Monday 9 March 2015

Chapter 3 An Outline of American Literature

“The Rise of a National Literature" and an American Renaissance
 Introduction to American Literature


CHAPTER 3

The Romantic period

          The romantic movement originated in Germany  spread to England and reached America around 1820. The New England Transcendentalists - Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Walt Whitman and their associates were the inspired by the romantic spirit. The American romanticism stressed inspiration, spiritual and aesthetic side of nature, value of common man and the idea of self. According to the romantic theory self and nature are one. New words like self-realisation, self expression, self reliance emerged.

         Transcendentalism the transcendentalist movement stressed the humanitarian trend of the 19 th century. It was a reaction against 18 th century Rationalism. The movement was based on a fundamental belief in the unity of world and God. The soul of each individual was identified with the world. The Doctrine of the self-reliance and individualism improved this idea.

          Concord was the first rural artist’s colony. Emerson and Thoreau practised simple living there. Transcendal club was organised in 1836. Its members were Emerson, Thoreau, Whitman, Fuller, Channing, Bronson Alcott, and Theodre Parker. They published the quarterly magazine 'The Dial'.

Ralph Waldo Emerson
(1803-1882)

          Emerson was a towering figure of his era. He had a religious sense of mission. His philosophy was contradictory to religion.

           His major ideas of new national vision are the use of personal experience, the idea of cosmic over soul and doctrine of compensation. His spiritual vision and writing make his work effective. He got his spiritual ideas by reading eastern religion especially, Hinduism, Confucianism and Islamic. In his poem Brahma he introduces Brahma to the highest Hindu God to the American readers. Emerson has influenced many American poets including Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson, Wallace Stevens, Hart crane and Robert Frost. He also influenced the philosophies of John Dewey, George Santayana, Fredric Nietzsche and William James.

Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)

          Henry David Thoreau was born in Concorde and lives there permanently. He led a simple life, according to his principles. He lived in cabin property owned by Emerson. Be wrote his masterpiece "Walden or Life in the Woods" in 1854. The book concentrates on the inner self of a human being. His method of concentration resembles Asian meditation techniques. Like Emerson and Thoreau he was influenced by Hindu and Buddhist philosophy. His style is eclectic crystalline and richly metaphysical. In "Walden" he tests the theories of transcendentalism. The essays of Thoreau surprised William Butter Yeats, Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King. His idea of civil disobedience, peaceful resistance and independence attracted them.

Walt Whitman (1819-1892)

          Walt Whitman was born in long Island, New York. He was a partime carpenter and a man of people. His works reveal the democratic spirit of America. He was largely self-taught. He left school at the age of 11 and so missed the traditional education. His masterpiece is "Leaves of Grass" which published in 1855. It contains the poem "Song of myself" Whitman was inspired by Emerson's writings especially hi essay "The Poet". "Leaves of grass" is full of concrete sights and sounds. Whitman seems to project himself into everything he sees or imagines. He considers himself as a mass man and at the same time a suffering individual.

      ....I am the hounded slave, I wince
     at the bite of the dogs.
     I am the mash d fireman with breast -bone broken.

          Moreover Whitman imagines a democratic America with free imagination in his poems. D.H.Lawrence called him the poet of the 'open road'.

          Whitman's other poems are 'Crossing Brooklyn Ferry" "out of the cradle” "Endlessly Rocking" and 'When lilacs in the Dooryard Bloom'd'. His another important work in his essay Democratic Vistas (1871). In this work, he calls for a new kind of literature to revive Americans. In his "Song of Myself" he places the Romantic self at the centre of the poem.

                  I celebrate myself, and sing myself. 

          Thus Whitman imagines the modern readers by his innovative ideas.

Emily Dickinson

     Emily Dickinson was a radical individualist. She was born in Amherst, Massa. She never married and led an unconventional life. She loved nature and was deeply inspired by the New England countryside. She lived a life of q recluse and had a sensitive psyche. She knew the Bible. The works of Shakespeare and classical mythology deeply. Her poems were unpublished and unknown in the nineteenth century. They were rediscovered in 1950's.
Dickinson's style is imagistic, modern and innovative. She combines concrete things with abstract ideas in her compressed style. Her poems are short and simple. They are sentimental and some are even heretical. She celebrates the simple objects like flowers and bee. She explores the dark and hidden part of the human mind. Her poems reveal a wide range of subjects and her great intelligence. Her poems are known by the numbers in Thomas H.Johnson's standard edition of 1955. She uses capitalisation and dashes in her poems.

     Dickinson proves herself as a non-conformist like Thoreau. She reverses the meanings of words and phrases by using paradox. 

Much madness is divinest sense
To a discerning eye
Much sense - the starkest madness.
'T is the majority.
Her wits is revealed in the poem 288. She ridicules ambition and public life.
I'm  nobody! Who are you?
Are you Nobody Too?

     Thus her poems are the most challenging and fascinating in American literature.


No comments:

Post a Comment