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Published bySamson Holland Modified over 8 years ago
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Naturalism In literature …extending the tradition of Realism…
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Definition: A movement that dissected human instincts and behavior and examined the social environment that “conditioned” people to turn out as they did. Works that seek to replicate (copy) a “believable everyday reality.” Naturalist writers believed that human behavior is determined by forces beyond the individual’s power, and especially by biology and the environment.
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Naturalists looked at human life as a grim and losing battle.
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Components of Naturalist works Characters in these stories often have only limited choices and motivations. Humans are totally and completely subject to the natural laws of the universe. Humans are like animals; we live by instinct and are unable to control our own destiny. Writers sought to explain human behavior through scientific reasoning (Darwin).
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Naturalist writers to know Jack London: “To Build a Fire,” The Call of the Wild Stephen Crane: The Red Badge of Courage Guy de Maupaussant: “The Necklace” Ambrose Bierce: “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” Charlotte Perkins Gilman “The Yellow Wallpaper”
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Naturalism in Art VVVVisual artists who were associated with Naturalism chose themes from life, showing subjects unposed and not idealized. SSSSome artists chose to paint outdoors in order to have a more “realistic” experience, and used peasants and tradespeople as their subjects.
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This style of art eventually became Impressionism, and from that era we get such great artists as:
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Claude Monet
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Pierre Auguste Renoir
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Edouard Manet
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So to Review… Naturalism is: a more deliberate kind of realism in novels, stories and plays, usually involving the view of human beings as passive victims of natural forces and the social environment.
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