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LITR 5535 American Romanticism Monday 28 August: Columbus, N 25-29; Selections from Genesis (handout); John Smith, N 42-53. Mary Rowlandson, N 135-152. Thomas Jefferson, N 334-342.
Monday 28 August: Columbus, N 25-29; Selections from Genesis (handout); John Smith, N 42-53. Mary Rowlandson, N 135-152. Thomas Jefferson, N 334-342. selection reader / discussion leader: Devon Kitch poetry: Anne Bradstreet, “To my Dear and Loving Husband,” N 125. poetry reader / discussion leader: Diane Palmer class format Awkward but flexible format with moveable tables and chairs: web projector and instructor make for traditional, hierarchical classroom: eyes to the front! implications: Authority, true knowledge flows from teacher to students but another tradition: graduate seminars are at least partly organized so that students face each other, instructor sits. implications: more equality, testing your work relative to your peers, not just in relation to authority figure; increasing professionalism (you may be working together . . . ); student-teacher as master-apprentice, mentor-trainee . . . . We'll move back and forth between two classroom organizations. Unfortunate default will be to face forward, esp. b/c students will be using web projector at least sometimes Burden: students who sit up front must be prepared to turn around, face students in back. Students in middle spread out, be flexible. Students in back: already cool, stay cool Input welcome--
Presentation schedule availability on course webpage
review names
If a problem rises, try to work something out with another student to change assignments, then notify instructor. Main purpose of presentations is not for you to do a lecture or otherwise show mastery but to practice seminar-style discussion and leadership. review "Romanticism" (obj. 1) > "American" (obj. 2) Last week, familiar review of "Romanticism" First, it's a big, complicated concept, full of contradictions. A movement, a style . . . Can't be easily or quickly defined, but can be described and defended
Concept is still alive in our language and culture, but has become more specific than historical and academic usage Popular uses: "How romantic!" "S/he's a romantic." "I read a lot of romances--you know, love stories." Most of us know that "Romanticism" or "the romance narrative" in a classroom like ours are bigger concepts than these usages, but important not to reject these usages--they still connect to Romanticism and "the romance narrative" in some way Course
Objectives:
Objective 1: Literary Categories of RomanticismObjective
1a. Romantic Spirit or
Ideology · To identify and criticize ideas and attitudes associated with Romanticism, such as desire and loss, rebellion, nostalgia, idealism, the gothic, the sublime, the individual in nature or separate from the masses. · The Romantic impulse may be as simple as a desire for anything besides “the here and now”—or “reality”; thus the quest or journey of the romance narrative involves crossing physical borders or transgressing social or psychological boundaries in order to attain or regain some transcendent goal or dream. · A Romantic hero or heroine may appear empty or innocent of anything except readiness or desire to change or self-invent. Objective
1b. The Romantic Period · To observe Romanticism’s concentration in the late 18th through the 19th centuries and its co-emergence with the rise of the middle class, the city, industrial capitalism, consumer culture, and the nation-state. · To observe predictive elements in “pre-Romantic” writings from earlier periods such as “The Seventeenth Century” and the "Age of Reason." · To speculate on residual elements in “post-Romantic” writings from later periods incl. “Realism and Local Color,” "Modernism," and “Postmodernism.” Objective
1c: Romantic Genres To describe & evaluate leading literary genres of Romanticism: ·
the romance narrative
or novel (journey from repression to transcendence) · the gothic novel or style (haunted physical and mental spaces, the shadow of death or decay; dark and light in physical and moral terms; film noir)
Literature as style, form > literature as history, historicism Europe: late 18th, early 19th century music: Beethoven, Chopin, Wagner poetry: Goethe, Hugo, Wordsworth the novel: the Brontes, Walter Scott, Hugo Standard dates of English Romanticism: 1789-1832 Standard dates of American Romanticism mid-19th century; 1820-1860 "American Renaissance" Generation's lag: implication that America inherits Romanticism from European model at least partly true Often overlooked: how much Americans are reading European books, and Europeans are increasingly reading American books (beginning with Irving and Cooper) Romanticism as transatlantic phenomenon But since this is American Romanticism, Can we get beyond American simply inheriting Romanticism from Europe? Don't go too far . . . obviously concepts like "the Gothic" started in Europe and were redeveloped in America, but . . . > How much is America always already Romantic?
Arrangement of course: First two classes: pre-Romantic writers--1400s to early 1800s Middle of semester: Romanticism: Cooper, Emerson, Douglass, Poe . . . End of semester: post-Romantic writers: late 19c Realism (James, Twain); early 20c Modernism (Fitzgerald, Harlem Renaissance)
This week and Sept. 11: pre-Romantic writers This week's writers all visitors or immigrants from Europe Romanticism has roots in medieval Europe, Especially the Romance derives from the medieval romances such as the quest for the Holy Grail Also some biblical or Judeochristian patterns that correspond to romance (Ancient Jews as wandering people: exile from Eden > bound for Promised Land; self-invention or transformation as conversion) Unique contributions by American literature to world literature Captivity narrative, + slave narrative Today: two captivity narratives: Rowlandson and Smith Romance narrative potentially implicit in both the captivity narrative and the slave narrative Repression>release Captivity > liberation, redemption romance narrative is space between these: struggle, quest, journey
Mary Rowlandson, N 135-152. How is this "captivity narrative" (i. e., a white settler taken hostage by the Indians) like and unlike a romance? (Larger purpose of Rowlandson text: Cooper's Last of the Mohicans is a captivity narrative) opening page: how would Indians be described today?
contrast Romance submission realistic details myth > history (reverse history > myth < classical > rom ptgs) wilderness gothic cf. Bradford 91 Mather the devil’s territories High literacy of Puritan women 135 King Philip's War 135 "Indian captivities" 136 Now is the dreadful hour come, that I have often heard of . . . but now my eys see it 137 [proto-gothic] Christians lying in their blood, company of hell-hounds, roaring 138 my mind changed 138 black creatures in the night 138 a lively resemblance of hell 138 vast and desolate wilderness [+ sublime?] 140 [borders of wilderness / borders of consciousness (set up “border romance”)] 141 a Bible 145 cf. Daniel 146 MR’s tendency to read Indians as myth, and our own such tendency 148 granting of desire = end of story, interest 151 I can remember . . . 151 Before I knew what affliction meant, I was ready sometimes to wish for it romance as separation, not union (till end, happily ever after) desire cf Mohicans--what gets left out of wilderness--pain, toothache, misery but id with Indians plus tested by wilderness experience John Smith, N 42-53. Domestic / wilderness romance as 2 traditions in American novel what's romantic? class rise--climbing ladder captivity and escape exotic peoples love of Pocahontas--saving (oneself?) and getting saved natural abundance--extremes 42 corporate, "company" compromise of government and individual 43 individual initiative and commitment farmer's son & shopkeeper's apprentice slave, murdered master survivor temper and self-reliance always at epicenter of political earthquakes 43 harmless adoption ceremony 44 [cf. Smith & Cooper, writing about America from Europe; distance as romanticism; log ago & far away]--"part of imagination" 45 casual reference to god 46 [division of labor] 46 industrial x natural
trade-products [if Romanticism loves nature, key to romanticization of Indian] 48 [Rambo scene] 48 [captivity: why so less affecting than Rowlandson? Single man; cf. Sam Houston) 48 [techno-shock, but geocentric Europeans] 50 hell, devils [ > gothic] 51 as if he had been a monster 51 [rescue scene] [continuing romanticization, myth-making; change of Smith's age in movie, cf. Change of Hawkeye's age in movies of Mohicans] Look ahead from Smith: gender and worldview: Pocahontas and bounty and mercy; pioneers as all-male conquest, invasive force --conflicting attitudes toward land: spontaneously bountiful or needs to be developed --captivity narrative (plus deliverance 16): Rowlandson, LOM enlargement of history into myth (Pocahontas) survivor as fittest, blest romanticism: traveler in exotic places, secret papers survival of fittest x commonwealth technological superiority -- muskets, compass novel = roman Rowlandson published 1682 at this time, only a few novels in existence, not yet widespread, so can't be considered to exist captivity narratives written in hundreds, over 30 known editions of Rowlandson's 1678-84 Bunyan, Pilgrim's Progress 1719 Defoe, Robinson Crusoe 1740 Richardson, Pamela, or Virtue Reconsidered as romance narrative read with same pleasure as novel, fills gap that novel or romance will later fill desire/quest, goal, journey, crossing borders/boundaries, changes character other captivity narratives Rowlandson, 135 "Indian captivities" original American narratives: captivity and slave painful for those who undergo them, but tests and changes people + knowledge of other cultures prototypes--Babylonian captivity
Last of the Mohicans (1826) Cynthia Parker (mother of Quannah Parker of Comanche) Sam Houston Daniel Boone hostages, POWs Patti Hearst The Searchers Little Big Man (1970) Dances with Wolves (?; 1990?) Ransom The Missing (2003)
The Searchers was partly based on story of Cynthia Parker?
assignments > midterm preview Monday 4 September: Labor Day Holiday—no class meeting Monday 11 September: Jonathan Edwards, N 182-194, 207-219; Susanna Rowson, Charlotte: A Tale of Truth (handout); Washington Irving, N 446-460 ("Rip Van Winkle"), "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" (handout). selection reader / discussion leader: Andrew Coleman (Edwards)
Edwards: "Personal Narrative" (182-194): spiritual romance? consider how Edwards anticipates Emerson, Romantic attitudes toward nature. From
Northrop Frye, Anatomy of Criticism.
Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1957.
In the form in which we possess it, most of [European fiction] has
already moved into the category of romance.
Romance divides into two main forms: a secular form dealing with
chivalry and knight-errantry, and a religious form devoted to legends of saints.
Both lean heavily on miraculous violations of natural law for their
interest as stories. (34) Edwards, "Sinners in the hands of an Angry God" (just read opening and closing pages): prototypes of gothic and sublime?
Susanna Rowson, Charlotte: A Tale of Truth (handout); 1st American bestseller--"seduction novel" "romance" as woman's novel, sentimental novel, tearjerker, loss and reconstruction of family (cf. Rowlandson) selections--starts in England, ends in America issues of honor, feeling
Washington Irving, N 446-460 ("Rip Van Winkle"), "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" (handout). Irving poised between Age of Reason and Romanticism Age of Reason: satire, humor, detachment Romanticism: romance narrative hero not as leader of society but eccentric, marginalized, outsider gothic and sublime esp. relocation of gothic to outdoor environment
Monday 18 September: James Fenimore Cooper, N 460-469. Cooper, The Last of the Mohicans, through ch. 11 (through p. 110 Penguin edition); Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain), N 1432-1440 (“Fenimore Cooper’s Literary Offences”); handout: D. H. Lawrence on Cooper's Leatherstocking novels. selection reader / discussion leader: Chris Wissel poetry: Cathy Song, "Heaven," N 2847 poetry reader / discussion leader: Nguyen Le web highlight (midterms): Leigh Ann Moore Monday 25 September: “The Iroquois Creation Story,” N 17-21; “The Cherokee Memorials,” N 571-581; William Apess, N 476-482. Complete The Last of the Mohicans. selection reader / discussion leader: Gordon Lewis (“Iroquois Creation Story”) poetry: Joy Harjo, "Call It Fear," N 2834-5 poetry reader / discussion leader: Dee Ann Bongiovanni Monday 2 October: Take-home midterm exam due within 72 hours of class meeting. Edgar Allan Poe, N 694-696, 704-727 (“Ligeia” & “Fall of the House of Usher”); William Faulkner, “N 2160-66. selection reader / discussion leader: Bonnie Napoli poetry: Poe, "Anabelle Lee," N 2671 poetry reader / discussion leader: Corey Porter
Midterm > model assignments
Instructor's questions for readings: Columbus: How do Columbus's letters trace a romance narrative? How are Romanticism and America combined from the first European explorers? How does "Reality" intrude? Columbus and Genesis: How does Columbus recreate the Genesis story? (both in text and in popular-historical attitudes toward "discovery of America") Mary Rowlandson: How is this "captivity narrative" (i. e., a white settler taken hostage by the Indians) like and unlike a romance? (Larger purpose of Rowlandson text: Cooper's Last of the Mohicans is a captivity narrative) Jefferson pp 334-42 (intro and Declaration of Independence) Compare to Columbus and Genesis as an "origins story" or "creation myth" What
is Romantic about the Declaration of Independence? Columbus, N 25-29; Selections from Genesis (handout) Instructor's questions: How do Columbus's letters trace a romance narrative? How are Romanticism and America combined from the first European explorers? Columbus and Genesis: How does Columbus recreate the Genesis story? (both in text and in popular-historical attitudes toward "discovery of America")
Narrative of desire / loss (Poe, Wolfe, Fitzgerald), + Last of the Mohicans, "Rip Van Winkle" (comic form) Appears so often that, despite content, have to conclude that there's some kind of pleasure in at least reading such a story, even though going through it oneself might be painful By the end of the semester we'll try to evaluate the aesthetics of this narrative, for now simply observe its existence and a kind of historical basis for it that you can see in Columbus and Rip Van Winkle Americans always start out in one world and end in another Romance quest? As dangerous as promising Most time, wouldn't take journey if not hopeful Introduction 25 a brief moment of wonder followed by a long series of disasters and disenchantments 25 the lushness of nature there made him believe himself near Paradise, but that illusion vanished 26 great victory 26 gave the name San Salvador (pre-existing story of sin & redemption) [biblical pattern of captivity and redemption] 26 so to each one I gave a new name "Adamic" American as new Adam (+-Eve) in garden-paradise 26 people without number, but nothing of importance 26 very fertile to a limitless degree 27 thousand kinds and tall 27 never lose their foliage 27 nightingale [factual error > historical error > myth] from Letter to Ferdinand and Isabella Regarding the Fourth Voyage (1503) 27 Of [these] lands, I
never think without weeping 27 Exhausted state 28 now all . . . seek permission to make discoveries 28 I was made a
prisoner 28 weep for me Material opportunity / spiritual or moral decline
Columbus and Genesis: How does Columbus recreate the Genesis story? (both in text and in popular-historical attitudes toward "discovery of America") Void, formless > word, order Paradise > Fall Blessed oneness with God and Nature, change of state of consciousness (Tree of Knowledge) Innocence > Sin [ > future Redemption?] Ignorance > Knowledge [> "fortunate fall?"] Compare to Club Med, etc.
Thomas Jefferson, N 334-342. Compare to Columbus and Genesis as an "origins story" or "creation myth" What
is Romantic about the Declaration of Independence?
How may the Declaration be interpreted as a romance narrative (not only in its text but across American history)? How is the "American Dream" story embedded in the Declaration? Who's left out? summary Columbus: Paradise past / present imperfect / future Smith: Wilderness romance / captivity self-made man on the frontier Bradstreet: Domestic romance Rowlandson: Wilderness romance / realism woman in frontier romance: victim, or opportunity for equality?
Tendency to interpret all experience in terms of pre-existing narrative Can others use that narrative?
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