REAL_Notes_The Rise of Realism

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  • THE RISE OF REALISM:1850-1900The only reason for the existence of a novel is that it does attempt to represent life. -Henry JamesPrisoners from the Front, Winslow Homer, 1922.

  • PEOPLE, PLACES, & THINGS:1850 - 1900What are some of the important events?

    Who are some authors of this period?

    What are some of the important works of this time?

  • REALISM: A VERY MINUTE FIDELITYRealism dominated fiction in America from the late 19th century until the middle of the 20th.The Realists:were writers who sought to portray real life without filtering it through personal feelings, romanticism, or idealism;wanted to be as accurate as possible when depicting people, places, and things. [Think of Realism as the photography of writing.]

  • A REACTION TO ROMANTICISMRealism is a reaction to idealized romantic novels of the previous period.Romanticism Recall:Edgar Allan Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Henry David Thoreau.Fallen Monarchs, William Bliss Backer, 1886.

  • CHARACTERISTICSRealistic writing is characterized by:honest, believable characters;realistic dialogue;events in the story that seem possible in real life;characters that are driven by real motives and emotions;characters that dont change without sufficient reason;objectivity.

    Young Soldier, Winslow Homer, 1861.

  • REALISM VS. ROMANTICISM

    RealismRomanticismCharacters are ordinary peopleCharacters are larger than lifeThe language is common vernacular (ordinary speech and dialect)The language is of a more elevated styleSettings exist or are based on actual placesSettings are often fictional or exotic and mysterious (or both)Plot is developed with ordinary events and circumstancesPlot is developed by unusual events, mystery, or high adventureAttempts to be objectiveHighly subjective

  • THE CIVIL WARCasualties, 1861-1865Federal: 664,928Confederate: 483,026Battles destroyed farms and homes.Cities were bombarded and burned.Shermans March to the SeaSuddenly, life wasnt so nice.The romantic heroes of the past werent cutting it anymore.Four dead soldiers in the woods near Little Round Top, Alexander Gardner, 1863.

  • THE CIVIL WAR, CONT.Journalistic accounts of the Civil War developed a taste for realistic writing.Increased use of photography also helped shaped Americas taste for realistic depictions.

    Body of a Confederate Soldier Near Mrs. Alsop's House, 1864.

  • NATURALISMNaturalism holds the same view as Realism with the addition of:Man has LITTLE control over his fate;Life is NEVER perfect; problems exist in society;Life is ALMOST NEVER fair;Good ALMOST NEVER wins over Evil;Hiding in the Haycocks, William Bliss Baker, 1881.Nature does not care about the plight of man.

  • NATURALISM, CONT.

    A man said to the universe:Sir, I exist!However, replied the universe,The fact has not created in me A sense of obligation.- Stephen Crane

    How does this poem espouse the tenants of Naturalism?

  • REGIONALISMRegionalism has ALL the characteristics of Realism PLUS:using regional dialects;descriptions of a local area or region;local cultures and customs.Writers attempt to make the reader feel theyve been to an area without actually going there.Champions of the Mississippi, Currier & Ives.

  • STEPHEN CRANEStephen Crane.Associated with the Naturalist movementb. 1871 (remember this date)Youngest of fourteen children; often ill as a childFirst work published in 1893Maggie: A Girl of the StreetsFinancial failure

  • STEPHEN CRANE, CONT.The Red Badge of Courage (1895)A novel about the Civil War told through the point of view of a young private.The highlight of his literary career.Remember his birth date?Wrote numerous stories and poems and worked as a newspaper correspondent (Nothing as popular as Red Badge, however.)Stephen Crane in Athens, 1897.

  • STEPHEN CRANE, CONT.While enroute to Cuba in 1896, Crane met Cora Taylor (a hostess).The pair journeyed to Greece in 1897 to cover the Greco-Turkish War.Unfortunately, Crane spent the rest of his life plagued by both finical and health struggles.Diagnosed with tuberculosis, he died in a sanitarium in Germany in 1900.He was only twenty-eight years old.

  • AMBROSE BIERCEb. 1842Father: Marcus Aurelius Biercean eccentric and unsuccessful farmerFought on the side of the Union during the Civil WarPart of Shermans March to the SeaSeverely wounded and cited for bravery fifteen timesLeft the army, moved to San Francisco, began to write for newspapers

    Ambrose Bierce, 1892.

  • AMBROSE BIERCE, CONT.Worked for several newspapers in San FranciscoMarried in 1871, separated in 1888(Bierce discovered compromising letters from an admirer of his wife.)The Devils Dictionary, 1906.d. 1914((we think))

    Ambrose Bierce, J.H.E. Parington.

  • AMBROSE BIERCE, CONT.Bierce left America in 1913 to report on (or perhaps join) the Mexican Revolution.In one of his last letters, Bierce wrote the following to his niece, Lora:Good-bye if you hear of my being stood up against a Mexican stone wall and shot to rags please know that I think that a pretty good way to depart this life. It beats old age, disease, or falling down the cellar stairs.And that was the last anyone heard from him...

  • THE DEVILS DICTIONARYBore, n. A person who talks when you wish him to listen.Cannon, n. An instrument employed in the rectification of national boundaries.Circus, n. A place where horses, ponies and elephants are permitted to see men, women and children acting the fool.Clarionet, n. An instrument of torture operated by a person with cotton in his ears. There are two instruments that are worse than a clarionet two clarionets.

  • THE DEVILS DICTIONARY, CONT.Corporation, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility.Idiot, n. A member of a large and powerful tribe whose influence in human affairs has always been dominant and controlling.Love, n. A temporary insanity curable by marriage.Novel, n. A short story padded.Telephone, n. An invention of the devil which [has] the advantages of making a disagreeable person keep his distance.

  • THE DEVILS DICTIONARY, CONT.Vote, n. The instrument and symbol of a freeman's power to make a fool of himself and a wreck of his country.Yankee, n. In Europe, an American. In the Northern States of our Union, a New Englander. In the Southern States the word is unknown.Zeal, n. A certain nervous disorder afflicting the young and inexperienced.

  • JACK LONDONb. 1876As a boy, he was largely uncared for by his parents (495).In his teens, he:was an oyster pirate;sailed on a schooner;went seal-hunting;wrote for several newspapers;prospected for gold in the Klondike.

    Portrait of Jack London, Arnold Genthe.

  • JACK LONDON, CONT.Jack London.London left the Klondike after only a year due to illness.His time in the Klondike, however, convinced him that life is a struggle in which the strong survive and the weak do not (495), a perspective which highly influenced his work.His story To Build a Fire is based on his experiences in the Klondike.

  • JACK LONDON, CONT.The Call of the Wild (1903) is his most famous work.The Call of the Wild is the story of a sled dog named Buck who escapes to freedom.In his later years, Londons health deteriorated due to alcoholism. d. 1916London overdosed on narcotics in November of 1916 and lapsed into a coma. He died the following evening at the age of forty.

  • WORKS CONSULTEDArpin, Gary Q. The Rise of Realism: The Civil War and Postwar Period. Elements of Literature. Austin: Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 2000. 408-422.Vanderziel, Jeffery. "Civil War Statistics." The American Civil War. 2001. 17 Feb 2009 .

    Group Work?- send them to the timeline in the book with table partners and have them pick out what they believe are the 3 MOST important events of the period.

    http://www.csustan.edu/english/reuben/pal/chap5/5intro.html

    Realism, n. The art of depicting nature as it is seen by toads. The charm suffusing a landscape painted by a mole, or a story written by a measuring-worm. --Ambrose Bierce The Devil's Dictionary (1911)

    Artist: William Sidney Mount

    *The Period: 1850-1900

    What are some of the important authors of this period?- Important works?- Events?

    Different slide; nothing written; answers given orally.

    *These American realists believed that humanity's freedom of choice was limited by the power of outside forces. *For example, romantic writers such as Ralph Waldo Emerson celebrated the ability of human will to triumph over adversity.

    Romantized work pictured on page.* Refer back to the Chopin stories theyve already done. Characteristics; who are the main characters?- are their lives really that exciting?

    Define objectivity; emphasize the real part; *Highlight the difference between objective and subjectiveLarger then life think of the mans grief from The Raven Elevated style think of the language in The RavenPlot Ministers Black Veil & the raven coming in the window from The Raven & the house in The Fall of the House of Usher*Horror; life suddenly wasnt so nice; romantic heroes of the past werent cutting it anymore; wanted something real.**Naturalism is the depressing cousin of Realism and Regionalism.

    *How does this poem espouse the tenants of Naturalism?*Regionalism is Realism in your own backyard.

    Also called local color

    May include legendary characters of a region: Paul Bunyan, etc.*I say published because after writing the piece magazines found it much to grim, and he paid to have the book printed himself. Even then, however, no one wanted to buy, and copies laid around his apartment gathering dust.

    Examine the title of his first work. What do you think this piece is about?- how does it fit into the Realist movement?**Hostess read as madamSanitarium - a medical facility for long-term illness*Father: eccentric like he named all thirteen of his children names that start with A; Abigail, Amelia, Ann, Addison, Aurelius, Augustus, Almeda, Andrew, Albert, Ambrose, Arthur, Adelia, and Aurelia

    ****Idiot: reference Much Madness is Divinest Sense*chief.Father: William Chaney, an astrologer who left Londons mother after she refused to have an abortion. Flora attempted (unsuccessfully) to commit suicide after Chaney left her. Flora gave London to an ex-slave, Virginia Prentiss, to be raised.Thats messed up.

    Oyster pirate is a name given to persons who engage in the poaching of oysters.***