the enlightenment in europe and the americas (volume d)
TRANSCRIPT
![Page 1: The Enlightenment in Europe and the Americas (Volume D)](https://reader035.vdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022081417/56649d745503460f94a53c7a/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
The Enlightenment in Europeand the Americas (Volume D)
![Page 2: The Enlightenment in Europe and the Americas (Volume D)](https://reader035.vdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022081417/56649d745503460f94a53c7a/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
• classical ideals versus progress and modernity
• faith and imagination versus reason• “I” as individual versus society• God as a watchmaker, Deism• reason: “the power by which man deduces
one proposition from another, or proceeds from premises to consequences” (Dr. Johnson, Dictionary, 92).
Background
![Page 3: The Enlightenment in Europe and the Americas (Volume D)](https://reader035.vdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022081417/56649d745503460f94a53c7a/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
Background (continued)
• human reason• freedom• free market• Kant, controlled
politics• problems with racism
and slavery• “progress”
![Page 4: The Enlightenment in Europe and the Americas (Volume D)](https://reader035.vdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022081417/56649d745503460f94a53c7a/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
Newton
![Page 5: The Enlightenment in Europe and the Americas (Volume D)](https://reader035.vdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022081417/56649d745503460f94a53c7a/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
Religion
• Deism• scientific study as a
divine or spiritual study
• individual and the universe
• Great Chain of Being
![Page 6: The Enlightenment in Europe and the Americas (Volume D)](https://reader035.vdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022081417/56649d745503460f94a53c7a/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
• social instability
• decorum, civility
• social hierarchy
• gender roles
• absence of children
Society
![Page 7: The Enlightenment in Europe and the Americas (Volume D)](https://reader035.vdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022081417/56649d745503460f94a53c7a/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
• suitable subjects
• proper language and style
• purpose of writing: to delight and to instruct
• artifice or reality?
• art’s purpose
Decorum
![Page 8: The Enlightenment in Europe and the Americas (Volume D)](https://reader035.vdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022081417/56649d745503460f94a53c7a/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
Alexander Pope
“But ALL subsists by elemental strife; And Passions are the elements of Life. The general ORDER, since the whole began, Is kept in Nature, and is kept in Man” (An Essay on Man, lines 169–71).
![Page 9: The Enlightenment in Europe and the Americas (Volume D)](https://reader035.vdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022081417/56649d745503460f94a53c7a/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
The Enlightenment was a time of great tension between the ideals of __________ .
a. tradition and progressb. philosophy and literaturec. poetry and dramad. religion and Deism
Test Your Knowledge
![Page 10: The Enlightenment in Europe and the Americas (Volume D)](https://reader035.vdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022081417/56649d745503460f94a53c7a/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
Enlightenment philosophers and writers, regardless of their belief in tradition or progress, tended to value which of the following?
a. imaginationb. natural philosophyc. reasond. realism
Test Your Knowledge
![Page 11: The Enlightenment in Europe and the Americas (Volume D)](https://reader035.vdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022081417/56649d745503460f94a53c7a/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
The topic of children is largely absent from Enlightenment writing because __________.
a. infant mortality was so highb. children were not understood to possess reasonc. children were not taught to read until adulthoodd. the topic of children was considered indecorous
Test Your Knowledge
![Page 12: The Enlightenment in Europe and the Americas (Volume D)](https://reader035.vdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022081417/56649d745503460f94a53c7a/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
What was “the Great Chain of Being” as Enlightenment thinkers understood it?
a. a guide to proper behavior and decorumb. the historical royal lineagec. part of God as a “watchmaker”d. a hierarchy that put everything in its place
Test Your Knowledge
![Page 13: The Enlightenment in Europe and the Americas (Volume D)](https://reader035.vdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022081417/56649d745503460f94a53c7a/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
The Enlightenment ideal of decorum suggested that ____________.
a. all subjects were fit for literatureb. all literary genres were equally importantc. literary subjects must be fitted to their appropriate genred. genre was always more important than subject
Test Your Knowledge
![Page 14: The Enlightenment in Europe and the Americas (Volume D)](https://reader035.vdocuments.net/reader035/viewer/2022081417/56649d745503460f94a53c7a/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
Visit the StudySpace at:http://wwnorton.com/studyspace
For more learning resources, please visit the StudySpace site for
The Norton Anthology Of World Literature.
This concludes the Lecture PowerPoint presentation for
The Norton Anthology
of World Literature