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TJ123-8-2009 LK VWD0011 Tradition Humanistic 6th Edition W:220mm x H:292mm 175L 115 Stora Enso M/A Magenta (V)
LOOKING BACK
CHAPTER 27 The Romantic View of Nature 27
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Nature and the Natural in Asian Literature
- The Romantic embrace of nature and natural imagery was not
confined to the West: in Chinese literature, as reflected in Shen
Fu’s confessional prose, nature became a source of inspiration
and personal solace.
•Chinese poets and painters described the natural landscape by
way of a few carefully chosen words and images.
Romantic Landscape Painting
- It was among Western Romantics that the landscape became
a major vehicle for the expression of the artist’s moods and
emotions. - Constable’s contemplative scenes of English country life and
Turner’s sublime vistas are the visual counterparts of the poems
of Wordsworth. - The elegiac landscapes of Friedrich in Germany and Corot in
France reflect the efforts of Romantic artists to explore nature’s
shifting states as metaphors for human feeling.
American Romanticism
- American Romantics endowed the quest for natural simplicity
with a robust spirit of individualism. The transcendentalists
Emerson and Thoreau sought a union of self with nature; Walt
Whitman proclaimed his untamed and “untranslatable” ego in
sympathy with nature’s energy. - In the American landscapes of Cole, Bierstadt, and Church,
nature becomes symbolic of an unspoiled and rapidly vanishing
world; in the art of George Catlin, the native populations and
traditions of America are lovingly documented. - Among Native Americans, yet another (less Romantic but
equally mystical) view of nature flourished, as evidenced in
magnificent ceremonial objects. - American folk art, as typified by the paintings of Edward Hicks,
made use of natural imagery for decorative and symbolic
purposes.
The Progress of Industrialization
•Nineteenth-century Europe experienced a population boom;
increased production of coal, iron, and steel encouraged
expansion of industry and commerce in the West. In this
industrially based society, goods were increasingly made at
factories rather than in homes.
- Advancing industrialization encouraged urbanization and
spurred Western efforts to find markets and resources in other
parts of the world.
Early Nineteenth-Century Thought
- German philosophers, influenced by Asian philosophy and
Kantian idealism, viewed nature subjectively and in the direction
of mysticism. - Hegel proposed a dialectical model according to which all
reality, all history, and all ideas progressed toward perfect
freedom. - Darwin argued that by means of natural selection, all living
things, including human beings, evolved from a few simple
forms: species either develop into higher forms of life or fail to
survive.
•While the theory of natural selection displaced human beings
from their elevated place in the hierarchy of living creatures,
it advanced the idea of the unity of nature and humankind.
Nature and the Natural in European Literature
- Nature provided both a metaphor for the Romantic sensibility
and a refuge from the evils of nineteenth-century
industrialization and urbanization.
•William Wordsworth, the leading nature poet of the nineteenth
century, embraced the redemptive power of nature. Exalting the
natural landscape as the source of sublime inspiration and
moral truth, Wordsworth and his English contemporaries
initiated the Romantic movement. - The Romantics stressed the free exercise of the imagination,
the liberation of the senses, and the cultivation of a more natural
language of poetic expression. - Shelley compared the elemental forces of nature with the
creative powers of the poet, while Keats rejoiced that nature’s
fleeting beauty might forever dwell in art. Blake’s deeply spiritual
poems reflect a visionary and moral perception of nature.