the romantic period

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The Romantic Period French Revolution (1789) – 1832 Pages 620-638

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The Romantic Period. French Revolution (1789) – 1832 Pages 620-638. Historical Transition Period. Charles Dickens / from A Tale of Two Cities. Turbulent Times Caused by the Haves and Have Nots. American Revolution / French Revolution Overthrow of the Haves - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Romantic Period

The Romantic Period

French Revolution (1789) – 1832Pages 620-638

Page 2: The Romantic Period

Historical Transition

Period

Page 3: The Romantic Period

Charles Dickens / from A Tale of Two Cities

Page 4: The Romantic Period

Turbulent Times Caused by the Haves and Have Nots

• American Revolution / French Revolution• Overthrow of the Haves• Conservatives in England became more rigid– Repressive measures:• Outlawed collective bargaining• Imprisoned suspected agitators

Page 5: The Romantic Period

Industrial Revolution

• Goods made by hand verses mass production• Communal land owned by many farmers was

taken over by wealthy individuals– Turned into private parks for hunting/recreation

• Large numbers of landless people, go to the cities to find work

Page 6: The Romantic Period
Page 7: The Romantic Period

Laissez Faire Economic Policy• “Let the people do as they pleased” / Hands

off Policy

• Economic forces should be allowed to operate freely without government interference

Page 8: The Romantic Period

Laissez Faire Economic Policy• Result? – rich grew richer and the poor

suffered even more

• Adam Smith, Wealth of Nations – basis for capitalism / justification to ignore the suffering of millions

Page 9: The Romantic Period

Attitude of the Day• Most members of the upper class believed

that they deserved their worldly success• And, the poor must be innately evil,

deserving of the hunger and appalling conditions that they endured

Page 10: The Romantic Period

Romantic Poets

• Frustrated by England’s resistance to political and social change

• Responded through public poetry emphasizing emotion and imagination rather than bottom line reason

• Wrote poems about ordinary people– Truths about the heart– NATURE

Page 11: The Romantic Period

William Blake

• He cried out against the social problems he saw

• He warned against the growing divisions between the classes, working conditions, and child labor

• “No one should go hungry in a land as green and wealthy as England.”

• Most thought he was crazy.

Page 12: The Romantic Period

Romanticism1798-1832

• Pages 620-621, 622• What can you infer about the Romantic

artists?

• The divine arts of imagination: imagination, the real and eternal world of which this vegetable universe is but a faint shadow.– ~William Blake

Page 13: The Romantic Period