Romanticism
Romanticism
Romanticism
ROMANTICISM
Literature in Romanticism.
Romanticism proper was preceded by several related developments from the mid-18th
century on that can be termed Pre-Romanticism. Among such trends was a new
appreciation of the medieval romance, from which the Romantic movement derives its
name. The romance was a tale or ballad of chivalric adventure whose emphasis on
individual heroism and on the exotic and the mysterious was in clear contrast to the
elegant formality and artificiality of prevailing Classical forms of literature, such as the
French Neoclassical tragedy or the English heroic couplet in poetry. This new interest in
relatively unsophisticated but overtly emotional literary expressions of the past was to
be a dominant note in Romanticism.
Romanticism in English Literature began in the 1790s with the publication of the Lyrical
Ballad of William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Wordsworth’s “Preface” to
the second edition (1800) of Lyrical Ballads, in which he described poetry as “the
spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings,” became the manifesto of the English
Romantic movement in poetry. William Blake was the third principal poet of the
movement’s early phase in England. The first phase of the Romantic movement
in Germany was marked by innovations in both content and literary style and by a
preoccupation with the mystical, the subconscious, and the supernatural. A wealth of
talents, including Friedreich Holdrin, the early Johann Wolfgang, Jean
Paul, Novalis, Ludwig Tieck, August Wilhelm and Friedrich Von, Wilhelm Hendrich,
and Friedrich Schelling, belong to this first phase.
Many Romantic ideals were first articulated by German thinkers in the Sturm and
Drang movement, which elevated intuition and emotion above Enlightenment
rationalism. The events and ideologies of the French Revolution were also direct
influences on the movement; many early Romantics throughout Europe sympathized
with the ideals and achievements of French revolutionaries. Romanticism lionized the
achievements of "heroic" individuals – especially artists, who began to be represented as
cultural leaders (one Romantic luminary, Percy Bysshe Shelley, described poets as the
"unacknowledged legislators of the world" in his "Defence of Poetry"). Romanticism also
prioritized the artist's unique, individual imagination above the strictures of classical
form. In the second half of the 19th century, Realism emerged as a response to
Romanticism, and was in some ways a reaction against it. Romanticism suffered an
overall decline during this period, as it was overshadowed by new cultural, social, and
political movements, many of them hostile to the perceived illusions and preoccupations
of the Romantics. However, it has had a lasting impact on Western civilization, and
many "Romantic", "neo-Romantic", and "post-Romantic" artists and thinkers created
their most enduring works after the end of the Romantic Era.