"American romanticism utopian communities and transcendentalism" Essays and Research Papers

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    Visions of psychological‚ emotional‚ spiritual paralysis and despair run rampant throughout dark romantic literature. Dark Romanticism can be seen as the antithesis of the Romantic ideals that reached their ultimate form in Transcendentalism. Edgar Allen Poe and Nathaniel Hawthorne‚ two dark Romantics‚ were concerned with the human condition and human nature in a way that few other writers of the time period were. Although strikingly different from the Transcendentalists‚ Hawthorne and Poe emphasize

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    Tracy Tameleo Susan Reilly 19th Century American Literature December 12‚ 2008 The nineteenth century gave readers a plethora of literary genius. Perhaps the most recognized literary movement was Transcendentalism. This literary concept was based on a group of new ideas in religion‚ culture‚ and philosophy. Transcendentalism paved the way for many subgenres‚ it’s most significantly opposite; however was the emergence of Dark Romanticism. The Romantics had a tendency to value emotion and

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    Romanticism was an artistic and intellectual movement that originated in the late 1700s in Western Europe. Transcendentalism was a group of new ideas in literature‚ religion‚ culture‚ and philosophy that emerged in the United States of America in the 1800s. Romanticism emerged as a reaction to three important trends in the 1700s. One was the Age of Enlightenment‚ the idea that reason was all important. The Romantics believed that reason could only take you so far. To get a true understanding of

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    Romanticism and Transcendentalism have a relationship that is similar of a mother to a daughter. Certain traits were passed along by the writers but each era differed in their own unique way. The Romanticists believed that certain parts of nature are beautiful‚ such as life‚ but were disgusted by others‚ such as death. They also believed that God may be both a good yet an evil entity. Transcendentalists took the teachings of the Romanticists to the next level. They not only worshiped nature as God

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    The greatest mission of the Transcendentalist Movement was the abolition of slavery. There were many people who worked to end the slavery in so many ways. In Romanticism and Transcendentalism (1800-1860) book‚ one man who stood out was Fredrick Douglass. Fredrick Douglass wanted to fight in a peaceful way. Mr. Fredrick gave speeches‚ and wrote books to convince others to help him fight against slavery. He told others about his life as a slave and why it was wrong to own other people. Only Harriet

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    American Transcendentalism Emerson’s definition of Transcendentalism according to Meg Brulatour is that of an individual pursuit guided by intuition and self-reliance. Emerson believed that Transcendentalists found truth in nature’s ideas and that truth could be seen by a person who was paying attention and was in synch with nature. Direct involvement with nature allows man to use his intuition to experience the natural marvels before him. The idea of the “Oversoul” which Emerson and other Transcendentalists

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    Oneida Utopian Community

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    Oneida Utopian Community The Oneida Community can be considered one of the most successful utopian societies that there has ever been. “The Oneida Community‚ in many ways the most radical social and sexual experiment in American history‚ was founded in central New York by John Humphrey Noyes and a small band of Christian perfectionists in March 1848” (Olin‚ 285). The community eventually came to an end around 1879 and although somewhat short-lived‚ this utopian community presented many ideas that

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    utopia is a community where everything is perfect. Nothing and no one is perfect in life and flaws do exist. The fact that the definition has the word ‘imaginary’ shows that it doesn’t exist. If a perfect utopia existed then everyone would want to live there and be a part of that specific utopia. This whole unit we have been studying utopias and looking at different communities and how they exist. Two of the communities that we studied were the people of Jonestown and another community was the Omelas

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    American Romanticism

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    considered the first period of American creativity‚ the Romantic period is placed within the historical context of westward expansion‚ the increasingly heated nature of the slavery question‚ and strained relations between the opposing desires for reform and separation found in the North and the South. Historically‚ this period of tensions resulted in the Civil War. Within the literature‚ however‚ the opposing views of life were able to co-exist relatively peacefully. Romanticism is typically defined as

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    Transcendentalism was a movement for religious renewal‚ literary innovation‚ and social transformation. Its ideas were grounded in the claim that divine truth could be known intuitively. Based in New England and existing in various forms from the 1830s to the 1880s‚ transcendentalism is usually considered the principal expression of romanticism in America. Many prominent ministers‚ reformers‚ and writers of the era were associated with it‚ including Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)‚ Henry David Thoreau

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