The Romantic Period 1785-1830 France: The House of Bourbon France: The House of Bourbon Bourbon Dynasty 1643 - 1715 Louis XIV (the Sun King) 1715 -
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Transcript The Romantic Period 1785-1830 France: The House of Bourbon France: The House of Bourbon Bourbon Dynasty 1643 - 1715 Louis XIV (the Sun King) 1715 -
The Romantic
Period
1785-1830
France: The House of
Bourbon
France: The House of Bourbon
Bourbon Dynasty
1643 - 1715 Louis XIV (the Sun King)
1715 - 1774 Louis XV (the Beloved)
1774 - 1792 Louis XVI
First Republic 1792-1804 [Louis XVII]
Bonaparte Dynasty First Empire
1804-1815 Napoleon
Bourbon Dynasty Restored
1815-1824 Louis XVIII
England: The House of Hanover
ROMANTIC
REVOLUTIONS
American Revolution
1775-1783
1763: Britain began to impose taxes upon the colonies which were
viewed as illegal
Broad intellectual and social shifts
republican ideals: liberty and rights as central values, makes the
people as a whole sovereign, rejects aristocracy and inherited
political power, expects citizens to be independent and calls on them
to perform civic duties, and is strongly opposed to corruption.
liberal democracy: representative democracy (with free and fair
elections) along with the protection of minorities, the rule of law, a
separation of powers, and protection of liberties (thus the name
liberal) of speech, assembly, religion, and property.
Colonies’ alliance with France
1776: Declaration of Independence
1787: Constitution and Bill of Rights
Quaker
Met Ben Franklin in London –
who advised him to move to
America
1776: Common Sense: attacked
British monarchy and argued for
American independence
1787: Returned to Britain
1791: The Rights of Man: proposed
universal male suffrage,
progressive taxes, family
allowances, old age pensions,
maternity grants and abolition of
House of Lords
1792: Became a French citizen and
elected to National Convention –
opposed execution of Louis XVI
1794: Age of Reason: questioned
truth of Old Testament and
Christianity
1802: returned to America
Tom Paine
1737-1809
Auguste Milliere, Thomas Paine
National Portrait Gallery, London
French Revolution and Napoleon
1789-1815
1789: Fall of Bastille and Declaration of the Rights of Man
1792: September Massacres of imprisoned nobility
1793: The Reign of Terror
Execution of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette
France declared war against Britain
1794: Fall of Robespierre
1804: Napoleon crowned Emperor of France
1815: Napoleon’s defeat at Waterloo
Jean-Pierre Louis Laurent Houel (1735-1813),
Prise de la Bastille ("The storm of the Bastille").
Official British Reaction to the
French Revolution
Curtailment of civil liberties and harsh
repression
suspension of the writ of habeus corpus
advocates of political change charged with
treason
1791: Rejection of a bill to abolish the slave
trade
1793: declaration of war against France
Anglo-Irish statesman and
Edmund Burke philosopher
1756: A Vindication of Natural
1729-97
Society: A View of the Miseries
Joshua Reynolds, Edmund Burke
Scottish National Portrait Gallery
and Evils Arising to Mankind:
treatise on anarchy
1757: A Philosophical Enquiry
into the Origin of Our Ideas of the
Sublime and Beautiful: treatise
on aesthetics
1765-94: Whig member of
House of Commons
Opposed absolute monarchy
and supported American
colonies against the king
1790: Reflections on the
Revolution in France: saw
French Revolution as a violent
rebellion against tradition which
would end in disaster.
Professional writer,
philosopher and feminist
1790: Vindication of the Rights
of Men: response to Burke in
defense of the ideals of the
French Revolution
1792: A Vindication of the
Rights of Women
1794: An Historical and Moral
View of the French Revolution
1796: Letters Written During a
Short Residence in Sweden,
Norway, and Denmark
1797: married William
Godwin
Died of childbirth fever
1798: William Godwin
published Memoirs of the
Author of a Vindication of the
Rights of Woman
Mary
Wollstonecraft
1759-97
Eugene Delacroix
Liberty Leading the People
1797:The
Young
General
1800: Napoleon at St. Bernard
1812: Napoleon in his study
Images of
Napoleon
By
Jacques
Louis
David
1804: The coronation
Jacques Louis David, 1805-07
The coronation of the Emperor Napoleon I
Napoleonic Wars
1805-1815
William Sadler, The Battle of Waterloo
Industrial Revolution
Power-driven machinery replaced hand
labor
1765: James Watt – the steam engine
Industry moved from homes and workshops
to factories
Population moved from agricultural
countryside to industrial cities
Enclosure of “commons” into privately
owned estates
Laissez faire economic policy – free
operation of economic laws –governmental
non-interference
1776: Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations
Scientific Advances:
An Age of Wonder
The possibility of flight: hot air balloons
Astronomical discoveries
Electricity
Chemistry
Emphasis on experimentation and applied
science
Public interest ignited by demonstrations
and lectures
Montgolfier Hot Air
Balloon
November 21, 1783 – first
manned flight in a balloon
designed by the Montgolfier
brothers
Paris, above the Seine
70 feet high powered by a 6
foot brazier with burning
straw
Aeronauts – Pilatre de
Rozier and Marquis
d’Arlandes
Charlière
Hydrogen
Balloon
1768 -- Discovery of hydrogen by
Henry Cavendish and Joseph
Priestly, named hydrogen by
Antoine Lavoisier
December 1, 1783 – first manned
flight in a hydrogen balloon
launched by Jacques Alexandre
Charles
wickerwork basket for
passengers
impermeable balloon made of
silk coated with rubber
controllable gas valve
ballast bags that could be
jettisoned by the aeronaut
Interest in Meteorology
1804 -- Guy-Lussac ascended
23,000 feet above Paris –
establishing the limits for
human to breathe
1804 – Luke Howard
published On the Modification
of Clouds classifying 4 basic
cloud types: cumulus, stratus,
cirrus, and nimbus
Fascination with clouds both
scientifically and aesthetically
First mapping overview of the
earth – earth as a giant
organism
The calm Philosopher in ether
sails,
Views broader stars and breathes in
purer gales;
Sees like a map in many a waving
line,
Round earth’s blue plains her lucid
waters shine;
Sees at his feet the forky lightning
glow
And hears innocuous thunder roar
below.
Erasmus Darwin
Astronomy and the
Herschels
Great 40 Foot
Telescope
William Herschel, 1738-1832
Caroline Herschel, 1750-1848
Astronomy and the Herschels
William Herschel: composer and musician turned
astronomer and telescope builder
1781: discovered the planet later named Uranus
1782: appointed “the King’s Astronomer”
1785-89: built Great 40 Foot Telescope
Deep sky surveys: Catalogue of One Thousand New Nebulae and Clusters
of Stars (1786),Catalogue of a Second Thousand New Nebulae and Clusters
of Stars (1789, Catalogue of 500 new Nebulae, nebulous Stars, planetary
Nebulae, and Clusters of Stars (1802)
Determined that the solar system is moving through space
Caroline Herschel: singer turned astronomer and comet-hunter
Discovered 8 comets
1798: Catalogue of Stars published by Royal Society
1828: Awarded the Gold Medal by Royal Astronomical Society for work
with nebulae
Electricity and Galvanism
1771: Luigi Galvani discovered that
electricity causes twitching of frog’s legs:
“animal electricity”
1800: Allesandro Volta invented the
voltaic pile, the first electrochemical battery.
1803: Giovanni Aldini demonstrated
electro-stimulation of deceased limbs on an
executed criminal at Newgate Prison in London
“On the first application of the process to the face, the jaws of
the deceased criminal began to quiver, and the adjoining muscles
were horribly contorted, and one eye was actually opened.
In the subsequent part of the process the right hand was raised and
clenched, and the legs and thighs were set in motion.”
Dissections, Body Snatchers,
Reanimations and Frankenstein
Chemistry and Sir Humphrey Davy
1799: ‘Researches, Chemical and
1778-1829
Philosophical, chiefly concerning
Nitrous Oxide and its Respiration
1801: Became assistant lecturer in
chemistry, director of the chemical
laboratory, and assistant editor of the
journals of the Royal Society: popular
public lectures on galvanism and
chemistry.
Pioneered electrolysis to isolate
elements: discovered sodium,
potassium, calcium, magnesium, boron,
and barium.
The Davy Lamp: safety lamp for coal
miners
CLASSICISM vs.
ROMANTICISM
Neo-Classicism vs
Greek/Roman influence
Emphasis on Society
Age of Reason
Rationality
Philosophy
Deism
Euro-centric
Cities
Enlightenment
Science
Romanticism
Medieval/Oriental influence
Emphasis on Individual
Age of Passion
Emotion
Imagination
Spirituality: Vitalism
Interest in the Exotic
Nature: pastoral and wild
Revolution
Social Justice
NATURE
Neo-Classical
Romantic
Universal
Subject to human control
Gardens
Source of peace and
tranquillity
Untamed nature:
dangerous/evil
Particular
Beyond human control
Mountains, oceans,
forests
Source of inspiration
and spirituality
Untamed nature:
exhilarating/sublime
Gainsborough, St James Park
Friedrich, Solitary Tree
LOVE
Neo-Classical
Romantic
Universal
Subject to human control
Marriage
Social Contract
Economic Contract
Attraction between
social and intellectual
equals
Source of peace and
tranquillity
Particular
Beyond human control
Passion
Individual choice
Search for soul-mate
Forbidden
attractions: social,
exotic, incestual
Source of inspiration,
exhilaration and despair
Gaspar Netscher
A Musical Evening
John Smibert, Dean George Berkeley and His Family
Caspar David Friedrich, Woman at Sunrise
William Blake
The Enslavement of Experience
The Transcendance of Imagination
NeoClassical
Artist
Social
Arbiter of Taste
Elitist
Moral
Intellectual
Critic
Louis Michel van Loo Portrait of Diderot
Romantic
Artist
Loner
Unconventional
Amoral
Genius
Prophet
George Gordon Lord Byron
Romantic Drama
Influences
17th c. French Neo-Classical and English
Restoration drama of wit and manners became
18th theatre of sensibility
18th –19th c. German Romantic Theatre
Revival of Shakespeare
Rise of “star system”: actor-managers
Technical advances in staging and lighting
German Romantic
Theater
“Stürm und Drang”
Looked to Shakespeare for
models
Sweeping historical and
tragic dramas
Began to emphasize
historical accuracy in
costumes and settings
Improved theatrical effects -footlights, revolving stages,
theatrical machinery
Schiller and Goethe
French Romantic Drama
Revolt against Neo-Classicism fueled by French
Revolution
Action – Passion– Human Nature
Alexander Dumas, pere, 1802-1870
Henri III et sa cour (Henry III and His Court, 1829)
For Antony (1831)
La Tour de Nesle (1832)
Novelist: Three Musketeers, Count of Monte Cristo
Alfred de Vigny, 1797-1863
1820s: Alexandrine verse adaptations of Romeo
and Juliet, The Merchant of Venice and Othello
La Marechale d’Ancre (1831)
Quitte pour la Peur (1833
Chatterton (1835)
Victor Hugo, 1802-85
1827: Cromwell
1829: Marion de Lorme –
banned by the censors
1830: Hernani –caused a
riot at Theatre Francais
1832: The King Takes his
Amusement – banned by
the censors -- Verdi’s
Rigoletto
1833: Lucrece Borgia and
Maria Tudor
1835: Angelo
1838: Ruy Blas
1843: Les Burgraves
Poet, Novelist, Dramatist -- best known
for his novels, The Hunchback of Notre
Dame (1831) and Les Miserables (1862)
Scene from Hernani painted by L. Ceosio
Manfred on the Jungfrau
Ford Madox Brown
1842
English
Closet
Drama
Closet drama: drama meant more to be read than performed
Prominent in the early 19th c. when melodrama and burlesque
dominated the theater, and poets attempted to raise dramatic
standards:
Joanna Baillie: Plays on the Passions, 1798-1812
Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Remorse, 1813
George Gordon Lord Byron: Manfred, 1817
Percy Bysshe Shelley’s The Cenci and Prometheus Unbound,
1819
Robert Browning’s Strafford (1837) and Pippa Passes (1841)
Melodrama
Comes from "music drama" –
music was used to increase
emotions or to signify
characters (signature music).
Theatre of sentimentality -emotional appeal
Simplified moral universe:
good and evil embodied in
stock characters
Heroes and villains -- and
lily-pure heroines
Sensationalistic: fires,
explosions, drownings, etc.
Wide popular appeal
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
dramatizations
based on novel by
Harriet Beecher
Stowe
George L. Aiken’s was the most popular--1853. Six acts, done
without an afterpiece – established the single-play format. 325
performances in New York.
In the 1870’s, at least 50 companies doing it in the U.S.
In 1899: 500 companies.
In 1927: 12 still doing it.
12 movie versions since 1900.
The most popular melodrama in the world until the First
World War.
Romantic Prose Genres
Literary criticism
Autobiography
The Novel
Historical novels
Novels of manners
Novels of sensibility
Gothic novels
Literary Criticism
William Hazlitt
Charles Lamb
Literary critics became
the arbiters of taste
Debate over the artistic
value as well as the
utilitarian value of
critical literature
1802: Edinburgh
Review
1809: Quarterly
Review
Thomas DeQuincy
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Autobiography
The term was first used by the poet Robert Southey
in 1809 in the English periodical Quarterly Review
Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Confessions
(1781-88)
Dorothy Wordsworth, The Grasmere Journals
(1799+)
Thomas De Quincey, Confessions of an Opium
Eater, 1822
Frederick Douglass, Narrative of the Life of
Frederick Douglass, An American Slave, (1845)
Historical
Novels
Novels that reconstruct a
past age, often when two
cultures are in conflict
Fictional characters interact
with with historical figures
in actual events
Sir Walter Scott (17711832) is considered the
father of the historical
novel: The Waverly Novels
(1814-1819) and Ivanhoe
(1819)
Jane Austen and
the Novel of Manners
Novels dominated by the customs,
manners, conventional behavior and
habits of a particular social class
Often concerned with courtship
and marriage
Realistic and sometimes satiric
Focus on domestic society rather
than the larger world
Other novelists of manners:
Anthony Trollope, Edith Wharton,
F. Scott Fitzgerald, Margaret
Drabble
Novels of Sentiment
Novels in which the characters, and thus the
readers, have a heightened emotional
response to events
Connected to emerging Romantic movement
Laurence Sterne (1713-1768):
Tristam Shandy (1760-67)
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832):
The Sorrows of Young Werther (1774)
Francois Rene de Chateaubriand (17681848): Atala (1801) and Rene (1802)
The Brontës: Anne Brontë Agnes Grey
(1847) Emily Brontë, Wuthering Heights
(1847), Charlotte Brontë, Jane Eyre (1847)
Laurence Sterne by
Sir Joshua Reynolds
The Brontës
Charlotte (1816-55), Emily (1818-48), Anne (1820-49)
Wuthering Heights and Jane
Eyre transcend sentiment into
myth-making
Wuthering Heights plumbs
the psychic unconscious in a
search for wholeness, while
Jane Eyre narrates the female
quest for individuation
Brontë.info: website of
Brontë Society and Haworth
Parsonage
The Victorian Web
portrait by Branwell Brontë of his sisters,
Anne, Emily, and Charlotte (c. 1834)
Gothic Novels
Novels characterized by magic,
mystery and horror
Exotic settings – medieval,
Oriental, etc.
Originated with Horace
Walpole’s Castle of Otranto
(1764)
William Beckford: Vathek, An
Arabian Tale (1786)
Anne Radcliffe: 5 novels (178997) including The Mysteries of
Udolpho
Widely popular genre throughout
Europe and America: Charles
Brockden Brown’s Wieland
(1798)
Contemporary Gothic novelists
include Anne Rice and Stephen
King
Frankenstein
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
1797-1851
Inspired by a dream in reaction to a
challenge to write a ghost
story
Published in
1817
(rev. ed. 1831)
A Gothic novel
influenced by
Promethean myth
The first science
fiction novel
Lyric Poetry
Search for an authentic language of feeling rather than
artifice
Wordsworth: “the spontaneous overflow of powerful
feelings recollected in tranquility”
1st person voice of the poem – during this period usually
associated with the poet – sometimes biographical and
confessional
Revived older poetic forms:
blank verse: unrhymed iambic pentameter
the sonnet
the ballad
the ode
Keats
Coleridge
The Poet as
Rock Star
Shelley
Wordsworth
Byron
Leopardi
Heine
The Poet as
Rock Star
Pushkin
Novalis
America in the early 19th Century
THE
TRANSCENDENTALISTS
Transcendentalist
Movement
Began September 8, 1836, when a group of prominent New
England intellectuals, led by poet-philosopher Ralph Waldo
Emerson, met at the Transcendental Club in Boston.
A philosophical movement protesting the state of culture –
especially political parties and organized religion.
Advocated individual self-reliance and independence –
humans are inherently good.
Major figures in the movement were Ralph Waldo
Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, John Muir, Margaret
Fuller and Amos Bronson Alcott (father of Louisa May
Alcott).
A reaction against 18th century Rationalism and New England
Puritanism, it was influenced by German Idealism (Immanuel
Kant) and Vedic (Indian) spiritualism.
Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1803-1882
Essayist, lecturer and
poet
Founder of
Transcendentalism –
expounded principles
in the essay,
“Nature,” 1836
Encouraged and
critically supported
Thoreau and
Whitman
Henry David Thoreau, 1817-1862
Poet, philosopher, naturalist,
abolitionist
Best known for his books, Walden
and Civil Disobedience
Although not highly regarded by his
contemporary critics, Thoreau has
had a profound effect on such
varied figures as Tolstoy, Ghandi,
John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther
King as well as a wide range of 20th
century authors.