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Unit 5
         Literary Focus Essays


Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism
Collection 12: Modernism
Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance
Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism

New Poetic Movements: Reactions to Tradition
• In the face of industrialization, American
  symbolists rebel against the Romantics’ focus on
  nature as a source of solace.
• Imagism brings precision and concreteness to
  poetry in place of prettiness and decoration.
• Free verse overrides traditional poetic forms,
  which have set rhyme schemes and meters.
Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism

• In the early twentieth century, Americans awoke
  to a sense that their own national culture had
  come of age.
• This sense was reflected in the
  poetry, painting, music, dance,
  even the new architecture of
  the skyscraper.
• Ironically, American poets found their new
  inspiration in Paris rather than their homeland.
• Learning from French symbolist poets, Americans
  were able to produce a new type of poetry.
Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism
Symbolism: The Search for a New Reality
Symbolism is a form of expression in which artists
rearranged the world of appearances, seeking to
depict a different, more truthful version of reality:
• tried to portray emotional
  effects suggested by objects
• eliminated “dull and
  meaningless” symbols
• emphasized use of personal
  symbols to suggest ideas, emotions, and moods
• argued that imagination is more reliable than reason
Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism
Symbolism: The Search for a New Reality
Like the Romantics, symbolists

• stressed the importance of ideas
  and feelings.

• emphasized the
  independence of the
  individual.

• made a great stand against mechanization.
Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism
Symbolism: The Search for a New Reality
  Unlike the Romantics, the symbolists could find
  no solace or spiritual renewal in nature
  because they believed that
• science had stripped
  nature of its mystery

• the modern world suffered
  increased poverty,
  violence, and conflict in
  spite of advances in
  science and technology
Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism
Imagism: “The Exact Word”
Writers Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot used symbolist
techniques as the foundation for imagism, the
school of thought that flourished from 1912-1917.
 • Imagists believed that poetry can be made
   purer by concentration on precise
   images alone.
 • They took on the role of reformers,
   planning to rid poetry of prettiness,
   sentimentality, and artificiality.
• They concentrated on the power of the image
  to communicate feeling and thought.
Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism
Imagism: “The Exact Word”
The imagists issued a manifesto, or public
declaration:

1 They proposed to use the “language of common
  speech.”
  Imagists believed poetry could be made purer
2 by concentration on the precise, calling for “the
  exact word, not merely the decorative word.”

3 They called for poetry to be “hard and clear,
  never blurred or indefinite.”
Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism
A New Poetic Order
Ezra Pound said Walt Whitman “broke new wood”
as the first American practitioner of free verse, a
poetry free of rhyming and metrical patterns.
                    • Most Americans think of
                      imagism as the school of
                      free verse.
                    • The imagist movement
                      was also an invitation to a
                      new way of seeing and
                      experiencing the world.
   Walt Whitman
Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism
A New Poetic Order
Although imagism was a short-lived movement, it
gave rise to some of our greatest poets.




         T. S. Eliot           Robert Frost
Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism

Ask Yourself

1. Why do you think the symbolists’ focus on
   individualism was so appealing to American
   poets?
2. How did the imagists change poetry?
3. New generations often reject established
   ideas about poetry. Why do you think that is?


                                     [End of Section]
Collection 12: Modernism

 Characteristics of Modern American Fiction
• Sense of disillusionment and a loss of faith in the
  American dream
• Rejection of sentimentality and artificiality in
  favor of capturing reality
• Emphasis on bold experimentation in style and
  form, reflecting the fragmentation of society
• Interest in the individual and the inner workings
  of the human mind
Collection 12: Modernism
Breakdown of Beliefs
The violence of World War I and the devastation
of the Great Depression severely damaged the
idealism of many Americans.
Collection 12: Modernism
Breakdown of Beliefs
 • People began to distrust
   societal institutions.
 • They began to question
   the cultural, Puritan-based
   traditions that had once
   guided American life.
 • Writers responded to this
   period of change by
   breaking with literary
   tradition.
Collection 12: Modernism
Facing Reality
Modernist writers believed in
facing reality:
• Ernest Hemingway faced
  the shattering realities of war.
• F. Scott Fitzgerald faced
  the realities behind the
  crumbling American Dream.
• William Faulkner faced the
  realities of an increasingly
  unfamiliar world.
Collection 12: Modernism
Facing Reality
In his novels and short stories, Ernest
Hemingway deals frankly with the shattering
realities of war.
• His characters find
  themselves in an
  unpredictable, chaotic world.
• His characters respond to life’s
  ambiguities by turning to their
  own sense of honor and dignity.
Collection 12: Modernism
Facing Reality
F. Scott Fitzgerald captures glittering life of the
Jazz Age—the booming decade between World
War I and the Great Depression.
• Novels such as
  The Great Gatsby showcase
  beautiful and wealthy




                                                  The Granger Collection, New York
  characters . . . who are also
  unhappy.
• Materialism and the pursuit of
  pleasure, according to
  Fitzgerald, were rampant.
Collection 12: Modernism
The Great Gatsby
• Wealth and pleasure
  have become the point
  of living for many.
• Portrays the height of
  the “Jazz Age.”
• Gatsby believes in the
  American Dream, but it
  no longer exists.
Collection 12: Modernism
Facing Reality
William Faulkner used a bold new style to
describe an increasingly unfamiliar world.
• He experimented with multiple
  points of view, disjointed sentences,
  and complex sentences.

• Many of his books employ a
  stream-of-consciousness narrative
  technique.
Collection 12: Modernism
Stream of Consciousness Narrative Technique
 • Reflects interest in the
   study of the unconscious
   mind, made popular by
   Sigmund Freud.

 • Attempts to reflect the
   chaotic and sometimes
   confusing activities of the
   human psyche.                      Sigmund
                                      Freud
Collection 12: Modernism
Modernist writers believed in facing reality by
probing the uncertainties of the modern world.
     Ernest           F. Scott                                             William
   Hemingway         Fitzgerald                                           Faulkner




                                     The Granger Collection, New York
 Bare-bones truth   Dazzling style                                        Stream of
                                                                        consciousness
Collection 12: Modernism

Ask Yourself

1. How did world events lead to disillusionment
   with traditional beliefs and values?
2. Explain how the work of one of the writers
   described above addresses the uncertainties
   of the modern world.




                                     [End of Section]
Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance

        Influences on American Culture
• African American talent in music, writing, and art
  was introduced to mainstream America.
• Autobiographies provided firsthand accounts of
  the black experience.
• Dialects of African American vernacular speech
  enriched the English language.
• African Americans were recognized and
  celebrated for contributions to American culture.
Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance
Harlem Comes to Life

• After World War I, large numbers of African
  Americans of all ages and walks of life migrated to
  northern cities.
• Artists, singers, writers,
  musicians, and other
  professionals
  congregated in Harlem,
  New York.

                                    Harlem
Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance
Harlem Comes to Life
New York City’s Harlem neighborhood was the center
of an explosion of African American poetry, prose,
music, dance, drama, and art after WWI.




Mainstream America was developing a new respect
for African American contributions to art and culture.
Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance
Jazz Age
This new appreciation for black artistic talent
grew with the music echoing from New Orleans,
Memphis, and Chicago.
• Blues and jazz became
  popular music.
• An all-black Broadway show
  opened.
• African art influences
  modernist painters.
Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance
Jazz—music with roots in African rhythms,
European harmonies, American gospel sounds, and
the work songs of plantation workers.
• Gained popularity in the 1920s
                             • Some jazz clubs, such as
                               Harlem’s Cotton Club, had
                               racist policies
                             • Famous jazz musicians:
                               Louis Armstrong, Duke
                               Ellington, and Ethel Waters
Louis Armstrong performing
Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance
The African American Voice
• Harlem Renaissance artists focused on African
  American experiences
• Rhythm of poetry was
  based on spirituals and
  jazz; poetic lyrics based
  on blues and street talk.
• Prominent poets: James
  Weldon Johnson, Claude
  McKay, Langston Hughes,
  and Countee Cullen
                               Langston Hughes
Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance
The African American Voice
• Writers Claude McKay and
  Countee Cullen continued to
  write in standard English.
• Other important Harlem writers,
  such as Langston Hughes and
  Zora Neale Hurston, drew on
  the African oral tradition.
• Common dialect, the blues,
  folk tales, spirituals, and work
  songs inspired their works.
Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance
African American Autobiography
• Autobiography became the
  preferred genre for some
  African American writers.
• Tradition began with slave
  narratives, including narratives
  by Olaudah Equiano, Harriet
  Jacobs, and Frederick Douglass.
• In the years following the
  Harlem Renaissance,
  autobiography became more
  and more popular.
Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance
Decline of the Harlem Renaissance
By the early 1930s, the Great Depression had
depleted the funds that supported African
American writers, institutions, and publications.




But, the foundation was laid for future writers to make
    their feelings part of the American experience.
Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance

Ask Yourself

1. How did the Harlem Renaissance help African
   Americans become more accepted in
   American society?
2. What are some themes and characteristics of
   the Harlem Renaissance?




                                    [End of Section]
The End

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Collection 11,12,13 symbolism and imagism, modernism and the harlem renaissance

  • 1. Unit 5 Literary Focus Essays Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism Collection 12: Modernism Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance
  • 2. Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism New Poetic Movements: Reactions to Tradition • In the face of industrialization, American symbolists rebel against the Romantics’ focus on nature as a source of solace. • Imagism brings precision and concreteness to poetry in place of prettiness and decoration. • Free verse overrides traditional poetic forms, which have set rhyme schemes and meters.
  • 3.
  • 4. Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism • In the early twentieth century, Americans awoke to a sense that their own national culture had come of age. • This sense was reflected in the poetry, painting, music, dance, even the new architecture of the skyscraper. • Ironically, American poets found their new inspiration in Paris rather than their homeland. • Learning from French symbolist poets, Americans were able to produce a new type of poetry.
  • 5. Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism Symbolism: The Search for a New Reality Symbolism is a form of expression in which artists rearranged the world of appearances, seeking to depict a different, more truthful version of reality: • tried to portray emotional effects suggested by objects • eliminated “dull and meaningless” symbols • emphasized use of personal symbols to suggest ideas, emotions, and moods • argued that imagination is more reliable than reason
  • 6. Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism Symbolism: The Search for a New Reality Like the Romantics, symbolists • stressed the importance of ideas and feelings. • emphasized the independence of the individual. • made a great stand against mechanization.
  • 7. Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism Symbolism: The Search for a New Reality Unlike the Romantics, the symbolists could find no solace or spiritual renewal in nature because they believed that • science had stripped nature of its mystery • the modern world suffered increased poverty, violence, and conflict in spite of advances in science and technology
  • 8. Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism Imagism: “The Exact Word” Writers Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot used symbolist techniques as the foundation for imagism, the school of thought that flourished from 1912-1917. • Imagists believed that poetry can be made purer by concentration on precise images alone. • They took on the role of reformers, planning to rid poetry of prettiness, sentimentality, and artificiality. • They concentrated on the power of the image to communicate feeling and thought.
  • 9. Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism Imagism: “The Exact Word” The imagists issued a manifesto, or public declaration: 1 They proposed to use the “language of common speech.” Imagists believed poetry could be made purer 2 by concentration on the precise, calling for “the exact word, not merely the decorative word.” 3 They called for poetry to be “hard and clear, never blurred or indefinite.”
  • 10. Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism A New Poetic Order Ezra Pound said Walt Whitman “broke new wood” as the first American practitioner of free verse, a poetry free of rhyming and metrical patterns. • Most Americans think of imagism as the school of free verse. • The imagist movement was also an invitation to a new way of seeing and experiencing the world. Walt Whitman
  • 11. Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism A New Poetic Order Although imagism was a short-lived movement, it gave rise to some of our greatest poets. T. S. Eliot Robert Frost
  • 12. Collection 11: Symbolism and Imagism Ask Yourself 1. Why do you think the symbolists’ focus on individualism was so appealing to American poets? 2. How did the imagists change poetry? 3. New generations often reject established ideas about poetry. Why do you think that is? [End of Section]
  • 13. Collection 12: Modernism Characteristics of Modern American Fiction • Sense of disillusionment and a loss of faith in the American dream • Rejection of sentimentality and artificiality in favor of capturing reality • Emphasis on bold experimentation in style and form, reflecting the fragmentation of society • Interest in the individual and the inner workings of the human mind
  • 14. Collection 12: Modernism Breakdown of Beliefs The violence of World War I and the devastation of the Great Depression severely damaged the idealism of many Americans.
  • 15. Collection 12: Modernism Breakdown of Beliefs • People began to distrust societal institutions. • They began to question the cultural, Puritan-based traditions that had once guided American life. • Writers responded to this period of change by breaking with literary tradition.
  • 16. Collection 12: Modernism Facing Reality Modernist writers believed in facing reality: • Ernest Hemingway faced the shattering realities of war. • F. Scott Fitzgerald faced the realities behind the crumbling American Dream. • William Faulkner faced the realities of an increasingly unfamiliar world.
  • 17. Collection 12: Modernism Facing Reality In his novels and short stories, Ernest Hemingway deals frankly with the shattering realities of war. • His characters find themselves in an unpredictable, chaotic world. • His characters respond to life’s ambiguities by turning to their own sense of honor and dignity.
  • 18. Collection 12: Modernism Facing Reality F. Scott Fitzgerald captures glittering life of the Jazz Age—the booming decade between World War I and the Great Depression. • Novels such as The Great Gatsby showcase beautiful and wealthy The Granger Collection, New York characters . . . who are also unhappy. • Materialism and the pursuit of pleasure, according to Fitzgerald, were rampant.
  • 19. Collection 12: Modernism The Great Gatsby • Wealth and pleasure have become the point of living for many. • Portrays the height of the “Jazz Age.” • Gatsby believes in the American Dream, but it no longer exists.
  • 20. Collection 12: Modernism Facing Reality William Faulkner used a bold new style to describe an increasingly unfamiliar world. • He experimented with multiple points of view, disjointed sentences, and complex sentences. • Many of his books employ a stream-of-consciousness narrative technique.
  • 21. Collection 12: Modernism Stream of Consciousness Narrative Technique • Reflects interest in the study of the unconscious mind, made popular by Sigmund Freud. • Attempts to reflect the chaotic and sometimes confusing activities of the human psyche. Sigmund Freud
  • 22. Collection 12: Modernism Modernist writers believed in facing reality by probing the uncertainties of the modern world. Ernest F. Scott William Hemingway Fitzgerald Faulkner The Granger Collection, New York Bare-bones truth Dazzling style Stream of consciousness
  • 23. Collection 12: Modernism Ask Yourself 1. How did world events lead to disillusionment with traditional beliefs and values? 2. Explain how the work of one of the writers described above addresses the uncertainties of the modern world. [End of Section]
  • 24. Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance Influences on American Culture • African American talent in music, writing, and art was introduced to mainstream America. • Autobiographies provided firsthand accounts of the black experience. • Dialects of African American vernacular speech enriched the English language. • African Americans were recognized and celebrated for contributions to American culture.
  • 25. Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance Harlem Comes to Life • After World War I, large numbers of African Americans of all ages and walks of life migrated to northern cities. • Artists, singers, writers, musicians, and other professionals congregated in Harlem, New York. Harlem
  • 26. Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance Harlem Comes to Life New York City’s Harlem neighborhood was the center of an explosion of African American poetry, prose, music, dance, drama, and art after WWI. Mainstream America was developing a new respect for African American contributions to art and culture.
  • 27. Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance Jazz Age This new appreciation for black artistic talent grew with the music echoing from New Orleans, Memphis, and Chicago. • Blues and jazz became popular music. • An all-black Broadway show opened. • African art influences modernist painters.
  • 28. Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance Jazz—music with roots in African rhythms, European harmonies, American gospel sounds, and the work songs of plantation workers. • Gained popularity in the 1920s • Some jazz clubs, such as Harlem’s Cotton Club, had racist policies • Famous jazz musicians: Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, and Ethel Waters Louis Armstrong performing
  • 29. Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance The African American Voice • Harlem Renaissance artists focused on African American experiences • Rhythm of poetry was based on spirituals and jazz; poetic lyrics based on blues and street talk. • Prominent poets: James Weldon Johnson, Claude McKay, Langston Hughes, and Countee Cullen Langston Hughes
  • 30. Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance The African American Voice • Writers Claude McKay and Countee Cullen continued to write in standard English. • Other important Harlem writers, such as Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston, drew on the African oral tradition. • Common dialect, the blues, folk tales, spirituals, and work songs inspired their works.
  • 31. Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance African American Autobiography • Autobiography became the preferred genre for some African American writers. • Tradition began with slave narratives, including narratives by Olaudah Equiano, Harriet Jacobs, and Frederick Douglass. • In the years following the Harlem Renaissance, autobiography became more and more popular.
  • 32. Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance Decline of the Harlem Renaissance By the early 1930s, the Great Depression had depleted the funds that supported African American writers, institutions, and publications. But, the foundation was laid for future writers to make their feelings part of the American experience.
  • 33. Collection 13: The Harlem Renaissance Ask Yourself 1. How did the Harlem Renaissance help African Americans become more accepted in American society? 2. What are some themes and characteristics of the Harlem Renaissance? [End of Section]