Romanticism & Transcendentalism: Shifting the Focus to the Individual American Literature 1800 – 1860 Romanticism & Transcendentalism: Shifting the Focus to the Individual
American Romanticism 1800-1860 The Industrial Revolution brought economic growth to the United Sates, and it transformed American society. Hundreds of new factories were built Expansion of roads and canals were built The railroad and the steamboat were invented
Industrial Revolution This Revolution created a division between the North and South, The North was run by factories The South was run by farms This division later caused the Civil War.
Roots of Romanticism A movement in art and thought that dominated Europe and the U.S. throughout the 1800s Romantic writers valued imagination and feeling over intellect and reason. Some went bright and cheery, life full of goodness and possibility (Transcendentalism) While others went dark and gloomy, life full of evil and insanity (gothic, brooding literature)
You could see it in the art too Thomas Cole: The Connecticut River
Thomas Cole—Ruined Tower
Thomas Cole--The Titans’ Goblet
But remember, the Europeans started this movement before we did… John Henry Fuseli (German)—The Nightmare
Caspar David Friedrich (German)—The Wanderer Above the Sea of Fog
My favorite! JMW Turner—Rain Steam and Speed The Great Western Railway
Transcendentalism Believed that intuition is a valuable guide Truth is in nature Rejected organized religion Viewed individual conscience as superior to law
Transcendentalism Kantian Philosophy—the transcending, or going beyond empiricism (scientific knowledge) and ascertaining a priori, the fundamental principles of human knowledge.
They were: Well-educated, trying to create a uniquely American body of literature (wanted to achieve literary independence) Mostly New Englanders (Boston, mostly) A generation struggling to define spirituality and religion
Transcendentalists Became involved in social reform Anti-slavery Women’s rights Believed that at the level of the human soul, all people had access to divine inspiration and sought and loved freedom and knowledge and truth
Ralph Waldo Emerson’s 1836 essay, “Nature” is considered the moment transcendentalism became a major cultural movement.
The spiritual connection among all living things Optimism Civil Disobedience Oversoul: The spiritual connection among all living things Optimism Nature Simplicity Individuality Intuition Self-Reliance Transcendentalism
Transcendentalists Ralph Waldo Emerson is considered the father of Transcendentalism; however, Henry David Thoreau also made a huge contribution to it. Others: Margaret Fuller, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Walt Whitman.
Transcendentalists Believed that a new era of American life was at hand Criticized society for unthinking conformity Urged that each individual find, in Emerson's words, “an original relation to the universe” (O, 3) From The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Modern Transcendentalist: Chris McCandless College graduate Eschewed all of his savings and personal belongings Wanted to survive off of as little as possible Cherished the beauty and fragility of nature
Impact of Transcendentalism Today Transcendentalists’ Impact: 1960s Civil Rights: MLK continually promoted peaceful resistance to unjust authority: civil disobedience. This is a value that finds its roots in Thoreau’s essay “Civil Disobedience” National Parks: John Muir (as WI man!) was influenced by the Transcendental philosophers of his time, deciding to explore the natural wildlife of our country. His writings later influenced President Teddy Roosevelt in his decision to establish the National Park system. So, if you’ve been to a Nation Park, you should thank the Transcendentalists Other writers/artists/thinkers influenced by the Transcendentalists Walt Whitman (poet, Leaves of Grass) Louisa May Alcott (Little Women) John Muir (famous naturalist and nature writer) John Burroughs (famous naturalist and nature writer) Robert Frost (poet, “Two roads diverged in a yellow wood…”) Wallace Stevens (modernist poet) The Indigo Girls Eddie Vedder, Pearl Jam Movie, Into the Wild President Theodore Roosevelt Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Mahatma Gandhi