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By: Kayla Brooks Mika Fengler Alexandra Dorrell

Romantic Period. By: Kayla Brooks Mika Fengler Alexandra Dorrell. Transportation in the Romantic Period. Steamboat Sailing Canal Railroad. Transport goods and people. Built in New York 1825. Link, east and west coast. Called Iron House First in 1869.

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By: Kayla Brooks Mika Fengler Alexandra Dorrell

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  1. Romantic Period By: Kayla Brooks Mika Fengler Alexandra Dorrell

  2. Transportation in the Romantic Period • Steamboat • Sailing • Canal • Railroad • Transport goods and people • Built in New York 1825 • Link, east and west coast. • Called Iron House • First in 1869

  3. Rising Industrialization in the Romantic Era • Factories are found in the Northeast • Some inventions= • Steel plow • Reaper • Telegraph • Morse Code • Spurred Social Change • Rapid growth=National pride and self awareness

  4. Moving Outwards and Advances in the Romanic Period • 16 states eastward coast • As growth Americans began to direct control over government. • Democratic advances= ONLY WHITE MEN • Gold Rush spurred growth to the west coast

  5. Slavery in the Romantic Era • North vs. South • Cotton Gin demanded MORE slaves • 8 million-15 million slaves • 1840- underground railroad • Civil war fought over slavery • Lincoln

  6. Types of Literature in the Romantic Period • Short Stories • Novels • Folktales • Poems • Speeches • Sermons • Diaries • Essays • Epistles

  7. Romantic Authors Do not particularly write about love Romantic, by definition, is having no basis in fact; a product of invention or exaggeration Most authors used imagination over reasoning and intuition over fact

  8. Washington Irving (1783-1859) Born on April 3, 1783 in New York City around the Hudson River Valley Youngest of 11 He wrote for a brother’s newspaper He went on a tour of Europe in 1804 In 1807 he wrote the Salmagundi which is a collection of twenty essays about society of the day

  9. William Bryant (1794-1878) Born on November 3, 1794 in Cummings He attended Williams College in 1810 through 1811 then studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1815 In 1825 he moved with his wife Frances Fairchild to New York City and became editor of the New York Review and later joined the Evening Post, a New York newspaper He wrote his finest poem, “Thanatopsis,” at age 17 Some other famous works include “To a Waterfowl,” “Green River,” and “The Yellow Violet”

  10. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882) Born in Portland, Maine Attended Bowdoin College, which he later taught at along with Harvard University He wrote “Paul Revere’s Ride.” He was famous for his ballads such as; The Village of the Blacksmith, The Wreck of the Hesperus, Evangeline (1847), The Song of Hiawatha (1858) and the Courtship f Miles Standish

  11. John Greenleaf Whittier (1807-1892) • Born in 1807 in Haverhill, Massachusetts • Fist poem – “The Exile’s Departure” • First book – Legends of New England in Prose and Verse • Best known poem – “ Maud Muller” • He was a very emotional and sentimental writer

  12. Culture During the Romantic period, the United States signed the treaty for the Louisiana Purchase. This gave the United States the territory from the Mississippi River to the Rocky Mountains. All of this land was Purchased from the French in 1803.

  13. In 1814, the Star Spangled Banner was written. Francis Scott Key, wrote this poem after seeing the flag still standing at Fort McHenry. Later this poem was turned into a song and adapted to be the United States’ national anthem in 1931.

  14. The electromagnetic telegraph was patented by Samuel F.B. Morse in 1837. This enabled the use of the Morse Code. The Morse Code was a way of conveying the alphabet through a combination of dots and lines.

  15. In 1848, the California Gold Rush began. Gold was found in a mill in California. Soon people all over the world were traveling to California in hopes of striking gold.

  16. In 1838, many Native Americans were forced by the United States government to travel the Trail of Tears. All of these Charokees had to walk from Georgia to Oklahoma. During this, conditions were terrible leaving about 4,000 dead.

  17. Inner Feelings & Emotions • Freedom of form • Self-expression, unique personal feelings • Stories based on emotions or human experiences • Questioning movements & ideals-effects on human

  18. Quest for Individual to Define Himself • Subjectivity against rationalism & fixed genres • Created own forms-mixed several genres • Individual thinking

  19. Imagination Over Reason • Stories converted to myth • Transcendentalism, human mind unlocking any mystery • “tapped into universal truth through imagination”

  20. Nature Inspires Man to High Ideals • Direct revelation of truth • “living garment of God” • Viewed as good & kind compared to the corruption of society • Used for theme/setting • Interested in dark side of nature • Appreciated wonders of nature

  21. Interest In Past • History major part in fiction • Inspiration for poems/stories • Mysterious, exotic, distant/far away • Middle Ages-folk songs, tales, understanding dreams

  22. Characteristics of Writing • Simile-two things are compared using like or as • Metaphor-comparison/characteristic is given to something • Symbolism-word or image represents something more than itself • Point of View-perspective of who is telling the story • Imagery-writing that forms a mental image • Irving-Devil & TomWalker-uses omniscient 3rd person • “And each separate dying ember wrought its ghost upon the floor”-The Raven, Edgar Allen Poe

  23. WORKS CITED • Pinney, Roy. "slavery." Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia. 2008. Grolier Online. 22 Aug. 2008 <http://gme.grolier.com/cgi-bin/article?assetid=0268740-0>. • "Image:Cotton gin Harpers.jpg". Wikimedia Commons. August 20,2008 <http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5f/Cotton_gin_harpers.jpg&imgrefurl=http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Cotton_gin_harpers.jpg&h=680&w=896&sz=111&hl=en&start=6&um=1&tbnid=P55wDdIQRevZaM:&tbnh=111&tbnw=146&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dcotton%2Bgin%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den>. • Prentice Hall Literature: Timeless Voices, Timeless Themes: The American Experience. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education, Inc., 2004. 230-237.

  24. WORKS CITED "Irving, Wahington". eLibrary. August, 19, 2008 <http://elibrary.bigchalk.com/libweb/elib/do/document?set=search&groupid=1&requestid=lib_standard&resultid=1&edition=&ts=D3657B3B89F68721ED4288294C1961BA_1219244740208&start=1&urn=urn%3Abigchalk%3AUS%3BBCLib%3Bdocument%3B88552001>. "Bryant, William Cullen". eLibrary. August, 19, 2008 <http://elibrary.bigchalk.com/libweb/elib/do/document?set=search&groupid=1&requestid=lib_standard&resultid=1&edition=&ts=D3657B3B89F68721ED4288294C1961BA_1219244899141&start=1&urn=urn%3Abigchalk%3AUS%3BBCLib%3Bdocument%3B121712339>. "Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth". eLibrary. August, 19, 2008 <http://elibrary.bigchalk.com/libweb/elib/do/document?set=search&groupid=1&requestid=lib_standard&resultid=1&edition=&ts=D3657B3B89F68721ED4288294C1961BA_1219245037274&start=1&urn=urn%3Abigchalk%3AUS%3BBCLib%3Bdocument%3B120309994>. “Whittier, John Greenleaf". eLibrary. August, 19, 2008 <http://elibrary.bigchalk.com/libweb/elib/do/document?set=search&groupid=1&requestid=lib_standard&resultid=1&edition=&ts=D3657B3B89F68721ED4288294C1961BA_1219245106593&start=1&urn=urn%3Abigchalk%3AUS%3BBCLib%3Bdocument%3B124731010>.

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