88

Click here to load reader

English literature - The Romantic period

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: English literature - The Romantic period

Instructor: Ph.D Doan Hue Dung

Group 3: Nguyễn Giang TrúcĐinh Thị Ngọc Yến Trang

Nguyễn Huyền TrâmCao Kỳ Bảo TrânNguyễn Thị Thêm

Bùi Duy Khang

Page 2: English literature - The Romantic period

1.The French Revolution

2. The Industrial Revolution

Page 3: English literature - The Romantic period
Page 4: English literature - The Romantic period

The French Revolution• Began in 1789 and ended in the late 1790s • Causes: The irresponsibility and extravagant spending by King

Louis XVI (1754-1793) bankruptcy

The influence from Enlightenment ideals: individual liberty in opposition to an absolute monarchy

abolish the feudalism and establish a republic

Page 5: English literature - The Romantic period
Page 6: English literature - The Romantic period

Divided into two stage

+ 1789 – beginning of 1793: The successful stage

+ 1793 – late 1790s: The violent and turbulent phase

Page 7: English literature - The Romantic period

The first stage + July 14, 1789 (Bastille Day): rioters stormed the Bastille fortress, starting the French Revolution. + Eliminating the aristocracy + On August 4, the adoption of the Declaration of the Rights of Man (influenced by American Declaration of Independence, having 17 articles) + January 21, 1793: King Louis XVI ‘s execution (sent him to the guillotine) A majority of the population (working force) was escaped from oppression for many years.  According to Albert Hancock, in his book The French Revolution and the English Poets: a study in historical criticism, “The French Revolution came, bringing with it the promise of a brighter day, the promise of regenerated man and regenerated earth…..”

Page 8: English literature - The Romantic period
Page 9: English literature - The Romantic period
Page 10: English literature - The Romantic period
Page 11: English literature - The Romantic period

Romantic poets accept and approve the French Revolution. 

Under the new laws: writers and artists were freedom to express themselves

Romantic poets (such as Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron): wrote works for and about the working man

Influence on Writers and Literature

Page 12: English literature - The Romantic period

The second phase Turn into a bloody power struggle + In 1793, Radical Jacobins seized power from Girondins nominal: the idea of liberty, equality and fraternity

+ However, in fact: Their idea of justice: the execution of opponents The masses little chance to exercise their freedom: as soldiers to fight against France’s enemies.•At the late: General Napoleon Bonaparte + Proclaimed himself Emperor of France in 1804 + Led the French army in an unprecedented conquest of Europe + In 1805, was defeated by Britain at Trafalgar under the command of Admiral Horatio Nelson

Page 13: English literature - The Romantic period

The Girondins The Jacobins

Page 14: English literature - The Romantic period

 “The greatness of

a man is not measured from his feet to his

head, but from his head to the sky”

Page 15: English literature - The Romantic period

Trafalgar Naval Battle Admiral Nelson

Page 16: English literature - The Romantic period

Influence on Writers and Literature

Disappointed by the bloody outcome, embraced more conservative ideals Some priciples of literature (Romanticism): pursuit of happiness, human love.......

Page 17: English literature - The Romantic period
Page 18: English literature - The Romantic period
Page 19: English literature - The Romantic period

Use of technologyManual works

Agricultural Industrial

Traditional world Modern world

Positive effects

=> A leading country, hold an important role in the world

Page 20: English literature - The Romantic period

Negative impacts City: overcrowded and dirty “Mushroom towns”Working Conditions: unsafe, unsanitary and inhumaneTime work: 12 or 14 hours/dayNo vote Child labor

Page 21: English literature - The Romantic period

Luddite Riots

Page 22: English literature - The Romantic period

Changes in Themes The Romantic movement: against industrialization

and mechanizationWilliam Blake (The Chimney Sweepers): portray the misery of a child labor Charles Dickens ( Hard Time): the poverty and the harsh life of the working classJane Eyre (Wuthering Heights ): the beauty of the nature was destroyed by mechanical devices.

Page 23: English literature - The Romantic period

Changes in LanguageBefore 18th century• Divine works of arts• Written by the

aristocracy

In 18th century: the industrial revolution• The voice of common people

 ConclusionIndustrial Revolution has significant influence on the themes and language of literary works.

• Popular form: poetry• Form: essays, fiction, and poetry• Express thought and feeling • The language : vernacular

Page 24: English literature - The Romantic period
Page 25: English literature - The Romantic period
Page 26: English literature - The Romantic period

Causes Of The Romantic Period

• People had time to appreciate the arts

• Wealthy patrons were no longer needed to support artists

• Failure of The Enlightenment gave way to a new type of thinking

I don’t need a reason to cry

EMOTION

Page 27: English literature - The Romantic period
Page 28: English literature - The Romantic period

• Trends was a new appreciation of the medieval romance.

Page 29: English literature - The Romantic period

The Romantic

a tale or ballad of

chivalric adventure

on individual heroism

on the exotic

& the mysterious

the elegantformality artificiality

Classical forms of

literature

emphasised

Page 30: English literature - The Romantic period
Page 31: English literature - The Romantic period

the “spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings”

Page 32: English literature - The Romantic period

Nationalism The second phase of Romanticism (1805 - 1830s)

• was marked by a quickening of cultural nationalism and a new attention to national origins.

Page 33: English literature - The Romantic period

Nationalism The second phase of Romanticism (1805 - 1830s)

• English Romantic poetry had reached its zenith in the works.

Percy Bysshe Shelley John Keats Lord Byron

Page 34: English literature - The Romantic period

Individualism• Greater importance on intuition,

instincts, and feelings

• The artist has become the hero

Page 35: English literature - The Romantic period

Individualism

Page 36: English literature - The Romantic period

Poets of the Romantic Poem

Page 37: English literature - The Romantic period

The Romantic poets showed their interests in imagination, individual personality, liberty, nature,

children and simply people

Page 38: English literature - The Romantic period

Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)

+English lyrical poet, critic, and philosopher

+The leader of Romantic poetry

Page 39: English literature - The Romantic period

1791:Begins UniversityColeridge enrolls at Cambridge University as a member

of Jesuit College. He arrives just after William Wordsworth graduates.

Page 40: English literature - The Romantic period

1795Coleridge marries Sara Fricker, the sister of Robert Southey's fiancée. Their marriage turns out to be an unsuccessful and

unhappy one

Page 41: English literature - The Romantic period

1796 In December the family moves to Nether

Stowey in the Lake District. 1797

Meets Wordsworth.From it resulted Lyrical Ballads, which opened with

Coleridge's "Rime of the Ancient Mariner" and ended with Wordsworth's "Tintern Abbey".

Page 42: English literature - The Romantic period

2. Main works 1798 The Rime of the Ancient Mariner1816 Christabel , an unfinished narrative poem.1816the dreamlike poem Kubla khan , composed under the influence of opium.1817Biographia Literaria

Page 43: English literature - The Romantic period

Coleridge’s poetry+Content supernatural characters+AimTo give them a semblame (aspect) of the truth+Style: Archaic language rich in sound devices +Main interestThe creative power of imagination

Page 44: English literature - The Romantic period

The Rime of the Ancient Mariner is the longest major poem by the English poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and published in 1798 in the first edition of Lyrical 

Ballads

Page 45: English literature - The Romantic period

1834Coleridge dies at the Gillman home of heart and lung

problems. He is buried in the aisle of St. Michael's Church in Highgate

Page 46: English literature - The Romantic period

George Gordon Byron (1788 – 1824)

known simply as Lord Byron

Page 47: English literature - The Romantic period

1808 Byron receives his degree from Cambridge.

In 1809, he went on a two-year-long voyage to Europe and returned home in 1811

Page 48: English literature - The Romantic period

In 1812, Byron pulished the first two parts of his major work “Child harold’s Pilgrimage in which he described

his journey to foreign lands

Page 49: English literature - The Romantic period

Child harold’s Pilgrimage

Page 50: English literature - The Romantic period

Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Cantos I & II (1812)The Giaour (1813) The Corsair (1814)

The Prisoner of Chillon (1816) Darkness (1816)

The Lament of Tasso (1817) Heaven and Earth (1821)The Age of Bronze (1823)

The Island (1823The Deformed Transformed (1824)

 Don Juan (1819–1824; incomplete on Byron's death in 1824)

Page 51: English literature - The Romantic period

DON JUAN is the central work of George Gordon Byron British poet

Page 52: English literature - The Romantic period

1824Lord Byron Dies

Byron dies of fever in Missolonghi, Greece at the age of 36. His body is returned to England and he is buried

near Newstead Abbey.

Page 53: English literature - The Romantic period

John Keats (1795-1821)

+an English Romantic poet +The poetry of Keats is characterized

by sensual imagery

Page 54: English literature - The Romantic period

John Keats foremost Themes

Page 55: English literature - The Romantic period

What makes John Keats a Romantic poet“Beauty is truth, truth beauty, – that is all / Ye know on earth,

and all ye need to know“("Ode on a Grecian Urn“)“I have two luxuries to brood over in my walks, your loveliness

and the hour of my death… I hate the world :it batters too much the wrings of my self-will, and would I could take a sweet poison

from your lips to send me out of it”(1818)

Page 56: English literature - The Romantic period

Foremost works of John Keats

Poems (1817) Endymion (1818) "Ode on a Grecian Urn" (1819) "Ode to a Nightingale" (1819) "La Belle Dame Sans Merci" (1819) "On Autumn" (1820) Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems (1820)

Page 57: English literature - The Romantic period
Page 58: English literature - The Romantic period

1821John Keats dies.John Keats dies of tuberculosis at the age of 25 in Rome. He is buried in the Protestant cemetery.

Page 59: English literature - The Romantic period
Page 60: English literature - The Romantic period
Page 61: English literature - The Romantic period
Page 62: English literature - The Romantic period

Born on 7th, April 1770in Lake District

Cockermouth, England

Page 63: English literature - The Romantic period
Page 64: English literature - The Romantic period

• Education Primary education: his mother taught him to

read and write. Educated at Hawkshead Grammar School. He made his debut as a writer in 1787 when

he published a sonnel in “ The European Magazine”

Received his BA degree in 1791.

Page 65: English literature - The Romantic period

• In 1791, he visited France and fell in love with Annette Vallon.

Page 66: English literature - The Romantic period
Page 67: English literature - The Romantic period

• In 1795, Wordsworth was reunited with his sister, Dothory.

William Dorothy

Coleridge

“ We Were Three Persons In One Soul”

Page 68: English literature - The Romantic period

• Produced Lyrical Ballads (1798)

Page 69: English literature - The Romantic period

• In 1802, Wordsworth married Mary Hutchinson.

Page 70: English literature - The Romantic period

• Started to write a large and philosophical autobiographical poems.

Page 71: English literature - The Romantic period

• Received an honorary doctorate in Civil Law from the University of Durham

• Alo received the same degree from the Oxford University.

• In 1842, the government awarded him a civil list pension amounting £300.

Page 72: English literature - The Romantic period

• At the age of 80, he died on April 23, 1850.

Page 73: English literature - The Romantic period

Themes• Nature

Page 74: English literature - The Romantic period

Themes• Nature• The Power of Humand Mind

Page 75: English literature - The Romantic period

Themes• Nature• The Power of Humand Mind• Childhood

Page 76: English literature - The Romantic period

William Wordsword’s poetic style

Page 77: English literature - The Romantic period
Page 78: English literature - The Romantic period

Simplicity

Page 79: English literature - The Romantic period

Plain-spoken and easy to understand

One summer evening (led by her) I found A little boat tied to a willow tree Within a rocky cove, its usual home. Straight I unloosed her chain, and stepping inPushed from the shore. It was an act of stealthAnd troubled pleasure, nor without the voice

Page 80: English literature - The Romantic period

Emotion

Page 81: English literature - The Romantic period

Imagination

Page 82: English literature - The Romantic period

Emphasis on relationship between man

and nature

Page 83: English literature - The Romantic period

Almost always used blank verse

Page 84: English literature - The Romantic period

Major works• 387 poems from 1790s to 1850• Including the collection Lyrical

Ballads (1798) with Samuel Taylor Coleridge

• Lyrical Ballads, with Other Poems (1800). This edition contains the famous Preface, the Manifesto of English Romanticism.

• Poems, in Two Volumes (1807). • The Excursion (1814). • The Prelude (1850).

Page 85: English literature - The Romantic period

The Prelude (1850)• greatest works ever written

in English Literature• an autobiographical poem

written in 14 sections.• The first version was

written in 1798• Published it three months

after his death in 1850.• Written in blank verse

Page 86: English literature - The Romantic period

Extract from The Prelude • One summer evening (led by her) I found

• A little boat tied to a willow tree • Within a rocky cove, its usual home. • Straight I unloosed her chain, and stepping in

360• Pushed from the shore. It was an act of stealth• And troubled pleasure, nor without the voice • Of mountain-echoes did my boat move on; • Leaving behind her still, on either side, • Small circles glittering idly in the moon,

365• Until they melted all into one track • Of sparkling light. But now, like one who rows, • Proud of his skill, to reach a chosen point • With an unswerving line, I fixed my view • Upon the summit of a craggy ridge,

370• The horizon’s utmost boundary; far above • Was nothing but the stars and the grey sky. • She was an elfin pinnace; lustily • I dipped my oars into the silent lake, • And, as I rose upon the stroke, my boat

375• Went heaving through the water like a swan;

When, from behind that craggy steep till then The horizon’s bound, a huge peak, black and huge, As if with voluntary power instinct,Upreared its head. I struck and struck again, 380And growing still in stature the grim shape

Towered up between me and the stars, and still, For so it seemed, with purpose of its own And measured motion like a living thing, Strode after me. With trembling oars I turned, 385And through the silent water stole my way

Back to the covert of the willow tree; There in her mooring-place I left my bark, – And through the meadows homeward went, in grave And serious mood; but after I had seen

390That spectacle, for many days, my brain

Worked with a dim and undetermined sense Of unknown modes of being; o’er my thoughts There hung a darkness, call it solitude Or blank desertion. No familiar shapes

395Remained, no pleasant images of trees,

Of sea or sky, no colours of green fields; But huge and mighty forms, that do not live Like living men, moved slowly through the mind 400By day, and were a trouble to my dreams.

Page 87: English literature - The Romantic period

Structure: There are three main sections in the extract .

In the first section the tone is light and carefree. The scene is bucolic and the poet employs

pretty, pastoral imagery

In the second section , there is a volta, or distinct change in mood. The tone becomes darker and more fearful

In the final section, the narrator reflects on how the experience

has changed him

Page 88: English literature - The Romantic period

themes