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American Romanticism in Survey of American Literature II | ENG 442, Study notes of American literature

Material Type: Notes; Professor: Royal; Class: Survey American Lit II; Subject: English - ENG; University: Texas A & M University-Commerce; Term: Unknown 1989;

Typology: Study notes

Pre 2010

Uploaded on 08/18/2009

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Download American Romanticism in Survey of American Literature II | ENG 442 and more Study notes American literature in PDF only on Docsity! Prof. Derek P. Royal ENG 442 – Survey of American Literature II American Romanticism Generally speaking, American romanticism spanned the period between the Jacksonian Era and the end of the Civil War, 1830-1865. The United States was undergoing dramatic transformations during this period—cultural, political, economic, and industrial changes that would ultimately lead to the explosive ruptures of a civil war. In literature, these decades are considered by many to comprise America’s first great creative period. Many of the writers coming to the fore during this time helped to set the stage—and define the terms—for what would become a true “American” literature (as opposed to something borrowed and recycled from England or Europe). Literary critic F. O. Matthiessen (in 1941) famously referred to this era as the American Renaissance. This flowering of literary activity was made up of a wide variety of writers. Some who began their art during the “Federalist Age”—e.g., Washington Irving, William Cullen Bryant, and James Fenimore Cooper—went on to define what we now know as American romanticism. Those authors emerging later include novelists Nathaniel Hawthorne, William Gilmore Simms, Herman Melville, Harriet Beecher Stowe; poets Edgar Allan Poe, John Greenleaf Whittier, James Russell Lowell, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson; and essayists Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and Oliver Wendell Holmes (with many working in multiple genres). Although this varied collection of writers worked under the banners of diverse creative philosophies—Transcendentalism, historical romance, the gothic, sentimental fiction—one can see many similar traits and assumptions among its practitioners. This renaissance in American literature resulted from, among other things: • dramatic increases in literacy and education • the growth of the publishing industry and the emergence of larger publishing houses (including books, periodicals, gift books, almanacs, and annuals) • the emerging significance of the domestic fiction market • a stronger sense of nationhood, in many ways brought about by: • the growth of larger newspapers, spanning larger regions • the ongoing expansion into the west, a sense of Manifest Destiny • a powerful emphasis on reform and humanitarianism…in both the North as well as in the South (e.g., growing attention to abolition and women’s rights) • a ongoing shift from Jeffersonian agrarianism to an emphasis on business and technology (the word “technology” was coined in 1829) In a very general sense, some of the features defining American romanticism include: • a faith in the value of individualism and the legitimacy of intuitive perception • a sense that the natural world is a source of goodness and a check against human corruption; an emphasis on the innocence of nature; the glorification of the “noble savage”; a desire to escape from the constraints of society
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