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American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920(ish) NOTES

American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

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Page 1: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism1860-1920(ish)

NOTES

Page 2: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

What is Realism?O A faithful representation of reality in

literature, also known as “verisimilitude” (the appearance of truth, the quality of truth)

O Emphasis on development of believable characters.

O Written in natural vernacular, or dialect.

O Prominent from 1860-1890.

Page 3: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Realism

O Realism sought to portray life as faithfully and accurately as possible, focusing on ordinary people suffering the harsh realties of everyday life. It depicts ordinary people coping with everyday realities.

O Authors included Mark Twain, Henry James, Edith Wharton, Willa Cather, and Dunbar

O The LiteratureO Presented life objectivelyO Favored science and technologyO Found meaning in the mundaneO Focused on socials ills and social conflict

Page 4: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Elements of Realism

O Rejection of the idealized, larger-than-life hero of Romantic Literature

O Detailed depiction of ordinary characters and realistic events

O Emphasis on characters from cities and lower classes

O Avoidance of the exotic, sensational, and overly dramatic

O Use of everyday speech patterns to reveal class distinctions

O Focus on the ethical struggles and social issues of real-life situations

O Sought to explain why ordinary people behave the way they do

Page 5: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Realist Writers

OMark TwainOWilliam Dean

HowellsOHenry James

OEdgar Lee Masters

Page 6: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Why did Realism develop?

O The Civil WarO The urbanization and industrialization

of AmericaO As a reaction to RomanticismO Increasing rates of democracy and

literacyO The emerging middle classO Upheaval and social change in the

latter half of the 19th century

Page 7: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

What is Regionalism?O Often called “local color.”O Focuses on characters, dialect,

customs, topography, and other features specific to a certain region (eg. the South)

O Coincided with Realism and sharing many of the same traits.

O Prominent from 1865-1895.

Page 8: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Regionalist Writers

OKate Chopin—South

OMary E. Wilkins-Freeman—New

EnglandOMark Twain—

WestOWilla Cather—

Midwest

Page 9: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Why did Regionalism develop?

O Dual influence of Romanticism and Realism

O The Civil War and the building of a national identity

O An outgrowth of realism with more focus on a particular setting and its influence over characters

Page 10: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

What is Naturalism?O Applied scientific principles of

objectivity and detachment to the study of human beings.

O Influenced by Darwinism (natural selection) and psychology (Freud)

O individuals were governed by heredity and environment.

O Often depict man in conflict with nature, society, or himself.

O Prominent from 1880-1920(ish)

Page 11: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Naturalism-Focuses on people’s helplessness in the face of

chance

O Sought to portray ordinary people’s lives, but suggested that environment, heredity, and chance, or forces they could neither understand nor control, determined people’s fate.

O Authors included Stephen Crane, Kate Chopin, Theodore Dreiser, Jack London

O Man’s destiny was determined by heredity and natural selection, society, psychological impulses, and economic class

Page 12: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Naturalism

O Influenced by emerging disciplines of psychology and sociology

O Attempt to analyze human behavior objectively, as a scientist would

O Belief that human behavior is determined by heredity and environment

O Sense that human beings cannot control their own destinies

O Sense of life as a losing battle against an uncaring universe

Page 13: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Naturalist WritersOStephen CraneOAmbrose Bierce

O Jack LondonOEdwin Arlington

RobinsonOKatherine Anne

PorterOCharlotte Perkins

GilmanOEdith Wharton

Page 14: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Why did Naturalism develop?

O The swell of immigrants in the latter half of the 19th century, which led to a larger lower class and increased poverty in the cities

O The prominence of psychology and the theories of Sigmund Freud

O Pessimism in the wake of the Civil War and Reconstruction

O Publication of Charles Darwin’s Origin of the Species

Page 15: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Points to Remember…

O Realism, Regionalism, and Naturalism are intertwined and connected.

O Their influence has dominated most literature created since 1920, though the movement itself is dated to roughly that point.

O They are truly American modes of writing.

Page 16: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Journal1-4-12

Do you agree with the saying “knowledge is power”? Does

knowledge give you greater control over your life?

Page 17: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Frederick Douglass1817/1818 (?) - 1895

Page 18: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Understand this…O The artistic movement, Realism, was

described in the 1850s and while his autobiography predates the technical date of the movement, it definitely is in the spirit of it. True life accounts were one of the inspirations for realism.

Page 19: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Objectives O To read and analyze an excerpt from

an autobiography that explores one of the major causes of the Civil War

O To identify one purpose of writing an autobiography

Page 20: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Author and Background

P 328

Page 21: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

from My Bondage and My Freedom

Frederick Douglass

Page 22: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Questions to ponder/answer/turn in O While reading:

O 1. Why do you think the mistress went beyond her husband’s instructions to stop teaching Douglass, trying to prohibit him from learning altogether?

O 2. In the third paragraph, what argument does Douglass make against slavery?

O 3. What do you learn from a recollection from his childhood?

O 4. how might a young enslaved person have managed to earn money? What does his choice about how he spends his money say about Douglass?

O 5. Douglass’s reading and rereading of this dialogue proves to be a turning point in his life. Why?

O After reading: P 335- #6 (look back at your journal),#7 (don’t chart, just explain),#8

Page 23: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Journal

Imagine yourself facing a frightening life-or-death situation

involving, for example, a car accident or a natural disaster. What thoughts do you think might flash though your mind at such a time?

Page 24: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

ObjectivesO To read a short story whose setting

is the Civil WarO To analyze the use of third person

point of view in a short story

Page 25: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

Author and Background

P 367

Page 26: American Regionalism, Realism, and Naturalism 1860-1920( ish ) NOTES

An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge

Ambrose Pierce