1 / 23

The Romantic Hero

The Romantic Hero. 5 “I’s” of Romanticism. Imagination Intuition Innocence Inner Experience Inspiration. Nationalism . Sense of cultural and political unity Brothers Grimm (1812-1815) Good and Bad aspects. Thomas Carlyle. 1795-1881 On Heroes and Hero Worship (1841)

beaumont
Télécharger la présentation

The Romantic Hero

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Romantic Hero

  2. 5 “I’s” of Romanticism • Imagination • Intuition • Innocence • Inner Experience • Inspiration

  3. Nationalism • Sense of cultural and political unity • Brothers Grimm (1812-1815) • Good and Bad aspects

  4. Thomas Carlyle • 1795-1881 • On Heroes and Hero Worship (1841) • Starts the scholarly concept of the Romantic hero.

  5. Literature’s Affect • Novel & increase in literacy • Popularity in own time • Tradition of realism • Inspiration from various sources

  6. Sir Walter Scott • 1771-1832 • Scottish native • Tolerance • Ivanhoe (1819) • Rob Roy (1817)

  7. Alexandre Dumas • 1802-1870 • Action packed life • The Count of Monte Cristo (1844-5) • The Three Musketeers (1844)

  8. Victor Hugo • 1802-1885 • Rich lyrical style • Romantic style with a social conscience • Le Miserables (1862)

  9. Charles Dickens • 1812-1870 • Popular in lifetime and popular today • Campaigner against social injustice

  10. Romantic Heroes in America

  11. Nathaniel Hawthorne • 1804-1864 • Explores hidden motivations in his characters • The Scarlet Letter (1850)

  12. Herman Melville • 1819-1891 • International recognition for Moby Dick (1851) • Moral strength verse Evil

  13. Real Life Romantic Heroes • Big ego • Experience life fully • Non conformists • Extraordinary Achievements • Die young

  14. Shaka • 1787-1828 • Warrior and King • Military Changes • Conservationist

  15. Simon Bolivar • 1783-1830 • South American general • Wrote the constitution for Bolivia

  16. Napoleon • 1769-1821 • First Romantic Hero from Europe and First Dictator from Europe • Ended French Revolution

  17. Promethean Hero • Story of Prometheus • Champion of liberty and suffering of humanity • Poets embrace this figure

  18. Lord Byron, George Gordon • 1788-1824 • Dedicated to pleasures of the senses • Aided Greeks • Bouts of creativity and passion • Byronic hero

  19. Alexander Pushkin • 1799-1837 • Russian Nationalist • Biography • “Byron of Russia”

  20. Frederick Douglas • 1817-1895 • Leading anti-slavery spokesperson • Escaped from slavery to become an advocate • “It was slavery I hated . . . Feeding and clothing me could not atone for taking my Liberty away”

  21. Harriet Beecher Stowe • 1811-1896 • Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1850) • Her description of slavery ignited conversation

  22. Sojourner Truth • 1797-1883 • Born as Isabella Baumfree • Feminist and abolitionist

  23. Turner Rebellion • 1828 • Nat Turner • Visions & a “confession”

More Related