chapter 12 lecture - humanities

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Identify major figures in Romanticism. Romanticism All non-cited images were gathered from the free domain and are not under any copyright law restrictions. All images gathered from wikipedia.org.

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Page 1: Chapter 12 Lecture - Humanities

• Identify major figures in Romanticism.

Romanticism

All non-cited images were gathered from the free domain and are not under any copyright law restrictions. All images gathered from wikipedia.org.

Page 2: Chapter 12 Lecture - Humanities

The Rise of Romanticism• By 1800, Neoclassicism was the dominant style in European art and architecture, but Romanticism was beginning to emerge.

French painting would oscillate for four decades between the classical and intellectual paintings of artists such as Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres and the romantic and emotional paintings of Delacroix.

Page 3: Chapter 12 Lecture - Humanities

While classicism was based on logic, rigor, clarity, and exactitude, romanticism stressed inexactitude and indeterminacy.

The Rise of Romanticism

One notable Romantic painter was Francisco Goya, who was the most important chronicler of France’s war with Spain.

Page 4: Chapter 12 Lecture - Humanities

In the Romantic era, sculpture fell out of favor.

The Rise of Romanticism

Romantics embraced Gothic architecture.

• Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s autobiographical Confessions was a celebration of the self and a powerful example of reflective self-analysis.

Bodoklecksel. Reims Kathedrale. 2006. JPG.

Page 5: Chapter 12 Lecture - Humanities

• The unity of humanity with nature was a special theme of Ralph Waldo Emerson.

The Rise of Romanticism

Page 6: Chapter 12 Lecture - Humanities

• Living close to nature was, for Henry David Thoreau, the very source of humankind’s strength.

The Rise of Romanticism

Page 7: Chapter 12 Lecture - Humanities

Much nineteenth century literature focused on human ignorance and the search for truth.◦ Examples include:

Herman Melville’s Moby Dick, in which Captain Ahab is seeking a final truth in the form of a great white whale.

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes, who is always trying to figure out “who done it.”

William Blake’s poetry showed him to be a man with a profound interest in human emotions.

Romanticism and Literature

Page 8: Chapter 12 Lecture - Humanities

Probably the most important literary event in the Romantic era was the publication in 1798 of the Lyrical Ballads, co-authored by William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, which rejected the sophisticated syntax and vocabulary of Neoclassical writing.

One of the great English Romantic poets

was Lord Byron, a free spirit who was known for his unconventional behavior.

Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights is a fully Romantic work that breaks new ground in the violence of its scenes and the extravagance of its style.

Romanticism and Literature

Page 9: Chapter 12 Lecture - Humanities

Perhaps the most influential writer of the Romantic era was Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe, who witnessed the shift from the Enlightenment emphasis on reason, objectivity, and scientific fact to the Romantic concern for emotion, subjectivity, and imaginative truth.

His play Faust has been described as a defining work of European Romanticism.

Romanticism and Literature

Page 10: Chapter 12 Lecture - Humanities

The two outstanding American poets of the nineteenth century were Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson.

Whitman experimented with language and form, while Dickinson’s poems are partly rooted in the metaphysical poetry of John Donne.

Romanticism and Literature

Page 11: Chapter 12 Lecture - Humanities

While innovative Romantic composer Hector Berlioz wrote mostly in large forms, Frederic Chopin wrote in small ones.

Where Berlioz wrote for orchestra, Chopin wrote mostly for the piano.

Italy’s greatest Romantic composer was Giuseppe Verdi, composer of Rigoletto.

As Beethoven dominated the musical world for the first half of the nineteenth century, Richard Wagner dominated the second half.

Romanticism and Music

Page 12: Chapter 12 Lecture - Humanities

By 1850, new technological achievements offered architects and sculptors new possibilities.

The Crystal Palace in London, which extended the idea of a glass-framed greenhouse, was built for the Great Exhibition of 1851.

Romanticism and Technology

Page 13: Chapter 12 Lecture - Humanities

Romanticism and Technology

The Statue of Liberty was designed in 1875 by Frederic-Auguste Bartholdi and given to the United States by France.

Schwen, Daniel. Statue of Liberty frontal. 2008. JPG.

Page 14: Chapter 12 Lecture - Humanities

Resources

Bodoklecksel. Reims Kathedrale. 2006. JPG.

Schwen, Daniel. Statue of Liberty frontal. 2008. JPG.

All non-cited images were gathered from the free domain and are not under any copyright law restrictions. All images gathered from wikipedia.org.