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Title: The%20Romantic%20Hero


1
Chapter 28
  • The Romantic Hero

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Romanticism
  • Nature
  • Emotion sentimentality // nostalgia //
    melancholy
  • Imagination exotic // ecstatic // fantastic //
    gothic

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Romanticism
  • The sublime
  • Subjectivity
  • Spontaneity
  • Mysticism

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  • While Enlightenment writers studied the social
    animal, the romantics explored the depths of
    their own souls.
  • (Fiero 705)

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  • I am made unlike anyone I have ever met I will
    even venture to say that I am like no one in the
    whole world. I may be no better, but at least I
    am different.
  • (Rousseau, Confessions
  • quoted in Fiero 706)

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  • Nationalism

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Nationalism
  • an ideology (or belief system) grounded in a
    peoples sense of cultural and political unity
    (Fiero 705)

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Nationalism ? Liberalism
  • After the first French Revolution (1789)
  • nationalism
  • political change
  • freedom

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Nationalism ? Conservativism
  • An appreciation/veneration of the past
  • Demanding the sacrifice of individuals freedom
    for the common good

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National Identity
  • Nation
  • narration
  • an imagined community
  • a system of cultural
  • signification (Homi Bhabha)

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National Identity
  • Creation of national institutions
  • Participation of national rituals (holidays,
    festivals)
  • Identifying with a national community
  • National imagery heroes

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Nationalism Romanticism
  • Romantic writers insisted on the uniqueness of
    cultures by idealizing history and community.
  • Germany
  • the Volk (the common people)
  • Volksgeist (the spirit of the people)

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Nationalism Romanticism
  • The state was itself a natural historic organism.
    Future rested on understanding a nations past.

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Extreme nationalism
  • German racial nationalists
  • Like their Nazi successors, Volkish thinkers
    claimed that the German race was purer than, and
    therefore superior to, all other races. (453)
  • --Taken from W.C. by Marvin Perry

17
  • The Romantic Hero

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The Romantic Hero
  • Gifted with intellect and imagination, the hero
    is at odds with the common herd of mankind.
  • The heros desires are insatiable his is a will
    not satisfied with ordinary things.
  • The Promethean hero an over-reacher who
    unsettles traditional moral categories.

19
Types of the Romantic Hero
  • The Faustian hero Goethes unique treatment of
    the Faust myth (the fact that he never finds
    satisfaction on earth is what ultimately redeems
    him) Victor Frankenstein
  • The abolitionist see Frederick Douglass
    defense of stealing from his slave-masters The
    morality of free society can have no application
    to slave society.
  • The Byronic hero aristocratic, darkly handsome,
    manly, brooding, brilliant, erotic, melancholy,
    indomitable.
  • The Gothic villain-hero
  • http//www.georgiasouthern.edu/dougt/hero.htm

20
Napoleon Bonaparte
  • An example of the Romantic hero and its
    contradictions
  • a Corsican peasant who crowns himself emperor
  • a champion of the revolutionary ideals of
    liberty, fraternity, and equality (Fiero 30) who
    yet went on to wage an imperial war against
    nations of Europe

21
Napoleon Bonaparte
  • a brilliant military tactician who over-reached
    himself in the Russian campaign (lost 500, 000
    men!)
  • an individual with petty habits and towering
    egotism
  • http//www.georgiasouthern.edu/dougt/hero.htm

22
Jacques-Louis David, Napoleon Crossing the Great
Saint Bernard Pass, 1800
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Ingres, Napoleon on his Imperial Throne 1806
24
Jacques-Louis David. Consecration of the Emperor
Napoleon I and Coronation of the Empress
Josephine on 2 December 1804. 1808.
25
Jean-Léon Gérôme, Napoleon and His General Staff
in Egypt, 1867
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Antoine-Jean Gros, Napoleon Bonaparte Visiting
the Plague-stricken at Jaffa, 1799
27
Food for Thought
  • What makes Napoleon a Romantic hero?

28
The Promethean Hero
  • Shelley, Prometheus Unbound
  • Mary Shelley, Frankenstein or, The Modern
    Prometheus

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The Gothic Novel
  • Mary Shelley, Frankenstein
  • Horace Walpole, The Castle of Otranto
  • Features
  • Anti-rationalism (horror the supernatural)
  • A revived interest in the medieval past

33
Food for Thought
  • Who is the modern Prometheus in Mary Shelleys
    Frankenstein?

34
The Byronic Hero
  • Childe Harolds Pilgrimage (1813-1814)
  • Don Juan (1819-1824)

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The Byronic Hero
  • A rebel
  • Isolated from society
  • Moody by nature or passionate about a particular
    issue
  • Arrogant, confident, abnormally sensitive and
    extremely conscious of himself
  • Rejects the values and moral codes of society

38
The Byronic Hero
  • Characterized by a guilty memory of some unknown
    sexual sin.
  • A figure of repulsion as well as fascination
  • http//www.umd.umich.edu/casl/hum/eng/classes/434/
    charweb/CHARACTE.htm

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  • Goethes Faust

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paradox and problems
  • the conflicted political background and legacy
  • what does this mean for women?
  • scrutinizing romantic mythmaking  the noble
    savage and the mythology of imperialism.
  • the tricky morality  an ethics based on the
    imagination, emotions?
  • http//www.georgiasouthern.edu/dougt/rom.htm
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