Title: The American Renaissance and Transcendentalism
1The American RenaissanceandTranscendentalism
2Search for American Literary Identity
- By the mid-19th century, people were wondering
if America could produce great writing
3Hawthorne Melville
- Nathaniel Hawthorne and Herman Melville became
friends - Saw a dark side to human existence sought to
record this aspect of human nature in their works - Melville wrote a patriotic essay urging Americans
to create their own literary identity
4Declaration of Literary Independence
- American Renaissance
- Means rebirth
- Describes the explosion of American literary
genius
5Pioneers of American Literature
- Nathaniel Hawthorne
- Herman Melville
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Henry David Thoreau
6Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Inspired reform movements to
- Improve public education
- End slavery
- Elevate status of women
- Improve social conditions
- Inspired utopean projects - plans for creating a
perfect society
7Transcendentalism
- Transcend to exist above and apart from the
material world - By meditation, by communing with nature, and
through work and art, man could transcend his
senses and attain an understanding of beauty,
goodness, and truth
8Roots of Transcendentalism
- Puritans
- Jonathan Edwards God reveals himself through the
physical world - Romantics
- William Cullen Bryant death is simply part of
the life cycle
9A Transcendentalists View of the World
- Everything in the world, including human beings,
is a reflection of the Divine Soul. Each
individual soul is made up of the same stuff as
the universal soul (kind of like the idea of The
Force in Star Wars)
10A Transcendentalists View of the World
- The physical facts of the natural world are a
doorway to the spiritual or ideal world (the
spiritual world is simply a reflection of the
natural world and vice-versa) - People can use their intuition to behold Gods
spirit revealed in nature or their own souls
11A Transendentalists View of the World
- Self-reliance and individualism must outweigh
external authority and blind conformity to custom
and tradition (like Romanticism, the individual
is the most important) - Spontaneous feelings and intuition are superior
to deliberate intellectualism and rationality
(like Romanticism)
12Emerson Transcendentalism
- Emersons utopian group known as The
Transcendental Club - Most influential transcendentalist
- Every natural fact is a symbol of some spiritual
fact
13Emerson Transcendentalism
- Intuition over logic
- Intuition our capacity to know things
immediately through emotions rather than
reasoning - Contrasts with rational thinking of someone like
Benjamin Franklin - Opposed deism (the idea that the universe was
rationally designed by divinity who endowed
humanity with reason)
14Emerson Transcendentalism
- Optimism Idealism
- God can be found directly in nature and the
individual - discover this, and you will find
meaning in life - Natural events can be explained on a spiritual
level (think Thanatopsis)
15Thoreau Transcendentalism
- Stayed secluded in a cabin at Walden Pond in
Massachusetts to rediscover the grandeur and
heroism of a simple life led close to nature - Wrote in a style that imitated nature
- Walden is one of the most well-known works
produced in America
16Thoreau Transcendentalism
- Protested Mexican War
- Refused to pay poll tax
- Radical abolitionist
- Resistance to Civil Government
- Essay on passive resistance
- Inspired Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr.
17Thoreau Transcendentalism
- I should have told them at once that I was a
Transcendentalist - that would have been the
shortest way of telling them that they would not
understand my explanations."
18Sources
- Lit Book p 206-214, 230-231
- http//www.pbs.org/wnet/ihas/icon/transcend.html
- http//www.vcu.edu/engweb/transcendentalism/
- http//www.google.com