Romanticism Flashcards
Timeline
Start: 1780 - shifts within English political discouse; sense of turmoil caused by the French Revolution
End: Reform Bill 1832
1776: American Declaration of Independence
1789: French Revolution
1792-1802: Revolutionary Wars → Britain in war with France
1803-15: Napoleonic Wars
Emergent class struggle
- Luddites (group): attacked and destroyed industrial machinery that were intended to replace human labour → class-struggle between working-class and ruling-class
- “Peterloo Massacre” 1819: peaceful mass demonstration for parliamentary reform; people killed & injured
- industrial revolution → social and economic unrest among the labouring classes who are living in abominable conditions in industrial areas → working classes had no political rights → economic distress and poverty widespread → social unrest → reaction against:
-
Reform Bill 1832: lower middle class was given the right to vote → eased the tension by expanding
suffrage; only included men
The Revolution Controversy - Pamphlets
- pamphlets written in response to the key political events
- French revolution created deep division between radical supporters and conservative opponents → Revolution Controversy polarised political debate along conservative and radical lines and influenced political thinking
- Edmund Burke, Thomas Paine, Mary Wollstonecraft
Edmund Burke
- founder of modern British Conservatism
- A philosophical inquiry into the origins of our ideas of the sublime and beautiful (1757)
Thomas Paine
Common Sense (1775): most widely distributed pamphlet of the American Revolution → took side with the Americans → independence was an obvious and necessary step
Mary Wollstonecraft
- A Vindication of the Rights of Woman → argues that true equality and liberty can only be obtained if the ideals of the French Revolution also applied to women
- main focus: reform of female education → enable women to be treated as rational rather than merely beautiful
Poetry
- The “Big Six”: Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge; Byron, Bysshe Shelley, Keats
- “The Greater Romantic Lyric ”Cyclical form (from the particular (= given concrete situation) to the general back to the particular)
Wordsworth & Coleridge. Lyrical Ballads
- collection of poetry synonymous with a certain form of Romanticism
- title: paradox; lyrical = written poetry; ballads = oral tradition
- return to nature: low & rustic life; situation from common life
- revolt against neo-classicism: poetic diction; sensibility
Comparison
- yearning for the past; romanticised Middle Ages
- focus on idyllic nature, rural life, common people
- interest in occult and supernatural elements
- themes of tragic love, death in the name of love, sexuality common subject
= emotion over thought;
nature over industrialisation;
spiritualism over science;
rusticity over wealth;
freedom over authority