Title: Realism
1Realism
- Regionalism Local Color
- 1865-1920
2What is realism?
- Broadly defined, a literary technique devoted to
"the faithful representation of reality" - A reaction against romanticism
- Sparked by an interest in the scientific method,
the systematizing of the study of documentary
history, and the influence of rational philosophy
3Realist writers
- Endeavored to accurately represent contemporary
culture and people from all walks of life - Addressed themes of socioeconomic conflict by
contrasting the living conditions of the poor
with those of the upper classes in urban as well
as rural societies - Sought to narrate their novels from an objective,
unbiased perspective that simply and clearly
represented the factual elements of the story - Became masters at psychological characterization,
detailed descriptions of everyday life in
realistic settings, and dialogue that captures
the idioms of natural human speech
4Some Key Influences
- Rapid growth after the Civil War
- Increasing rates of democracy and literacy
- Rapid growth in industrialism and urbanization
- An expanding population base due to immigration
- A relative rise in middle-class affluence
- Interest in understanding these rapid shifts in
culture - Concern about loss of personal identity
5Local Color/Regional Literature
- Local color or regional literature focuses on the
characters, dialect, customs, topography, and
other features particular to a specific region. - Between the Civil War and the end of the
nineteenth century, this mode of writing became
dominant in American literature.
6Local Color
- According to the Oxford Companion to American
Literature, "In local-color literature one finds
the dual influence of romanticism and realism,
since the author frequently looks away from
ordinary life to distant lands, strange customs,
or exotic scenes, but retains through minute
detail a sense of fidelity and accuracy of
description" (439).
7Regional Literature
- Regional literature incorporates the broader
concept of sectional differences within a locale.
- For example, in The Adventures of Huckleberry
Finn, Mark Twain makes use of seven distinct
dialects to represent the differences of various
groups living in the region.
8Impacts
- Contributed to the reunification of the country
after the Civil War -
- Helped build a national identity
- Contributed to the narrative of unified
nationhood that late nineteenth-century America
sought to construct
9Regionalism in Art
- Regionalism is a realist modern American art
movement wherein artists shunned the city and
rapidly developing technological advances to
focus on scenes of rural life. - Regionalist style was at its height from 1930 to
1935. - During the Great Depression of the 1930s,
Regionalist art was widely appreciated for its
reassuring images of the American heartland.
10We introduced America to Americans."--Roy
Stryker, Regionalist Photographer
11Shared Characteristics in Local Color Regional
Literature
- Setting
- Characters
- Narrator
- Plots
- Themes
12Setting
- The emphasis is frequently on nature and the
limitations it imposes settings are frequently
remote and inaccessible. The setting is integral
to the story and may sometimes become a character
in itself.
13Characters
- Local color stories tend to be concerned with the
character of the district or region rather than
with the individual characters may become
character types, sometimes quaint or
stereotypical. - The characters are marked by their adherence to
the old ways, by dialect, and by particular
personality traits central to the region.
14Narrator
- The narrator is typically an educated observer
from the world beyond who learns something from
the characters while preserving a sometimes
sympathetic, sometimes ironic distance from them.
- The narrator serves as mediator between the rural
folk of the tale and the urban audience to whom
the tale is directed.
15Plots
- It has been said that "nothing happens" in local
color stories by women authors, and often very
little does happen. - Stories may include lots of storytelling and
revolve around the community and its rituals.
16Themes
- Many local color stories share an antipathy to
change and a nostalgia for an always-past golden
age. Thematic tension or conflict between urban
ways and old-fashioned rural values is often
symbolized by the intrusion of an outsider or
interloper who seeks something from the community.
17Shared Techniques
- Use of dialect to establish credibility and
authenticity of regional characters. - Use of detailed description, especially of small,
seemingly insignificant details central to an
understanding of the region. - Frequent use of a frame story in which the
narrator hears some tale of the region.
18Famous Practitioners
- Mark Twain
- Bret Harte
- Hamlin Garland
- Joel Chandler Harris
- William Faulkner
- William Styron
- Robert Frost
- Sinclair Lewis
- Henry James
- John Steinbeck
- Dashiell Hammett
- Kate Chopin
- Harriet Beecher Stowe
- Eudora Welty
- Sarah Orne Jewett
- Willa Cather
- Harper Lee
19Samuel Langhorne Clemens (1835-1910)
- Samuel Langhorne Clemens, aka. Mark Twain, was
a natural-born storyteller who was the first
writer to recognize that art could be created out
of the American language. - Through his use of carefully chosen words and his
sharply honed humor, he dealt head-on with
controversial issues that others were afraid to
confront.
20Mark Twains Writing Advice
- Whatever you have lived, you can write by
hard work a genuine apprenticeship, you can
learn to write well but what you have not lived
you cannot write, you can only pretend to write
it...
21An Enormous Noticer
- Mark Twain is described as an enormous noticer.
Much of what he noticed as a boy growing up in
the small Mississippi River town of Hannibal,
Missouri, found its way into his writings in
books such as The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. - He was always noticing whether people had their
hands in their pockets or not, how they dressed,
walked, spoke or presented themselves to others.
22Consider this passage from the first chapter of
Tom Sawyer, for example
- A stranger was before him boy a shade larger
than himself... This boy was well-dressed, too
well-dressed on a week-day. This was simply
astounding. His cap was a dainty thing, his
close-buttoned blue cloth roundabout was new and
natty, and so were his pantaloons. He had shoes
onand it was only Friday. He even wore a
necktie, a bright bit of ribbon. He had a
citified air about him that ate into Toms
vitals.
23Now, close your eyes
- What am I wearing?
- What is currently hanging on the back bulletin
board? - What color are the walls in this room?
- How many book shelves are in this room?
- Are there more boys or girls in this class?
- What object is sitting above the white board on
the left side?
24Twains First Success
- "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County"
(1865) was Twains first great success as a
writer, bringing him national attention. - In it, the narrator retells a story he heard from
a bartender at the Angels Hotel in Angels Camp,
California, about the gambler Jim Smiley and his
celebrated jumping frog.
25How he got started
- Twain began his career as a journalist, travel
writer, and writer of light, humorous verse. - He evolved into a chronicler of the vanities,
hypocrisies. and murderous acts of mankind,
making frequent use of satire. - At mid-career, with Huckleberry Finn, he combined
rich humor, sturdy narrative and social
criticism.
26What is satire?
- A literary genre or form in which vices, follies,
abuses, and shortcomings are held up to ridicule,
ideally with the intent of shaming individuals,
and society itself, into improvement. - Although satire is usually meant to be funny, its
greater purpose is often constructive social
criticism, using wit as a weapon. - A common feature of satire is strong irony or
sarcasm it also makes frequent use of parody,
burlesque, analogy, exaggeration, juxtaposition,
and double entendre. - Modern Examples Animal Farm Fahrenheit 451
Lord of the Flies Saturday Night Live,
Doonesbury, John Stewart Stephen Colbert The
Simpsons South Park
27Twain on Humor
- Humor must not professedly teach, and it must
not professedly preach, but it must do both if it
would live forever. - Mark Twain
28Most Famous Books
- The Innocents Abroad
- Roughing It
- The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
- The Prince and the Pauper
- Life on the Mississippi
- The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
- A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthurs Court
- The Tragedy of Puddnhead Wilson
- A Burlesque Autobiography
29The Adventures of Tom Sawyer a prequel to
Huckleberry Finn
30Twains Use of Dialect
- Twain was a master at rendering colloquial speech
and helped to create and popularize a distinctive
American literature built on American themes and
language. - In The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Twain uses
seven different dialects and even provides an
explanation for doing so
31Twains EXPLANATORY
- IN this book a number of dialects are used, to
wit the Missouri negro dialect the extremest
form of the backwoods Southwestern dialect the
ordinary "Pike County" dialect and four modified
varieties of this last. The shadings have not
been done in a haphazard fashion, or by
guesswork but painstakingly, and with the
trustworthy guidance and support of personal
familiarity with these several forms of speech. - I make this explanation for the reason that
without it many readers would suppose that all
these characters were trying to talk alike and
not succeeding.
32Missouri Negro Jim
- Goodness gracious, is dat you, Huck? En you
ain dead-you aint drownded-yous back agin?
Its too good for true, honey, its too good for
true. Lemme look at you chile, lemme feel o you.
No, you ain dead! yous back agin, live en
soun, jis de same ole Huck-de same ole Huck,
thanks to goodness!
33Extremist form of the backwoods Southwestern
dialect Arkansas Gossips (Sister Hotchkiss)
- Look at that-air grindstone, sI want to tell
met any cretur ts in his right minds a-goin
to scrabble all them crazy things onto a
grindstone? sI.
34Ordinary Pike County Huck
- My folks was living in Pike County, in Missouri,
where I was born, and they all died off but me
and pa and my brother Ike.
35Modified Pike County King
- Well, Id ben a-runnin a little temperence
revival thar bout a week . . . and business
a-growin all the time, when somehow or another a
little report got around last night that I had a
way of puttin in my time with a private jug on
the sly.
36Huck as Narrator
- The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn was a
breakthrough in American literature for its
presentation of Huck Finn, an adolescent boy who
tells the story in his own language. The novel
was one of the first in America to employ the
child's perspective and employ the vernacular a
language specific to a region or group of
peoplethroughout the book.
37Unique Perspective
- Huck's unique perspective is that of a
lower-class, southern white child, who has been
viewed as an outcast by society. - From this position, Huck narrates the story of
his encounters with various southern types,
sometimes revealing his naivete and, at other
times, his acute ability to see through the
hypocrisy of his elders.
38- Realist and Regionalist techniques are
exemplified in The Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn by the specific and richly
detailed setting
39- and the novel's insistence on dialect which
attempts to reproduce the natural speech of a
variety of characters unique to the Mississippi
Valley region.
40- In addition, Huck's momentous decision to free
Jim, even if it means going to hell, is seen as a
classic episode of Realist fiction because it
demonstrates the individual's struggle to make
choices based on inner motivations, rather than
outside forces.
41Twains Warning
42Many wonder if he really meant that since Huck
goes through a major metamorphosis in his
thinking about Jim
43On Race
- I have no race prejudices, and I think I have
no color prejudices nor caste prejudices nor
creed prejudices. Indeed I know it... All that I
care to know is that a man is a human being
that is enough for me. -
- Mark Twain
44Early Experiences
- Black people and black voices were part of
Twains life from the beginning. Every summer as
a child Sam spent several weeks on his uncles
farm, where an old slave called Uncle Daniel
thrilled the youngsters with ghost stories. - One of his most lasting childhood memories was
not so pleasant. It was of a dozen men and women,
chained together, waiting to be shipped
down-river to the slave market. They had, he
said, the saddest faces I ever saw.
45Controversy/Book Banning
- The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, first
published in 1884, was controversial from the
start. In 1885, Concord Public Library banned the
book. - Mark Twain wrote to Charles Webster on March 18,
1885 "The Committee of the Public Library of
Concord, Mass., have given us a rattling tip-top
puff which will go into every paper in the
country. They have expelled Huck from their
library as 'trash and suitable only for the
slums.' That will sell 25,000 copies for us sure."
46- In 1902, the Brooklyn Public Library banned The
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn with the statement
that "Huck not only itched but he scratched," and
that he said "sweat" when he should have said
"perspiration."
47Modern Day Issues
- In general, the debate over Twain's The
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn has centered
around the language of the book, which has been
objected to on social grounds, specifically for
its repeated use of the N word, which was in
common usage in the pre-Civil War period in which
the novel was set. - Yielding to public pressure, some textbook
publishers have substituted "slave" or "servant"
for the term that Mark Twain uses in the book,
which has been considered derogatory to African
Americans.
48The N Word
- Comes from the Latin adjective meaning black
(niger) and the Spanish/Portuguese word for black
(negro) - Used rightly or wrongly, ironically or
seriously, of necessity for the sake of realism,
or impishly for the sake of comedy, it doesn't
matter. Negroes do not like it in any book or
play whatsoever, be the book or play ever so
sympathetic in its treatment of the basic
problems of the race. Even though the book or
play is written by a Negro, they still do not
like it. The word nigger, you see, sums up for us
who are colored all the bitter years of insult
and struggle in America. - - Langston Hughes
49Others see it as the greatest and most important
American novel
-
- "All modern American literature comes from one
book by Mark Twain called Huckleberry Finn." - - Ernest Hemingway, Green Hills of Africa