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American Realism (1865-1910)
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American Realism (1865-1910). Romanticism vs. Realism Life as we Imagine it Life as it Really IS.

Dec 17, 2015

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Arron Mason
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Page 1: American Realism (1865-1910). Romanticism vs. Realism Life as we Imagine it Life as it Really IS.

American Realism (1865-1910)

Page 2: American Realism (1865-1910). Romanticism vs. Realism Life as we Imagine it Life as it Really IS.

Romanticism vs. Realism

Life as we Imagine it Life as it Really IS

Page 3: American Realism (1865-1910). Romanticism vs. Realism Life as we Imagine it Life as it Really IS.

“Realism is nothing more, nothing less, than the truthful treatment of material.”

-William Dean Howells (author)

•Begins in Europe (France)•In U.S., ushered in by Civil War and social change•Realists respond to ½ century of Romanticism, which they saw as tedious, irrelevant, outdated

Page 4: American Realism (1865-1910). Romanticism vs. Realism Life as we Imagine it Life as it Really IS.

For Realists, “The redemption of the individual lay within the social world.” (Howells)

Realists saw a need to confront social issues through their writing, art, and

photography.

Page 5: American Realism (1865-1910). Romanticism vs. Realism Life as we Imagine it Life as it Really IS.

Social Factors Which Contributed to the Onset of Realism

• Increasing rates of democracy and literacy• Rapid growth in industrialization and urbanization• Expanding population, especially immigrants• Origins of a “middle class”…increasing class

awareness• Renewed faith in scientific discovery & progress– Ex. Growing popularity of the camera……

Page 6: American Realism (1865-1910). Romanticism vs. Realism Life as we Imagine it Life as it Really IS.

Real images that showed the Real world…un-romanticized

Page 7: American Realism (1865-1910). Romanticism vs. Realism Life as we Imagine it Life as it Really IS.

Literary Characteristics of Realism

A. Character is more important than plot• faced with complex ethical choices• life lacks symmetry and plot, so should fiction• rounded, dynamic, believable characters

Page 8: American Realism (1865-1910). Romanticism vs. Realism Life as we Imagine it Life as it Really IS.

B. Importance of class, gender, ethnicity

• Examines the plight of lower, socially deprived classes in America

• Reflects changing face of America

• In America, the novel becomes a staple of the educated middle class

Page 9: American Realism (1865-1910). Romanticism vs. Realism Life as we Imagine it Life as it Really IS.

C. Events are Believable

• Focus on the ordinary…yet within the ordinary the extraordinary can happen

• Nothing supernatural or “beyond belief”

• An aversion to Emersonian idealism

Page 10: American Realism (1865-1910). Romanticism vs. Realism Life as we Imagine it Life as it Really IS.

D. Diction is natural vernacular

• Extensive use of dialogue and dialect…the way people really talk

• Regional (or “local color”) writers sought to preserve regional ways and customs amidst social change…esp. language and geography

• Walt Whitman’s poetry celebrated the common man and his daily language

Page 11: American Realism (1865-1910). Romanticism vs. Realism Life as we Imagine it Life as it Really IS.

E. Change in Author “Voice”

• More reliance on first person narrative-Author often removes himself from the story

• Decrease in allegory and slow-paced narrative; still a strong reliance on symbolism

• Purpose of writing is not merely to entertain, but to instruct as well: Social Purpose

Page 12: American Realism (1865-1910). Romanticism vs. Realism Life as we Imagine it Life as it Really IS.

Various Aspects of Realism

• Local Colorists: Mark Twain; Bret Harte

• Social Critics: William Dean Howells; Mark Twain

• Muckrakers: Upton Sinclair; Jacob Riis (photo.)

• New Voices: Paul Laurence Dunbar; Kate Chopin

• Naturalists: Jack London; Stephen Crane; Kate Chopin

Page 13: American Realism (1865-1910). Romanticism vs. Realism Life as we Imagine it Life as it Really IS.

Like Romanticism, Realism continues to influence literature and the arts…