Title: Romanticism
1Romanticism
By Kelsey Neipris Ryan LaFerrera Michelle
McCausland Britney Meraz Skye Aparicio
2What is Romanticism?
- Literary movement during the 18th century,
which gained strength in reaction to the
Industrial Revolution. - Emphasized emotion,
imagination, and nature as being above logic and
reason. - Drew from Medieval elements of art
and literature to escape the industrialism that
was occurring at the time.
3Liberty Leading the People
4The Fighting Temeraire
5Fashion
- Fuller skirts - Smaller waistlines -
Corsets, and layers Of petticoats
6Ethics Religion
- - Society becoming more secular
- Rise of the philosophes, and the questioning of
traditional thought - Beginning of the idea of natural rights
-
7Political
- Questioning of the tyranny of the monarchy and
the divine right of kings - Beginning of democracy and the idea of consent
of the governed - General reform of the government
8Intellectual
- The Enlightenment scientific thought, reason,
and logic - Economic and urban expansion
- General public has more access to and interest in
literary, artistic, philosophical, and scientific
works
9Key Elements
- Glorification of nature
- Religious mysticism
- Praise of the medieval, or the time before the
Industrial Age - Individualism
10Authors and their Contributions
- Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel Hawthorne
- Thomas and Joseph Warton
- Thomas Chatterton
- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
- Alexander Pushkin
- Washington Irving
- Edgar Allen
- Henry David Thoreau
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
11Man vs Nature
- Nature as the representation of god in the
natural universe. - Man is one with nature and anything that happens
with nature is beautiful. - Nature influenced man in romanticism because
anything having to do with nature is positive
even if the outcome was negative. - Romanticism is viewed as organic rather than
scientific.
12Stylistic Devices
- Romantic writing is gruesome, over the top,
unimaginable about what a persons willpower
creates out of it. They will act on anything they
can do to survive be out there and live life to
the fullest. A romantic writer isnt afraid to
put a character in the middle of a dessert with
no food, and see what it can do, or be trapped in
the middle of the ocean on an island. - Romanticism is a type of movement of concern,
impression, emotion and hopefulness for the
character. - Its a kind of culture to mankind wanting to
escape the safe background and be one with
nature. The writer itself uses imagination and
fantasy to escaping the divine devastation of the
city life. Its setting is rural, dark and gothic.
This kind of writing demonstrates the concern of
young children, lovers and caring of animals.
13Themes
- The evocation of criticism of the past
- The cult of sensibility with emphasis on women
and children - The heroic isolation of the artist/narrator
- Respect for a new, wilder untrammeled and pure
nature
14Characteristics
- Rejects social norms and conventions
- Has the self as the center of his/her own
existence - Focused on his/her thoughts rather than actions
- triumph of the individual over the restraints of
theological and social conventions - regret for his actions
- self-criticism
- EXAMPLES Mr. Darcy from Pride And Prejudice,
Andrei Balonsky from War and Peace
15Romanticism vs Modernism
- Romanticism
- emphasizes nature, emotions, and individual, and
the embrace of the traditional - embellishes and exaggerates the beauty of all
things using long, drawn out, flowery sentences - Modernism
- rejects tradition not only in culture but
literature as well - focuses on only the individual and his place in
society - uses short, fragmentary sentences.