Romantic Period in English Literature
Romantic Period in English Literature
Romantic Period in English Literature
The Romantic period, also known as Romanticism, was an intellectual, artistic, and literary
movement that took place in Europe and America around 1780-1850.
European Romanticism began as a reaction to the ways in which the Industrial Revolution and
the Enlightenment had transformed society.
The Enlightenment had prioritized reason and rationality over emotion and creativity. The
Industrial Revolution had urbanized England. Technology was booming, science was
accelerating, and cities were becoming increasingly crowded.
Because of these changes, many people felt like humanity was losing its relationship with the
natural world and the sublime.
Along came the Romanticists: a group of artists, writers, and intellectuals who celebrated nature,
emotion, and the spiritual. They criticized the way society had changed and glorified the past in
their work.
Important Romantic poets include William Wordsworth, Walt Whitman, Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow, Henry David Thoreau, William Blake, John Keats, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Emily
Dickinson, and Percy Bysshe Shelley.
Important fiction writers from the Romantic era include Emily Brontë (Wuthering Heights),
Charlotte Brontë (Jane Eyre), Mary Shelley (Frankenstein), Herman Melville (Moby Dick),
James Fenimore Cooper (The Last of the Mohicans), and Nathaniel Hawthorne (The Scarlet
Letter).
Related to their critique of progress is the fact that Romanticists were fascinated
with the past and resurrected it in various forms. They used their writing to remind
everyone of what the past had to offer and how far society had moved away from
the good old days.
4- An Awe of Nature
The Romanticists saw nature as a source of beauty and truth. Much of Romantic
literature focuses on nature as something sublime.
Countless Romantic poets wrote lyrical ballads about everything from birds and
flowers to mountains and clouds.
In the Romantic era, women were seen as innocent, pure creatures who should be
admired and respected.
Many Romantic poets and novelists centered their narratives around celebrating
the purity and beauty of a woman.
Unfortunately, this idealization meant that the Romantic Movement typically saw
women as objects for male admiration rather than as people with their own dreams
and ambitions. Female writers such as Jane Austen, Mary Shelley, and the Brontë
sisters had to publish under male pseudonyms because of these attitudes.
As we have already discussed, Romanticists were interested in the infinite and the
divine. As a result, Romanticism began to include supernatural elements.
Many Romantic poems and stories involve some aspect of the mystical or the
“gothic.”
Edgar Allan Poe and S.T Coleridge are the writers who used the supernatural elements
in their works.