romanticism

18
Romanti cism •What is it? •How did it begin? •What does it say? •What are some examples?

Upload: betsy

Post on 22-Feb-2016

36 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Romanticism. What is it? How did it begin? What does it say? What are some examples?. What is it?. Romanticism is the name given to the school of thought that values feeling and intuition over reason. . How did it begin?. Romanticism was a reaction to rationalism . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Romanticism

Romanticism

•What is it?•How did it begin?•What does it say?•What are some examples?

Page 2: Romanticism

Romanticism is the name given to the school of thought that values feeling and intuition over reason.

What is it?

Page 3: Romanticism

Romanticism was a reaction to rationalism.

How did it begin?

Page 4: Romanticism

By the mid-1700s rationalism rivaled religion as the dominant intellectual force in the West.

Page 5: Romanticism

Rationalism emphasized objective facts, science, and industry.

Page 6: Romanticism

The Romantics feared that rationalism was making the world into a grim, artificial place.

Page 7: Romanticism

The Romantics valued feeling and intuition over reason.

Classical Painting Romantic Painting

What does it say?

Page 8: Romanticism

The Romantics placed faith in inner experience and the power of the imagination.

Page 9: Romanticism

The Romantics shunned civilization in favor of unspoiled nature.

Page 10: Romanticism

The Romantics found beauty and truth in exotic locales, the super-natural realm, and the inner world of the imagination.

Page 11: Romanticism

The Romantics found inspiration in myth, legend and folklore.

Page 12: Romanticism

James Fennimore Cooper’s The Last of the Mohicans (1826) features a hero who is young, intuitive and close to nature.

Examples of Romanticism

Page 13: Romanticism

Washington Irving’s “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” (1820) includes a supernatural Headless Horseman.

Page 14: Romanticism

Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter (1850) emphasizes how artificial and restrictive society is.

Page 15: Romanticism

The End

Page 16: Romanticism

Washington Irving (1783-1859)

• Irving was born in New York City, became a lawyer and worked in his family’s business.

Page 17: Romanticism

Washington Irving (1783-1859)

• While in England on business, he was advised by Sir Walter Scott to study the Romantics and find inspiration in folklore and legends.

Page 18: Romanticism

• Irving’s stories combine comedy, satire and the supernatural:

“Rip Van Winkle”“The Legend of Sleepy

Hollow” “The Devil and Tom

Walker”