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American Romanticism

American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

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Page 1: American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

American RomanticismAmerican Romanticism

Page 2: American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

Overview Of Literary Time Periods

1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750)2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)4. American Renaissance/ Transcendentalism

(1840-1860)5. Realism (1855-1900)6. The Moderns (1900-1950) 7. Harlem Renaissance (1920s) 8. Post-Modernism (1950 to present)9. Contemporary (1970s-Present)

Page 3: American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

Review: Puritan/Colonial Period (1650-1750)

Genre/Style :Sermons, religious tracts, diaries, personal narratives, religious poems. It was written in plain style.

Effect/Aspects :Instructive, reinforces authority of the Bible and the church. Very little imaginative literature was produced.

Historical Context :Puritan settlers fled England where they were being persecuted for their religious beliefs, and came to New England to have religious freedom.

Page 4: American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

Review: Revolutionary Period/Age of Reason (1750-1800)

Overview of Revolutionary Period/Age of Reason

Genre/Style :Political Pamphlets, Travel Writing, and highly ornate persuasive writing.

Effect/Aspects :Patriotism and pride grows, creates unity about issues, and creates American character.

Historical Context :Encouraged Revolutionary War support.

Page 5: American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

AMERICA ESTABLISHES ITS BOUNDARIES

Westward Expansion1801-1861

Page 6: American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

Big Ideas…

Between 1801 and 1861, exploration was encouraged as America underwent vast territorial expansion and settlement.

Westward migration was influenced by geography and economic opportunity.

Prior to the Civil War, most industrialization in America was in the North; however, the equipment produced in the North had an impact on the farming society in the South.

Page 7: American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

Post-Revolutionary America

Page 8: American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

The Louisiana Purchase

New territories added to the United States after 1801

Louisiana PurchaseJefferson bought land from France (the

Louisiana Purchase), which doubled the size of the United States.

In the Lewis and Clark expedition, Meriwether Lewis and William Clark explored the Louisiana Purchase from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean.

Page 9: American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

Lousiana Purchase

Page 10: American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

Other Territories

Florida Spain gave Florida to the United States through a treaty.

Texas Texas was added after it became an independent republic.

Oregon The Oregon Territory was divided by the United States and

Great Britain.California

War with Mexico resulted in California and the southwest territory becoming part of the United States.

Page 11: American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

Florida, Texas, Oregon, California

Page 12: American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

Factors affecting westward expansion

Geographic and economic factors that influenced westward movement Population growth in the eastern states Availability of cheap, fertile land Economic opportunity, e.g., gold (California Gold Rush),

logging, farming, freedom (for runaway slaves) Cheaper and faster transportation, e.g., rivers and canals

(Erie Canal), steamboats Knowledge of overland trails (Oregon and Santa Fe) Belief in the right of “Manifest Destiny”—The idea that

expansion was for the good of the country and was the right of the country

Page 13: American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

Romanticism (1800-1860)

Overview of Romanticism

Genre/Style :Character Sketches, Slave Narratives, Poetry, and short stories.

Effect/Aspects :Integrity of nature and freedom of imagination. Emphasis on emotion and individualism

Historical Context :Publishing expands and industrial revolution brings new ideas.

Page 14: American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

Characteristics of American Romanticism

Values feeling and intuition over reason

Places faith in inner experience and the power of the imagination

Shuns the artificiality of civilization and seeks unspoiled nature

Prefers youthful innocence to educated sophistication

Champions individual freedom and the worth of the individual

Contemplates nature’s beauty as a path to spiritual and moral development

Page 15: American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

Characteristics (continued)

Looks backward to the wisdom of the past and distrusts progress

Finds beauty and truth in exotic locals, the supernatural realm, and the inner world of the imagination

Sees poetry as the highest expression of the imagination

Finds inspiration in myth, legend, and fold culture

Page 16: American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

MASS PRODUCTION OF POWER AND GOODS

The Industrial Revolution1870-1960

Page 17: American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

The First and Second Industrial Revolutions

The first, or old, Industrial Revolution took place between about 1750 and 1870 Took place in England, the United States, Belgium, and

France Saw fundamental changes in agriculture, the

development of factories, and rural-to-urban migration The second Industrial Revolution took place

between about 1870 and 1960 Saw the spread of the Industrial Revolution to places such

as Germany, Japan, and Russia Electricity became the primary source of power for

factories, farms, and homes Mass production, particularly of consumer goods Use of electrical power saw electronics enter the

marketplace (electric lights, radios, fans, television sets)

Page 18: American Romanticism. Overview Of Literary Time Periods 1. Puritan/Colonial (1650-1750) 2. Revolutionary/Age of Reason (1750-1800) 3. Romanticism (1800-1860)

The Spread of the Industrial Revolution

Mid-1800s – Great Britain, the world leader in the Industrial Revolution, attempted to ban the export of its methods and technologies, but this soon failed

1812 – United States industrialized after the War of 1812

After 1825 – France joined the Industrial Revolution following the French Revolution and Napoleonic wars

Circa 1870 – Germany industrialized at a rapid pace, while Belgium, Holland, Italy, Sweden, and Switzerland were slower to industrialize

By 1890 – Russia and Japan began to industrialize