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Realism
Regionalism
Naturalism
      Edith Wharton
       Kate Chopin
 Charlotte Perkins Gilman
 Mary E. Wilkins Freeman
     Ambrose Bierce
        Bret Harte
       Jack London
       Mark Twain
Remember the Romantics?
 1828-1865
 Included Transcendentalists and
  Anti-Transcendentalists
 Included Emerson, Thoreau, Whitman,
  Hawthorne, and Poe
 Believed in the individual, emphasized the
  imagination, emotions, and creativity, etc.
Now, on the Realists…
Edith Wharton
a   good transition from Romanticism to
  Realism & Regionalism
 Ethan Frome shows harsh realities of life in
  a small town in the East
 Ethan is a Transcendentalist (in some
  ways) who is affected by harsh realities of
  life
Realism & Realists
1865-1910
Reaction  against
 Romanticism
Turned from strange things
 to ordinary things (a slice of
 life and how life is really
 lived)
Realism
any effort to offer an accurate and
  detailed portrayal of actual life
  based on careful observation of
  life (often focused on middle &
            lower classes)
What does Realism mean?
 “Letfiction cease to lie about life; let it
 portray men and women as they really are.”

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

                         --William Dean Howells

                                          (1837 –1920)
             American realist author and literary critic
Realism
Finds   the drama and tension
 beneath the ordinary surface
 of life
Believed that humanity’s
 freedom of choice is limited
 by the power of outside
 forces
Realism
 Realist authors are more descriptive than
  symbolic.
 Readers were attracted to the realists
  because they saw their own struggles in
  print. They also had little patience for the
  slow-paced narratives, allegory, and
  symbolism of the Romantics writers (can
  you relate?).
 Realists’ writing was often regional.
Regionalism
accurately represents the speech,
 manners, habits, history, folklore,
  and beliefs of people in specific
         geographic areas
Regionalism

  Because America was leaping
 into a new modern age with the
       industrial revolution
      (standardization, mass
    production of goods, etc.),
people feared that local folkways
   and traditions would soon be
            forgotten.
Connection: Realism &
          Regionalism
Responding    to these sentiments,
 realistic writers set their stories
 in specific American regions,
 rushing to capture the “local
 color” before it was lost.
Regionalism grew out of Realism
Local Color
 Captures  the special atmosphere of the
  area and its people
 Often contains regional dialects, well-
  known places, customs, etc. of a
  particular area
 Because of lack of communication and
  transportation, it shows how people lived
  in other parts of the country
Naturalists
 1900-1914
 Extension  of Realism
 A reaction against the emphasis on the
  “ordinary” lives realist writers portrayed
 Naturalist writers insisted that the
  extraordinary is real, too.
Naturalism
offshoot of Realism; sought to
   describe people and events
  realistically; emphasizes how
    instinct and environment
 influence human behavior; the
    fate of humans is beyond
        individual control
Naturalists
Instead of middle-class realities,
   naturalists wrote about the
fringes of society—the criminal,
 the fallen, the down-and-out.
Naturalists
 Were  Darwinists—they believed that
  individuals have no choice in life because
  a person’s life is dictated by heredity and
  the external environment
 We inherit compulsive instincts such as
  hunger, the drive to accumulate
  possessions, and sexuality; and then we
  are subject to the social and economic
  forces in the family, class and
  surroundings into which we were born.
In other words, people are
caught within the forces of
 nature or society that are
       beyond their
 understanding or control
Naturalism
 Facts-only  approach (avoids idealistic
  solutions to problems)
 “Brutal Realism”
 The protagonist, a pawn to multiple
  compulsions, usually disintegrates, or is
  wiped out, by the end of the story.
 Aimed at bettering the world through
  social reform (bringing a situation to the
  eyes of the public so as to improve it)
 Realism-  any effort to offer and accurate and
  detailed portrayal of actual life based on
  careful observation of life (often focused on
  middle & lower classes)
 Regionalism- accurately represents the
  speech, manners, habits, history, folklore,
  and beliefs of people in specific geographic
  areas
 Naturalism- offshoot of Realism; sought to
  describe people and events realistically;
  emphasizes how instinct and environment
  influence human behavior
Genre                        American               Perceived         Presents          Freedom
                                                                the              life               of
                                     Author (s)            individual            as…             choice?
                                                           as…
    Transcendentalists              R. W. Emerson              A god          We would         Do whatever
R                                    H.D. Thoreau                                have it            pleases
O                                   Walt Whitman                                be, want             you –
M                                                                                it to be          limitless
A                                                                                              possibilities
N
T
       Dark Romantics            Nathaniel Hawthorne       Filled with the    Potentially        Choice
I
                                   Edgar Allan Poe               potential         dark           possible,
C
                                                                  for sin                         but tends
S
                                                                                                   to the
                                                                                                  dark side
      Realists/Regionalists          Edith Wharton            Simply a       As it really is   Choices are
R                                     Mark Twain                 person                          limited by
                                Charlotte Perkins Gilman                                           outside
E                                Mary Wilkins Freeman                                               forces
A                                   Ambrose Bierce                                                 (class,
L                                                                                                race, etc.)
I    Naturalists/Regionalists        Kate Chopin             A helpless      Determined        No choices –
S                                    Jack London                 object          only by            we are
                                                                                 heredity          pawns of
T                                                                                  and               our
S                                                                                environ-      background
                                                                                  ment                and
                                                                                                    current
                                                                                                   environ-
                                                                                                     ment
American Realist
   Authors:
Mark Twain
(Samuel Langhorne Clemens)




                  New York
Charlotte Perkins Gilman
Mary Wilkins Freeman




             New Jersey
Realist authors who
 were Naturalists:
Kate Chopin




         Missouri
Jack London




           Northern California


     London was the first American author to
     make a million dollars from his writing.
     He was also known to drink a quart of
     whiskey/day, which caused him to have
     numerous accidents, including once
     falling off of a pier into the San
     Francisco Bay.
Bret Harte




             Surrey, England
Ambrose Bierce




  Mexico—his actual death
  date and place are
  unknown

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Realism & naturalism & regionalism

  • 1. Realism Regionalism Naturalism Edith Wharton Kate Chopin Charlotte Perkins Gilman Mary E. Wilkins Freeman Ambrose Bierce Bret Harte Jack London Mark Twain
  • 2. Remember the Romantics?  1828-1865  Included Transcendentalists and Anti-Transcendentalists  Included Emerson, Thoreau, Whitman, Hawthorne, and Poe  Believed in the individual, emphasized the imagination, emotions, and creativity, etc. Now, on the Realists…
  • 3. Edith Wharton a good transition from Romanticism to Realism & Regionalism  Ethan Frome shows harsh realities of life in a small town in the East  Ethan is a Transcendentalist (in some ways) who is affected by harsh realities of life
  • 4. Realism & Realists 1865-1910 Reaction against Romanticism Turned from strange things to ordinary things (a slice of life and how life is really lived)
  • 5. Realism any effort to offer an accurate and detailed portrayal of actual life based on careful observation of life (often focused on middle & lower classes)
  • 6. What does Realism mean?  “Letfiction cease to lie about life; let it portray men and women as they really are.”  “Realism is nothing more and nothing less than the truthful treatment of material.” --William Dean Howells (1837 –1920) American realist author and literary critic
  • 7. Realism Finds the drama and tension beneath the ordinary surface of life Believed that humanity’s freedom of choice is limited by the power of outside forces
  • 8. Realism  Realist authors are more descriptive than symbolic.  Readers were attracted to the realists because they saw their own struggles in print. They also had little patience for the slow-paced narratives, allegory, and symbolism of the Romantics writers (can you relate?).  Realists’ writing was often regional.
  • 9. Regionalism accurately represents the speech, manners, habits, history, folklore, and beliefs of people in specific geographic areas
  • 10. Regionalism Because America was leaping into a new modern age with the industrial revolution (standardization, mass production of goods, etc.), people feared that local folkways and traditions would soon be forgotten.
  • 11. Connection: Realism & Regionalism Responding to these sentiments, realistic writers set their stories in specific American regions, rushing to capture the “local color” before it was lost. Regionalism grew out of Realism
  • 12. Local Color  Captures the special atmosphere of the area and its people  Often contains regional dialects, well- known places, customs, etc. of a particular area  Because of lack of communication and transportation, it shows how people lived in other parts of the country
  • 13. Naturalists  1900-1914  Extension of Realism  A reaction against the emphasis on the “ordinary” lives realist writers portrayed  Naturalist writers insisted that the extraordinary is real, too.
  • 14. Naturalism offshoot of Realism; sought to describe people and events realistically; emphasizes how instinct and environment influence human behavior; the fate of humans is beyond individual control
  • 15. Naturalists Instead of middle-class realities, naturalists wrote about the fringes of society—the criminal, the fallen, the down-and-out.
  • 16. Naturalists  Were Darwinists—they believed that individuals have no choice in life because a person’s life is dictated by heredity and the external environment  We inherit compulsive instincts such as hunger, the drive to accumulate possessions, and sexuality; and then we are subject to the social and economic forces in the family, class and surroundings into which we were born.
  • 17. In other words, people are caught within the forces of nature or society that are beyond their understanding or control
  • 18. Naturalism  Facts-only approach (avoids idealistic solutions to problems)  “Brutal Realism”  The protagonist, a pawn to multiple compulsions, usually disintegrates, or is wiped out, by the end of the story.  Aimed at bettering the world through social reform (bringing a situation to the eyes of the public so as to improve it)
  • 19.  Realism- any effort to offer and accurate and detailed portrayal of actual life based on careful observation of life (often focused on middle & lower classes)  Regionalism- accurately represents the speech, manners, habits, history, folklore, and beliefs of people in specific geographic areas  Naturalism- offshoot of Realism; sought to describe people and events realistically; emphasizes how instinct and environment influence human behavior
  • 20. Genre American Perceived Presents Freedom the life of Author (s) individual as… choice? as… Transcendentalists R. W. Emerson A god We would Do whatever R H.D. Thoreau have it pleases O Walt Whitman be, want you – M it to be limitless A possibilities N T Dark Romantics Nathaniel Hawthorne Filled with the Potentially Choice I Edgar Allan Poe potential dark possible, C for sin but tends S to the dark side Realists/Regionalists Edith Wharton Simply a As it really is Choices are R Mark Twain person limited by Charlotte Perkins Gilman outside E Mary Wilkins Freeman forces A Ambrose Bierce (class, L race, etc.) I Naturalists/Regionalists Kate Chopin A helpless Determined No choices – S Jack London object only by we are heredity pawns of T and our S environ- background ment and current environ- ment
  • 21. American Realist Authors:
  • 22. Mark Twain (Samuel Langhorne Clemens) New York
  • 24. Mary Wilkins Freeman New Jersey
  • 25. Realist authors who were Naturalists:
  • 26. Kate Chopin Missouri
  • 27. Jack London Northern California London was the first American author to make a million dollars from his writing. He was also known to drink a quart of whiskey/day, which caused him to have numerous accidents, including once falling off of a pier into the San Francisco Bay.
  • 28. Bret Harte Surrey, England
  • 29. Ambrose Bierce Mexico—his actual death date and place are unknown