1 / 14

American Romanticism

American Romanticism. 1800-1855. Celebrating the Individual.

maddox
Download Presentation

American Romanticism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. American Romanticism 1800-1855

  2. Celebrating the Individual • Patriotic and individualistic, urban and untamed, wealthy and enslaved---Americans in the first half of the 19th century embodied a host of contradictions. Struggling to make sense of their complex, inconsistent society, writers of the period turned inward for a sense of truth. Their movement, known as romanticism, explored the glories of the individual spirit, the beauty of nature, and the possibilities of the imagination.

  3. Romanticism: Historical Context • The Spirit of Exploration • Westward Expansion • Louisiana doubled the country’s size • Westward exploration further and further west • Displacement of the Native Americans • Manifest Destiny • It was the destiny of the United States to expand to the Pacific Ocean and into Mexican territory • Mexico disagreed: Mexican-American War

  4. Historical Context cont… • Growth of Industry • An enormous shift in the attitudes and working habits of many Americans • War of 1812 forced Americans to make items previously imported • Industrial Revolution • Changed country from agrarian economy to industrial powerhouse • Changed way of life for many Americans, but not necessarily for the better • Textile mills- long hours; poor wages

  5. Cultural Influences • The Tragedy of Slavery • 1793-1860 cotton production rose greatly • Cotton gin and farming equipment • Growth in slavery • Brutal living conditions • Tension between the North and South over issue • Call for Social Reform • American joined together in mid-19th century to fight slavery • Abolitionist movement • William Cullen Bryant and James Russell Lowell prominent abolitionists

  6. Ideas of the Age • Nationalism vs. Sectionalism • Nationalism: the belief that national interests should be placed ahead of regional concerns • National pride and optimism of Americans • Our own writers with a distinctly American “accent” • Issue of slavery brought about a rift in Nationalism • South relied on North for manufactured goods; made the North rich at the South’s expense

  7. Ideas continued… • Sectionalism: placing the interest of one’s own region ahead of the nation as a whole • Took hold in the South • Reaction to the North’s growing wealth and influence

  8. Romantic Literature • The Early Romantics • Romanticism emerged from Europe in the late 18th Century • Romantics look to nature for inspiration • Romantics celebrate emotions and the imagination • Writers in America reacting to the strict doctrines of the Puritans • Attempted to capture the energy and character of growing nation • Celebrated the glories of the individual spirit, the emotions, imagination basic to human nature

  9. Early Romantics • William Cullen Bryant • “Thanatopsis” established romanticism as a force in mid-19th Century literature • Celebrated nature • Washington Irving • Pioneered the short story as a literary form • Put America on the “literary map” • Influenced Nathaniel Hawthorne • James Fenimore Cooper • Wrote the first truly original American novel • The Last of the Mohicans

  10. The Fireside Poets • Group of New England Poets whose work was morally uplifting and romantically engaging • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow • Stressed individualism and an appreciation of nature • Only American poet recognized with a plaque in the Poets’ corner of Westminster Abbey • James Russell Lowell, Oliver Wendell Holmes and John Greenleaf Whittier • Committed to social reform • Championed the common person

  11. Transcendentalism • Beliefs: • People, nature and God are interconnected • Stress on individualism and self-reliance • Intuition can lead to knowledge • Faith in the inherent goodness of people • Celebration of emotions and the imagination

  12. The Transcendentalists • A philosophical and literary movement that emphasized living a simple life and celebrating truth found in nature and in personal emotion and imagination. • Stressed: optimism, freedom, and self-reliance • Ralph Waldo Emerson • The individual is capable of discovering a higher truth on his or her own, through intuition • People are inherently good and should follow their own truths

  13. Transcendentalists cont… • Henry David Thoreau • Major target the Puritan heritage • Stressed spiritual well-being • Achieved through intellectual activity and a close relationship with nature • He lived in the woods by Walden Pond for two years writing and studying nature.

  14. American Gothic: The “Brooding” Romantics • Anti-transcendentalists • Edgar Allan Poe • Nathaniel Hawthorne • Herman Melville • Philosophy filled with dark currents and a deep awareness of human capacity for evil. • Probe the inner life of their characters • Are romantic in their emphasis on emotion, nature, the individual, and the unusual.

More Related