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Romanticism - Coggle Diagram
Romanticism
Feautures
Exotic
past
The mysterious
Sublime
Importance of childood
Concept of nature of the English poets
Wordsworth
A source of joy (Pantheism)
Coleridge
God's will
Shelley
It's a shelter
Byron
companion to lonliness
Keats
a muse, a source of beauty
The role of the poet
Shelley
a prophet and a titan
Keats
denies his personality to identify with the object (negative capability)
Wordsworth
a teacher that explains the others how to understand their feelings
Coleridge
Idealises in order to recreate
Byron
Not a moral guide
Where?
GERMANY
Sturm und drang (storm and stress)
FRANCE
Méditation Poétiques Lamartine
ITALY
La lettera semiseria
ENGLAND
Lyrical Ballads
Art
Friedrich
Hayez
Delacroix
Blake
Illuminated printing
Who?
ENGLAND
First generation
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
The Rime of the ancient mariner
Christabel
William Wordsworth
The prelude
The Excursion
Preface
humble life
simple language
Poems in two volumes (Daffodils)
William Blake (forerunner)
Songs of Innocence
Second generation
George Byron
Manfred
Child Harold's Pilgrimage
Keats
Ode on a Grecian urn
La Belle Dame sans merci
Percy B Shelley
Ode to the West Wind
Prometheus Unbound
Prose
The novel of manners
Jane Austen
The historical novel
Walter Scott
The Gothic novel
Walpole
Italy
Leopardi
Manzoni
Germany
Madame De Stael
Schiller
France
Chateubriand
Rosseau
Lamartine
Music
Chopin
Strauss
Verdi
Schubert
When?
It starts late 18th century after the most important revolutions of the story that's why it's called period of the three revolutions
The Industrial Revolution
1760-1840
Peterloo Massacre
Mushrooms town
Agricolture Revolution
The American Revolution
1775-1783
People start to fight against tyranny
The French Revolution
1789-1799
Disillusionament
To 1830s
Periodicals
Athenaeum
Il Conciliatore
Comparison with the Enlightment
Enlightment
Reason and judjment Impersonal material Elevated subjects Science and tecnology
Romanticism
Imagination and emotions
Common people and language
Supernatural
Etymology
from the French word "romance" which referred to the languages derived from Latin and their works
17th century for extravagant and unreal tales
18th century to describe the picturesque in the landscape