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Mystics, Wanderers, and a Trip Down the Mississippi. 4 October 2012. The tiger usually (A) hunts by night and feeds (B) on a variety of animals , but it (C) prefers fairly large prey such as (D) deer and wild pigs . No error (E). Activator.
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Mystics, Wanderers, and a Trip Down the Mississippi 4October 2012
The tiger usually (A) hunts by night and feeds (B) on a variety of animals, but it(C) prefers fairly large prey such as(D) deer and wild pigs. No error (E)
Activator List three to fivethings that you learned during “The Amazing Race”.
Activating Strategy Record a response to each of the following pictures.
Activating Strategy 1. List at least two emotions that each painting makes you feel. 2. Which picture did you like best? Why?
Remember… (timeline) pre-Columbus - 1840
Remember… (timeline) 1620-1776
I. Revolutionary Period and Nationalism (timeline) 1750-1815
I. Revolutionary Period and Nationalism A. Revolutionary Period – when the American colonies joined together to break free from the British government
I. Revolutionary Period and Nationalism A. Revolutionary Period – when the American colonies joined together to break free from the British government *formed the United States of America
I. Revolutionary Period and Nationalism B. Nationalism – patriotism, loyalty to one’s country
I. Revolutionary Period and Nationalism B. Nationalism – patriotism, loyalty to one’s country *after the Revolutionary War, people began to be proud of being from the U.S.A. and focused on what it meant to be an American
I. Revolutionary Period and Nationalism Major authors: Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Paine
I. Revolutionary Period and Nationalism REVIEW List three points about this time period WITHOUT looking at your notes.
II. Romanticism (timeline) 1800-1840
II. Romanticism A. Age of Enlightenment: in the 1700s, science advanced very quickly and people began to believe that science/reason were more important than faith/religion vs.
II. Romanticism A. Age of Enlightenment: in the 1700s, science advanced very quickly and people began to believe that science/reason were more important than faith/religion *results: dictionaries, Industrial Revolution, population growth
II. Romanticism B. Romanticists – rejected these ideas
II. Romanticism B. Romanticists – rejected these ideas * believed that feelings were more important than reasonor logic vs.
II. Romanticism B. Romanticists – rejected these ideas * believed that feelings were more important than reasonor logic * valued individualism, nature, imagination, creativity, and emotions
II. Romanticism B. Romanticists – rejected these ideas * valued individualism, nature, imagination, creativity, and emotions * believed that studying nature led to an authentic understanding of truth and beauty
II. Romanticism B. Romanticists – rejected these ideas * city vs. countryside - city: poor morals and corruption, rational thought
II. Romanticism B. Romanticists – rejected these ideas * city vs. countryside - city: poor morals and corruption, rational thought - countryside: moral clarity, imagination
Romanticism Major authors: Herman Melville (Moby-Dick), Washington Irving (“The Legend of Sleepy Hollow”, “Rip Van Winkle”)
Romanticism Review – Love/Hate Think about the views of the Romanticists. List two things that they agreedand two that they disagreed with. Two each:
III. Transcendentalism (timeline) 1830s-1850
III. Transcendentalism A. Creation of Transcendentalism * Ralph Waldo Emerson * New England
III. Transcendentalism B. Beliefs * to discover the truth about God, nature, yourself, and everything else, you must listen to your intuition
III. Transcendentalism B. Beliefs * to discover the truth about God, nature, yourself, and everything else, you must listen to your intuition - intuition=“listen to your heart”
III. Transcendentalism B. Beliefs * all of the natural world was a reflection of a Divine Soul (God)
III. Transcendentalism B. Beliefs * all of the natural world was a reflection of a Divine Soul (God) - nature was the gateway to the Divine Soul
III. Transcendentalism B. Beliefs * all of the natural world was a reflection of a Divine Soul (God) - nature was the gateway to the Divine Soul - God is good, death is a part of life, optimistic
III. Transcendentalism B. Beliefs * relying on yourself and being anindividual were the most important ways to live
III. Transcendentalism B. Beliefs * relying on yourself and being anindividual were the most important ways to live - authority, society’s rules, and rational/scientific thought only kept people from being themselves
III. Transcendentalism Major authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson (“Self-Reliance”), Henry David Thoreau (“Walden”, “Civil Disobedience”)
IV. Realism (timeline) 1850-1900
IV. Realism - 1850: Fugitive Slave Act
IV. Realism (timeline) - 1850: Fugitive Slave Act - Women’s Rights Movement: Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Candy Stanton
IV. Realism - 1859: Charles Darwin published “On the Origin of Species” - theory of evolution, biology became the focus of science
IV. Realism - 1861-1865: U.S. Civil War
IV. Realism - 1850: U.S. population is 23 million
IV. Realism - 1850: U.S. population is 23 million - 1900: population is 76 million
IV. Realism A. Definition of Realism – writers began to write about all of these issues that were affecting their country and their lives
IV. Realism A. Definition of Realism – writers began to write about all of these issues that were affecting their country and their lives - issues: evolution(and developments in science), industrial development, civil war, racism, enormous cities, corrupt politicians, etc.
IV. Realism B. Goals of Realism * represent the everyday world like it really is
IV. Realism B. Goals of Realism * represent the everyday world like it really is * show ordinary people
IV. Realism B. Goals of Realism * represent the everyday world like it really is * show ordinary people * interested in science, psychology, and social issues