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Historical context, characteristics, ideas, and poets
Statements that Embody or Suggest Romanticism
1.

The answers to life’s most puzzling questions can be found through discussions with a simple
person who lives in the country close to nature—not with a sophisticated, well-educated person
from the city.

2.

The answer to life’s most puzzling questions can be found through a connection with nature.

3.

The use of one’s imagination is more important than rational thought.

4.

Subjectivity is more important than objectivity.

5.

Knowledge is gained through gut reactions and subjective hunches rather than level-headed,
objective, deductive thought.

6.

Nature is more important than art.

7.

Experimental trial and error is a better process than the conventional scientific method.

8.

Poetry should be spontaneous and full of emotion, not planned and straightforward.

9.

Sensitivity, feelings, and spontaneity are more important than intellectualism.

10.

“Dare to be” is a better battle-cry than “dare to know.”
Periods in British Literature
 450-1066: Old English (or Anglo-Saxon) Period (Beowulf)
 1066-1500: Middle English Period (Geoffrey Chaucer)
 1500-1660: The Renaissance (William Shakespeare; John Donne, John Milton)
 1660-1785: The Neoclassical Period

 1785-1830: The Romantic Period (William Blake, William

Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, John Keats, Mary Shelley,
Percy Bysshe Shelley)

 1837-1901: The Victorian Period (Charles Dickens)
 1914-1939: The Modern Period
 1945-present: The Postmodern Period (George Orwell, Mark Haddon, Bryce Courtenay,

Tsitsi Dangarembga and more!)
1785-1830: The Romantic Period

Turbulent time
In France: Revolution, Reign of Terror, Napoleon
Industrialization and Enclosure Acts shifted population to

cities, changed landscape
Shift in power from landholding aristocracy to
industrialists
Population increasingly polarized into rich and poor,
capital and labor
Reaction against Enlightenment, which placed an
emphasis on reason and science  CounterEnlightenment
“The Spirit of the Age”
Writers of the time didn’t call

themselves Romantic, but many
felt there was something
distinctive about their time, a new
literary spirit that accompanied
social and political revolution.
Most leading British writers
ardently supported the French
Revolution at first and were
disappointed by the Reign of
Terror.
But, filled with the spirit of
revolution, they still felt everything
was possible by discarding
inherited ideas and outworn
customs.

The Storming of the Bastille (1789),
Jean-Pierre Houel
Wordsworth and Coleridge:
Lyrical Ballads, 1798
 Wordsworth’s Preface: announced new poetry in

opposition to the previous century’s artificial
conventions
 Wordsworth: Poetry is “the spontaneous overflow
of powerful feelings”
 Coleridge used an organic metaphor—a poem
begins as a seed in the poet’s imagination
 Wordsworth: “What is a Poet?… He is a man
speaking to men; a man, it is true, endowed with
more lively sensibility, more enthusiasm and
tenderness, who has a greater knowledge of
human nature, and a more comprehensive soul,
than are supposed to be common among
mankind”

William Wordsworth

Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Characteristics of Romantic Poetry
Lyric poem—a poem that

expresses the emotions of a firstperson speaker (and in Romantic
poetry, that speaker is often quite
similar to the poet)
Intuition over reason
The pastoral over the urban
Focus on NATURE (Nature is
expressive, personified, sometimes
even divine)
Focus on intense EMOTIONS
(including horror and awe => THE
SUBLIME)

“The Wanderer Above the Sea of
Clouds” (1818), Caspar David Friedrich
More Characteristics of Romantic Poetry:
Importance of the power of

the IMAGINATION
NATIONALISM
RUINS and nostalgia for all
things medieval and gothic
Interest in the EXOTIC
Glorification of the
COMMONPLACE
Interest in DREAMS and
ALTERED STATES (opium)
Emphasis on SOLITUDE
(outlaws, outcasts,
nonconformity)

John Constable, “The Haywain” (1821)
The Raft of the Medusa
The Raft of the Medusa

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Romanticpoetry ppt

  • 2. Statements that Embody or Suggest Romanticism 1. The answers to life’s most puzzling questions can be found through discussions with a simple person who lives in the country close to nature—not with a sophisticated, well-educated person from the city. 2. The answer to life’s most puzzling questions can be found through a connection with nature. 3. The use of one’s imagination is more important than rational thought. 4. Subjectivity is more important than objectivity. 5. Knowledge is gained through gut reactions and subjective hunches rather than level-headed, objective, deductive thought. 6. Nature is more important than art. 7. Experimental trial and error is a better process than the conventional scientific method. 8. Poetry should be spontaneous and full of emotion, not planned and straightforward. 9. Sensitivity, feelings, and spontaneity are more important than intellectualism. 10. “Dare to be” is a better battle-cry than “dare to know.”
  • 3. Periods in British Literature  450-1066: Old English (or Anglo-Saxon) Period (Beowulf)  1066-1500: Middle English Period (Geoffrey Chaucer)  1500-1660: The Renaissance (William Shakespeare; John Donne, John Milton)  1660-1785: The Neoclassical Period  1785-1830: The Romantic Period (William Blake, William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, John Keats, Mary Shelley, Percy Bysshe Shelley)  1837-1901: The Victorian Period (Charles Dickens)  1914-1939: The Modern Period  1945-present: The Postmodern Period (George Orwell, Mark Haddon, Bryce Courtenay, Tsitsi Dangarembga and more!)
  • 4. 1785-1830: The Romantic Period Turbulent time In France: Revolution, Reign of Terror, Napoleon Industrialization and Enclosure Acts shifted population to cities, changed landscape Shift in power from landholding aristocracy to industrialists Population increasingly polarized into rich and poor, capital and labor Reaction against Enlightenment, which placed an emphasis on reason and science  CounterEnlightenment
  • 5. “The Spirit of the Age” Writers of the time didn’t call themselves Romantic, but many felt there was something distinctive about their time, a new literary spirit that accompanied social and political revolution. Most leading British writers ardently supported the French Revolution at first and were disappointed by the Reign of Terror. But, filled with the spirit of revolution, they still felt everything was possible by discarding inherited ideas and outworn customs. The Storming of the Bastille (1789), Jean-Pierre Houel
  • 6. Wordsworth and Coleridge: Lyrical Ballads, 1798  Wordsworth’s Preface: announced new poetry in opposition to the previous century’s artificial conventions  Wordsworth: Poetry is “the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings”  Coleridge used an organic metaphor—a poem begins as a seed in the poet’s imagination  Wordsworth: “What is a Poet?… He is a man speaking to men; a man, it is true, endowed with more lively sensibility, more enthusiasm and tenderness, who has a greater knowledge of human nature, and a more comprehensive soul, than are supposed to be common among mankind” William Wordsworth Samuel Taylor Coleridge
  • 7. Characteristics of Romantic Poetry Lyric poem—a poem that expresses the emotions of a firstperson speaker (and in Romantic poetry, that speaker is often quite similar to the poet) Intuition over reason The pastoral over the urban Focus on NATURE (Nature is expressive, personified, sometimes even divine) Focus on intense EMOTIONS (including horror and awe => THE SUBLIME) “The Wanderer Above the Sea of Clouds” (1818), Caspar David Friedrich
  • 8. More Characteristics of Romantic Poetry: Importance of the power of the IMAGINATION NATIONALISM RUINS and nostalgia for all things medieval and gothic Interest in the EXOTIC Glorification of the COMMONPLACE Interest in DREAMS and ALTERED STATES (opium) Emphasis on SOLITUDE (outlaws, outcasts, nonconformity) John Constable, “The Haywain” (1821)
  • 9. The Raft of the Medusa
  • 10. The Raft of the Medusa

Editor's Notes

  1. Display a transparency of the Romanticism Statements, and as you read through them, have students indicate on a sheet of paper whether they personally agree or disagree with each statement by recording "A" for agree or "D" for disagree. After all students have read and responded to the questions, ask them to total all of their As and Ds. Then have students determine how "Romantic" they are by sharing the following key: 3 or fewer As = "not Romantic" 4 or 5 As = "sort of Romantic" 6 or 7 As = "highly Romantic" 8-10 As = "extremely Romantic"
  2. Théodore Géricault: the painting represents the plight of the passengers and crew of the ill-fated French ship Medusa in 1816 The Méduse was a 40-gun Pallas-class frigate of the French Navy, launched in 1810. She took part the Napoleonic wars, namely in the late stages of the Mauritius campaign of 1809–1811 and in raids in the Caribbean. After the Bourbon Restauration, she was armed en flûte to ferry French officials to Saint-Louis, in Senegal, for the handover of the colony. Through inept navigation of her captain, an émigré given command for political reasons but incompetent as a naval officer, Méduse struck the Bank of Arguin and became a total loss. In the immediate aftermath of the wreckage, passagers and crew attempted to evacuate the ship on an improvised raft and became helpless when the frigate's launches gave up towing them. Only a handful of the shipwrecked survived the ordeal. The scenes on the raft instilled considerable public emotion, making Méduse one of the most infamous shipwrecks of the Age of Sail. It was definitely immortalised when Théodore Géricault painted his Raft of the Medusa, which became an icon of French Romanticism. INTERACTIVE STUDENT SITE: http://interactives.mped.org/view_interactive.aspx?id=782&title= A "pyramid of hope" is created in the center of the painting by dead figures at the bottom, dying figures in the middle, and a topmost figure waving a rag at the top. A large wave in the mid-left side of the painting threatens to break on the raft. Rays of sunlight breaking on the horizon at the top of the painting. On the right side a tiny image of a rescue ship can be seen on the distant horizon. In the far right hand corner of the raft is a bloodstained axe.