Agomei
Ominide
4 min. di lettura
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Concetti Chiave

  • The "Age of Revolution" marked a time of societal change with George III attempting to manage public debt through new taxes, which faced opposition in American colonies.
  • This period saw a shift from Enlightenment ideals to Romanticism, emphasizing individualism, nature, and emotional expression over rationality and social conventions.
  • The Romantics placed the individual at the center of art, expressing discontent with social and political conditions and valuing personal freedom in poetry.
  • The concept of the sublime in Romanticism highlighted the overwhelming power of nature and the smallness of humans, driven by strong emotions like fear and awe.
  • Poetry was central to the Romantic era, with poets like Wordsworth and Coleridge mediating between man and nature, emphasizing feelings and common life experiences in their works.

Indice

  1. Age of Revolution
  2. The sublime

Age of Revolution

These years are also called ‘’Age of revolution’’ with a changing society on different sides in different ways. George III wanted to reduce the public debt due to ‘’Seven years wars’’, introducing new duties on corn, paper and tea, but there was a fierce opposition in the American colonies and some taxes were repealed but not taxes about tea. Several American colonies wanted to pay taxes approved only by their local govern. He controlled the country surrounding himself with loyal supporters and a prime minister, William Pitt the Younger. He tried to simplify the financial system supporting Adam Smith’s theory, the laissez-faire. Their policy were conservatives at home and abroad and in 1801 the Act of Union joined Ireland to Britain.
It was a period in which new ideas and attitudes of harmony, balance and rationality of the Enlightment were replaced by creative imaginations and strong emotions. Romantic tendences were anticipated by the German literary movement ‘’Sturm and Drung’’, which rebelled against Classicism and started to focus on Individual and nature. Nature offered the poets solitude to develop their romantic ideas, and it was a source of emotions and a real and living thing. It was also a form of language because natural imagery offered the poet a way to contemplate human emotions. In contrast with the enlightment there are other differences like individualism that replace the impersonality or common people that stay away from social conventions, rather than elevated people and their interest in science. The Romantics expressed a negative attitude towards the social and political conditions so they placed the individual at the centre of art and they asserted that poetry should be free from all rules. They had interest in everyday life staying away from the chaos of the city. They exhibited fascination for the mysteries of the past.

The sublime

The source of the sublime were strong emotions like danger or fear, for example the emotions that can give us a vulcano’s eruption. The Sublime have supremacy over the beautiful, frightening and seducing at the same time. It show us how great nature is and how small men are.
POETRY
It was the prevailing genre in the Romantic period because it gives expression to feelings. Poets had to mediate between man and nature, pointing out the evils of society and to give voice to the ideals of freedom. The Romantic imagination was a power in the process of poetic composition and it allows men to understand nature as a system of symbols. Children were like poets because they were endowed with imagination and they were uncorrupted by civilization. Wordsworth and Coleridge were part of the 1st generation of romantic poets, who were known as Lake Poets because they lived together in the district of the Great Lakes in England. In 1798 they published the Lyrical Ballads, the 1st collection of English Romantic poems, but the most important is the second one, published in 1800 because it had a preface, and it was called ‘’The Manifesto’’. It deals with 4 point: Topic, situations of everyday life because with that conditions the passion of the heart were less restraint and were incorporated with nature; Language, really used by man; Poetry, a spontaneous overflow of feelings; Poet, a men with more sensibilty and imagination for expressing what he thinks and feels.

Domande da interrogazione

  1. ¿Qué medidas tomó George III para reducir la deuda pública y cuál fue la reacción en las colonias americanas?
  2. George III introdujo nuevos impuestos sobre el maíz, papel y té para reducir la deuda pública tras la "Guerra de los Siete Años". Hubo una fuerte oposición en las colonias americanas, y algunos impuestos fueron derogados, excepto los del té.

  3. ¿Cómo influyó el movimiento literario alemán "Sturm und Drang" en el Romanticismo?
  4. El "Sturm und Drang" anticipó las tendencias románticas al rebelarse contra el Clasicismo, enfocándose en el individuo y la naturaleza, y promoviendo la imaginación creativa y las emociones fuertes.

  5. ¿Qué papel jugó la naturaleza en la poesía romántica?
  6. La naturaleza ofrecía a los poetas soledad para desarrollar sus ideas románticas, era una fuente de emociones y un lenguaje que permitía contemplar las emociones humanas.

  7. ¿Qué características definieron a la poesía romántica según Wordsworth y Coleridge?
  8. La poesía romántica se definió por situaciones de la vida cotidiana, un lenguaje realmente usado por el hombre, un desbordamiento espontáneo de sentimientos, y el poeta como un hombre con más sensibilidad e imaginación.

  9. ¿Qué es lo sublime y cómo se relaciona con la naturaleza en el Romanticismo?
  10. Lo sublime se origina en emociones fuertes como el peligro o el miedo, mostrando la grandeza de la naturaleza y la pequeñez del hombre, siendo superior a lo bello, aterrador y seductor al mismo tiempo.

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