Performer - Culture & Literature Marina Spiazzi, Marina Tavella, Margaret Layton © 2012 The Romantic spirit 1798, publication of the Lyrical Ballads.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Romance literature in the
Advertisements

The Romantic Movement France, Germany, & England.
The Romantics Nature, Imagination & the Common Man Nature, Imagination & the Common Man.
The Romantic Period 1780 to 1830.
ions/bcornell/documents/Introduc tiontotheRomanticAgeofEnglish Literature.ppt.
The Romantic Movement ( )
Characteristics of Romantic Poets
The Romantic Movement ( )
The Romantic Age Janar Aronija. Introduction Romanticism is a artistic and philosophical movement Sweeping revolt against reasons, science, authority,
Defining Romanticism Notes. Romanticism “Began” with the publication of Lyrical Ballads by William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge Wordsworth defined.
William Wordsworth Benjamin Robert Haydon, William Wordsworth, 1842, London, National Portrait Gallery.
Romanticism and Romantic Poetry. Timeframe of Romantic Poetry First work of Romantic poetry - Lyrical Ballads by Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth.
FRANKENSTEIN BY MARY SHELLEY. Who was Mary Shelley? Born in 1797 to 2 leading intellectuals: Mary Wollstonecraft and William Godwin Married Percy Shelley.
Romanticism  Literary movement in England began in 1798 with the publication of the poetry collection Lyrical Ballads by Wordsworth and Coleridge o Initially.
Triumph of Imagination over Reason
BRITISH ROMANTICISM Two main contributing factors  1. French Revolution  2. Industrial Revolution.
The Romantics British Literature Unit 4 Ms. Carroll.
A Movement Across the Arts
  Romanticism was a movement in literature, music and art from the late 18 th Century until the mid 19 th Century. Although some of the writers and.
The Romantic Period. Began with the William Wordsworth’s Lyrical Ballads in 1798 Began with the William Wordsworth’s Lyrical Ballads in 1798 Embraced.
What Is Romanticism?. Key Ideas from Some Big Names Friedrich von Schlegel He is usually credited with first using the term “romantic” as applied to literature;
Revolution of language
William Wordsworth Benjamin Robert Haydon, William Wordsworth, 1842, London, National Portrait Gallery.
The Romantic Era in British Literature
Romanticism An experiment in emotion and imagination reacting to the Age of Enlightenment.
Romanticism A Movement Across the Arts Those who dream by day are cognizant of many things which escape those who dream only by night. -Edgar Allan Poe.
  Britain become a large trading empire  The cities grew fast  London remained the largest one  In the 19th century Britain was at its height and.
Journal: describe a place and time that is meaningful and that carries emotional significance, particularly a place in nature.
Romanticism Romanticism is an artistic and intellectual movement that originated in late 18th century Western Europe. In part a revolt against aristocratic,
American Romanticism “We will walk with our own feet we will work with our own hands we will speak our own minds” (Ralph Waldo Emerson).
Literary Highlights Wordsworth and Coleridge publish Lyrical Ballads in Thus starting the Romantic Era. Romanticism arises as a response to social.
The Age of Reason Early to Late Eighteenth Century Click Here For Music.
Romanticism ROMANTIC MOVEMENT Affirmation in individuality, imagination, and nature Poetry most important literary form Nature Feelings.
REALITY & VISION THE TWO GENERATIONS Of ROMANTIC POETS IDEALS THE FRENCH REVOLUTION ENGLISH ROMANTIC MOVEMENT Jean Jacques Rosseau’s FIRST GENERATION SECOND.
Romanticism. sprang up around the end of the 18 th century and flourished at the beginning of the 19th century Literary movement that reacted against.
Englishmen blamed King George III for the American Revolution and the loss of the American Colonies because of his inflexible and unsympathetic.
Literature in English 1. The Middle Ages (to ca. 1485) 2. The Sixteenth Century ( ) 3. The Early Seventeenth Century ( ) 4. The Restoration.
Instructions Take out your William Blake Packet and pick up the Wordsworth packet from the front table. Await further instructions.
Romanticism Questions to consider…  What were the essential features of Romanticism?  How did the Romantic writers respond to nature?  What.
ENGLISH ROMANTICISM British historians say it was approximately… …from 1798… …to 1832 when… …Lyrical Ballads. …Wordsworth and Coleridge… ….published… …their.
The Romantic Era in British Literature
Is reason all there is?. Romanticism defined… A movement that glorified and celebrated nature, all emotion, imagination and the mysterious A reaction.
William Wordsworth ( ) Beowulf
Romanticism.
John Keats Beowulf Performer - Culture & Literature
Begins with the publication of the poetry collection Lyrical Ballads by Wordsworth and Coleridge in 1798.
Romanticism Questions to consider…  What were the essential features of Romanticism?  How did the Romantic writers respond to nature?  What.
The Romantic Period Romantic signifies: a fascination with youth and innocence a fascination with youth and innocence a stage when people need.
THE ROMANTIC POETS CHANGE! Great political, economic and social change American Revolution French Revolution (Napoleon.
Romanticism?. EWW. NO! Caspar David Friedrich Wanderer Above the Sea of Fog What artistic characteristics do you notice about this painting?
What emotions are being expressed in this painting?
The Age of Romanticism Several Centuries B.C., Plato described humans as a careful balance of reason, passions, and appetites, with reason as the guide.
American ROMANTICISM ( ). RomanticLove Romantic Love is NOT the same as Romanticism in Literature ROMANTICWhen it comes to literature and the.
Romanticism. The Romantic movement was a reaction to the ideas and values of the Enlightenment and Neoclassicism. The Enlightenment generation had prized.
The Romantic Era in British Literature
A Movement Across the Arts
The Romantic Period
The Romantic spirit Beowulf 1798, publication of the Lyrical Ballads
The Age of Romanticism Presented by: Mr. Danz.
Romanticism in American Art and Literature
The Romantic Movement France & Germany.
THE ROMANTIC AGE Johanna Urm.
The Romantic Era By: Nicholas McClain.
The Age of Romanticism Presented by: Mr. Danz.
American Romanticism
The Romantic Period
William Wordsworth ( ) Beowulf
A Movement Across the Arts
William Wordsworth ( ) Beowulf
Presentation transcript:

Performer - Culture & Literature Marina Spiazzi, Marina Tavella, Margaret Layton © 2012 The Romantic spirit 1798, publication of the Lyrical Ballads

The Romantic spirit Performer - Culture&Literature the period in which new ideas and attitudes arose in reaction to the dominant 18 th -century ideals of order, calm, harmony, balance, rationality 1. The word ‘Romantic’ Caspar David Friedrich, Wanderer Above the Sea of Fog, 1818 The Romantic Age

The Romantic spirit Performer - Culture&Literature Enlightened trends Emphasised reason and judgement. Focused on society as a whole. Followed authority. Interested in science and technology. Romantic trends Emphasised imagination and emotion. Valued individuals. Looked for freedom. Represented common people. Interested in the supernatural. 2. Romanticism vs Enlightenment

The Romantic spirit Performer - Culture&Literature 3. English Romanticism English Romanticism influenced by the French Revolution and the English Industrial Revolution. a revolt of the English imagination against the neoclassical reason. The Romantics: expressed a negative attitude towards the existing social or political conditions; placed the individual at the centre of art; argued that poetry should be free from all rules.

The Romantic spirit Performer - Culture&Literature Focus on the beauties of nature, seen as a living being. Use of creative imagination. Exaltation of emotion over reason and senses over intellect. A new view of the artist as an individual creator. Fascination with the irrational, the past, the mysterious, the exotic. 4. The Romantics’ key ideas John Constable, The white horse, 1819, New York, Frick Collection

The Romantic spirit Performer - Culture&Literature Opposed to reason. A substitute for traditional religion. A vehicle for self-consciousness. A source of sensations. A provocation to a state of imagination and vision. An expressive language: natural images provide the poet with a way of thinking about human feelings and the self. 5. The Romantic nature J. M. Turner, Landscape with Distant River and Bay, c ; Musée du Louvre, Paris

The Romantic spirit Performer - Culture&Literature A creative power superior to reason. Shaped the poets’ fleeting visions into concrete forms. A dynamic, active, rather than passive power. Allows human beings to ‘read’ nature as a system of symbols. 6. The Romantic imagination J.M.W. Turner, Rain, Steam, and Speed – The Great Western Railway, 1844, London, The National Gallery

The Romantic spirit Performer - Culture&Literature Wordsworth and Coleridge were known as Lake Poets because they lived together in the last few years of the 18 th century in the district of the great lakes in Northwestern England. In 1798, they published the Lyrical Ballads, the manifesto of English Romanticism. 7. The Lake poets

The Romantic spirit Performer - Culture&Literature 8. The manifesto of English Romanticism Linked to nature, emotions, feelings Interested in the lives of the humble Nature, memory, children Simple, common used to liberate imagination ThemesLanguageThe poet The Preface to the Lyrical Ballads 1798

The Romantic spirit Performer - Culture&Literature Percy B. Shelley, George Byron and John Keats died very young and away from home; experienced political disillusionment reflected in their poetry; were linked to individualism, escapism. 9. The second generation of Romantic poets

The Romantic spirit Performer - Culture&Literature 10. The Romantics on nature NATURE WordsworthColeridgeByronShelleyKeats a source of joy inspiration and knowledge a mother and a moral guide a universal force the representation of God’s will and love the companion of his loneliness the counterpart of his stormy feelings when it was violently upset a source of enjoyment and inspiration pervaded by a guiding power leading man to love the creative mind benefits from the beauty of the natural landscape a kind of muse to the poet’s artistic quest

The Romantic spirit Performer - Culture&Literature In the Napoleonic era: the British navy dominated the sea; the French army dominated the European continent; the great hero of the British navy was Admiral Horatio Nelson defeated the French-Spanish fleet off Cape Trafalgar on the Atlantic coast of southern Spain in The Napoleonic Wars ( )

The Romantic spirit Performer - Culture&Literature The total defeat of Napoleon in 1815 at the battle of Waterloo in Belgium where the British troops, commanded by Arthur Wellesley, overcame the French. Their consequences 1.the acquisition of the Cape of Good Hope, Trinidad, Singapore, Ceylon and Malta was of strategic interest; 2.enormous financial costs; 3.Britain was on the verge of starvation, bankruptcy and evolution. 11. The Napoleonic Wars ( )

The Romantic spirit Performer - Culture&Literature 12. The Luddites They caused so much alarm that the government made machine-breaking punishable by death. Deteriorating working conditions Mechanical looms and spinners replacing skilled craftsmen Poverty led to outbursts of machine-breaking culminating in the ‘Luddites Riots’ of

The Romantic spirit Performer - Culture&Literature In 1819, during a peaceful public meeting in Manchester, soldiers fired into a crowd and eleven people were killed  the so-called ‘Peterloo Massacre’. 12. The Luddites

The Romantic spirit Performer - Culture&Literature The period between 1811 and 1820: the Regency. The Prince Regent, later to become George IV, acted as monarch during the illness of his father George III ( ). In 1830 William IV succeeded his brother and his short reign saw a new political awareness leading to the new age of reforms. 13. The Regency