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Romanticism

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Romanticism 1820s-1890s The Time Period In America, 1820s-1890s Development of the Civil War in America meant increased political tensions. Manifest Destiny still ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Romanticism


1
Romanticism
  • 1820s-1890s

2
The Time Period
  • In America, 1820s-1890s
  • Development of the Civil War in America meant
    increased political tensions.
  • Manifest Destiny still going strong.
  • First great creative period in America.

3
Major Aspects
  • A reaction against the Age of Reason
  • Evoking and criticizing the past.
  • Respect for wild and pure nature.
  • Connection with emotion.
  • Isolation of the artist or author.
  • Emphasis on Transcendentalism.
  • Asserting the idea of Nationalism.

4
Definition
  • Movement in art, literature, and music during the
    19th century.
  • Seen most strongly in music, literature, and the
    visual arts.
  • Characterized by the 5 Is
  • - Imagination
  • - Intuition
  • - Idealism
  • - Inspiration
  • - Individuality

5
Imagination
  • Imagination was emphasized over reason.
  • Needed more connection with nature and the
    surrounding world.
  • Promoted expanding your mind.
  • Considered necessary for creating art.
  • Imagination preferred over classical rules.

6
Intuition
  • Feeling or instincts.
  • British Romantic William Wordsworth described
    poetry as the spontaneous overflow of powerful
    feelings.

7
Idealism
  • Idealism is the concept that we can make the
    world a better place.
  • Emphasizes the spirit, the mind, or language over
    matter.
  • Immanuel Kant, a German philosopher, held that
    the mind forces the world we perceive to take the
    shape of the space and time.

8
Inspiration
  • Romantics believed the artists, writer, or
    musician is an inspired creator rather than a
    technical master.
  • Spontaneous, going with the moment

9
Individuality
  • During this time period, Womens Rights and
    Abolitionism were taking root as major movements.
  • Promoting the overall welfare and bettering the
    nation through the individual.
  • The individual is at the center of all life,
    which places the individual at the center of art.

10
Subjects
  • Nature
  • the Self
  • the inner
  • the past
  • the world of human nature
  • Supernatural

11
Ideas
  • Beauty- picturesque
  • The exotic
  • The mysterious
  • The emotional
  • Moral qualities

12
The Dark Side
  • Edgar Allan Poe
  • The strongest poetic influence in the pre-Civil
    War America
  • Still maintained the main ideas of Romanticism,
    just from a more cynical perspective.
  • Less of the light and fluffy and more of the
    dark and twisty.

13
Beauty in Nature
  • Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau
  • Both believed and promoted transcendentalism.
  • Expressed philosophic and religious ideas at an
    elevated level.
  • Disguised their political messages and criticisms
    in their writings.

14
Tall-Tale
  • Type of folklore associated with the American
    frontier.
  • Characterized by humorous exaggerations, heroes,
    super-human traits, and unbelievable events.

15
Transcendentalism
  • A philosophy which holds that basic truths can be
    reached through intuition rather than through
    reason.
  • Beauty in nature.
  • Essential divinity of all people.
  • Primary importance of the human spirit.
  • Mostly seen through novels or essays.

16
Romanticism Summary
  • Feelings are more important than reason.
  • Imagination is most important.
  • Happiness can be found in nature, not in
    civilization.
  • Innocence is more important than sophistication.
  • The individual is more important than society.

17
  • Nature is the way to gain spiritual wisdom.
  • Beauty and truth can be found in the supernatural
    and imagination.
  • Poetry is the highest work of the imagination.
  • Inspiration comes from myth, legend, and
    folklore.
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