals of the French
Revolution - 1792 A Vindication of the Rights of Women
- 1794 An Historical and Moral View of the French
Revolution - 1796 Letters Written During a Short Residence
in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark - 1797 married William Godwin
- Died of childbirth fever
- 1798 William Godwin published Memoirs of the
Author of a Vindication of the Rights of Woman
21Official British Reaction to the French
Revolution
- Curtailment of civil liberties and harsh
repression - suspension of the writ of habeus corpus
- advocates of political change charged with
treason - 1791 Rejection of a bill to abolish the slave
trade - 1793 declaration of war against France
22Napoleonic Wars1805-1815
William Sadler, The Battle of Waterloo
23Industrial Revolution
- Power-driven machinery replaced hand labor
- 1765 James Watt the steam engine
- Industry moved from homes and workshops to
factories - Population moved from agricultural countryside
to industrial cities - Enclosure of commons into privately owned
estates - Laissez faire economic policy free operation
of economic laws governmental non-interference - 1776 Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations
24CLASSICISM vs. ROMANTICISM
25Neo-Classicism vs Romanticism
- Greek/Roman influence
- Emphasis on Society
- Age of Reason
- Rationality
- Philosophy
- Deism
- Euro-centric
- Cities
- Enlightenment
- Science
- Medieval/Oriental influence
- Emphasis on Individual
- Age of Passion
- Emotion
- Imagination
- Spirituality
- Interest in the Exotic
- Nature pastoral and wild
- Revolution
- Social Justice
26 NATURENeo-Classical Romantic
- Universal
- Subject to human control
- Gardens
- Source of peace and tranquillity
- Untamed nature dangerous/evil
- Particular
- Beyond human control
- Mountains, oceans, forests
- Source of inspiration and spirituality
- Untamed nature exhilarating/sublime
27Gainsborough, St James Park
28Friedrich, Solitary Tree
29 LOVENeo-Classical Romantic
- Universal
- Subject to human control
- Marriage
- Social Contract
- Economic Contract
- Attraction between social and intellectual equals
- Source of peace and tranquillity
- Particular
- Beyond human control
- Passion
- Individual choice
- Search for soul-mate
- Forbidden attractions social, exotic, incestual
- Source of inspiration, exhilaration and despair
30Gaspar Netscher A Musical Evening
31Caspar David Friedrich, Woman at Sunrise
32William Blake The Enslavement of Experience
The Transcendance of Imagination
33Neo-Classical Artist
- Social
- Arbiter of Taste
- Elitist
- Moral
- Intellectual
- Critic
Louis Michel van Loo Portrait of Diderot
34Romantic Artist
- Loner
- Unconventional
- Amoral
- Genius
- Prophet
George Gordon Lord Byron
35Lyric Poetry
- Search for an authentic language of feeling
rather than artifice - Wordsworth the spontaneous overflow of
powerful feelings recollected in tranquility - 1st person voice of the poem during this
period usually associated with the poet
sometimes biographical and confessional - Revived older poetic forms
- blank verse unrhymed iambic pentameter
- the sonnet
- the ballad
- the ode
36The Poet as Rock Star
Keats
Coleridge
Shelley
Byron
Wordsworth
37The Poet as Rock Star
Leopardi
Heine
Pushkin
Novalis
38Romantic Prose Genres
- Literary criticism
- The Novel
- Historical novels
- Novels of manners
- Novels of sensibility
- Gothic novels
- Autobiography
39Literary Criticism
- Literary critics became the arbiters of taste
- Debate over the artistic value as well as the
utilitarian value of critical literature - 1802 Edinburgh Review
- 1809 Quarterly Review
Thomas DeQuincy
William Hazlitt
Charles Lamb
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
40Historical Novels
- Novels that reconstruct a past age, often when
two cultures are in conflict - Fictional characters interact with with
historical figures in actual events - Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832) is considered the
father of the historical novel The Waverly
Novels (1814-1819) and Ivanhoe (1819)
41Jane Austen and the Novel of Manners
- Novels dominated by the customs, manners,
conventional behavior and habits of a particular
social class - Often concerned with courtship and marriage
- Realistic and sometimes satiric
- Focus on domestic society rather than the larger
world - Other novelists of manners Anthony Trollope,
Edith Wharton, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Margaret
Drabble
42Novels of Sentiment
- Novels in which the characters, and thus the
readers, have a heightened emotional response to
events - Connected to emerging Romantic movement
- Laurence Sterne (1713-1768) Tristam Shandy
(1760-67) - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832) The
Sorrows of Young Werther (1774) - Francois Rene de Chateaubriand (1768-1848)
Atala (1801) and Rene (1802) - The Brontës Anne Brontë Agnes Grey (1847)
Emily Brontë, Wuthering Heights (1847), Charlotte
Brontë, Jane Eyre (1847)
Laurence Sterne bySir Joshua Reynolds
43The BrontësCharlotte (1816-55), Emily (1818-48),
Anne (1820-49)
- Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre transcend
sentiment into myth-making - Wuthering Heights plumbs the psychic unconscious
in a search for wholeness, while Jane Eyre
narrates the female quest for individuation - Brontë.info website of Brontë Society and
Haworth Parsonage - The Victorian Web
portrait by Branwell Brontë of his sisters,
Anne, Emily, and Charlotte (c. 1834)
44Gothic Novels
- Novels characterized by magic, mystery and
horror - Exotic settings medieval, Oriental, etc.
- Originated with Horace Walpoles Castle of
Otranto (1764) - William Beckford Vathek, An Arabian Tale (1786)
- Anne Radcliffe 5 novels (1789-97) including The
Mysteries of Udolpho - Widely popular genre throughout Europe and
America Charles Brockden Browns Wieland (1798)
- Contemporary Gothic novelists include Anne Rice
and Stephen King
45Frankenstein by Mary Shelley1797-1851
- Inspired by a dream in reaction to a challenge
to write a ghost story - Published in 1817 (rev. ed. 1831)
- A Gothic novel influenced by Promethean myth
- The first science fiction novel
46Autobiography
- The term was first used by the poet Robert
Southey in 1809 in the English periodical
Quarterly Review - Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Confessions (1781-88)
- Dorothy Wordsworth, The Grasmere Journals
(1799) - Thomas De Quincey, Confessions of an Opium Eater,
1822 - Frederick Douglass, Narrative of the Life of
rederick Douglass, An American Slave, (1845)
47(No Transcript)