Title: Elements of Romanticism
1Elements of Romanticism
- Rebellion against Neoclassicism
- Primitivism
- Love of Nature
- Sympathetic Interest in the Past
- Mysticism
- Individualism
2Romanticism Defined
3Artistic and intellectual movement that
originated in the late 18th century and stressed
emotion, imagination, freedom from classical
correctness in art forms, and rebellion against
social conventions.
4Romanticism as a Rebellion
- Rejection of precepts of order, calm, harmony,
balance, idealization, and rationality typical of
Neo-classicism and The Enlightenment - Reaction against 18th century rationalism and
materialism (Industrial Revolution)
5Mind and Heart
- Romanticism exalted emotion over reason, the
senses over the intellect
6Primitivism
- Noble Savage The idea that primitive human
beings are naturally good and that whatever evil
they developed is the product of the corrupting
influences of society and civilization
7Primitivism
- Human beings were potentially perfect, their
faults are due to the vicious influence of the
type of society in which they live, one which
tended progressively to restrict freedom and
lessen moral goodness
8(No Transcript)
9Love of Nature
- Earl of Shaftesbury contended that God had
revealed himself completely through Nature - Nature was perfect
- Primitive People closer to God
- Human nature prone to good evil result of
self-imposed limitations on freedom
10(No Transcript)
11(No Transcript)
12(No Transcript)
13Mysticism
- Knowledge of God is attainable through the use of
human faculties, transcends intellect and does
not use normal human perceptions and logical
processes
14Individualism
- Heightened awareness of moods and mental
potentials as well as personality
15(No Transcript)
16Dark RomanticismGothic
- Most gothic novels or stories tales of mystery
and horror and include the elements of - the supernatural,
- wild and desolate landscapes (dark forests,
feudal halls, mysterious castles),
17- monstrous apparitions and curses
- stupefying atmosphere of doom and gloom
- heroes and heroines in the direst of
imaginable straitswho do not always triumph -
18- wicked villain (witches, monsters, evil lords and
ladies) - a keen focus on the gloomy atmosphere and setting
19(No Transcript)
20(No Transcript)
21Transcendentalism
- Emphasis on imagination as a gateway to
transcendent experience and spiritual truth
22Individualism
- the spiritual center of the universe - and in an
individual can be found the clue to nature,
history and, ultimately, the cosmos itself. It is
not a rejection of the existence of God, but a
preference to explain an individual and the world
in terms of an individual.
23Mysteries of Nature
- Transcendentalists accepted the neo-Platonic
conception of nature as a living mystery, full of
signs - nature is symbolic.
24The structure of the universe
literally duplicates the structure of the
individual self - all knowledge, therefore,
begins with self-knowledge. This is similar to
Aristotle's dictum "know thyself."
25Individual Virtue
The belief that individual virtue and happiness
depend upon self-realization - this depends upon
the reconciliation of two universal
psychological tendencies
26- the expansive or self-transcending tendency - a
desire to embrace the whole world - to know and
become one with the world.
27- the contracting or self-asserting tendency - the
desire to withdraw, remain unique and separate -
an egotistical existence.