UVU Romantic British Literature (Spring 2022) Dashboard

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The Romantic period is unique amongst other literary historical periods; it is neither demarcated by, or named for, the reign a monarch (like the Elizabethan or Victorian eras), nor is it defined by the century with which it coincides (like the Twentieth or Twenty-First Centuries). Instead, the Romantic period is bookended by major political and social events. Named for a literary genre recovered in the eighteenth century (the medieval romance), the Romantic period is generally agreed to have ended in 1832 at the first major reform of the British Parliament, but its beginning could be considered to coincide with a variety of events, such as the 1776 American declaration of independence, or the 1789 commencement of the French revolution. In general, the literature of this period might be characterized as reactionary; Romantic critics and artists were responding to the period’s radical social and political shifts and to the British literary tradition’s overemphasis on classical influences at the expense of other genres and modes of expression. In many ways, they were confronting their own political philosophy, artistic ancestry, and the trauma and turbulence of near-constant war.

 This course explores these confrontations through four loosely constructed units that cover the political debates and artistic innovations fomented by the French Revolution, the challenges posed to gender norms by Romantic women writers, the passionate efforts of abolitionists to raise awareness about the horrors of slavery, and the radicalism espoused by some of British literature’s more (in)famous poets.

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Individual Entries

Posted by Viviana Moreno on Tuesday, February 8, 2022 - 02:14
Chronology Entry
Posted by Anthony Stephens on Tuesday, February 8, 2022 - 01:40
Chronology Entry
Posted by Kayla Holbrook on Monday, February 7, 2022 - 18:40
Place
Posted by Elli Batt on Monday, February 7, 2022 - 16:56

In Mansfield Park written by Jane Austen, Antigua is only mentioned a few times but it plays such a large role in the plot and the Bertram Family. I was curious to know more about this place and what kind of business was being conducted there. Some background and information on this Island will be helpful for readers to gain a better understanding of Sir Thomas's activities and motives. 

The Island itself is located southeast of Florida and the Dominican Republic. For hundreds of years the island of Anitgua was inhabited solely by slaves. It was disocevered by Christopher Clumbus during his second voyage. (Antigua Colony) Not until the year 1632 was it claimed by England and there was an increase in slaves once England took control. The main crop on Antigua was sugar and this was made popular by the first plantation owner named sir Christopher Codrington. There were other crops grown such as tobacco and indigo. Slavery was big in...

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Chronology Entry
Posted by Tessa Christensen on Monday, February 7, 2022 - 14:42
Posted by Jamie Maass on Monday, February 7, 2022 - 14:03
Posted by Maddie Heaps on Sunday, February 6, 2022 - 17:47
Posted by Olivia Leavitt on Saturday, February 5, 2022 - 23:42
Place
Posted by Gabriella White on Tuesday, February 1, 2022 - 14:38

The Place de la Concorde is a public square in Paris, France. During the French Revolution, the square was renamed Place de la Révolution, and executions by guillotine were performed there, including the executions of King Louis XVI and Queen Marie Antoinette. In 1795, the name Place de la Révolution was changed back to its original Place de la Concorde in an attempt at reconciliation after the violence of the French Revolution. "The guillotine, particularly the one in Paris’s Place de la Révolution, served as the bloody emblem of the fear tactics that began to manifest themselves." (Piccitto) The Place de la Concorde is also known as the Place de la Révolution. 

The Reign of Terror was an extremely violent period during the French Revolution. It began shortly after the French Revolution began. The Reign of Terror started on 5 September 1793 and ended on 28 July 1794. Some historians believe that the Reign of Terror started in March or June...

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Posted by Gabriella White on Tuesday, February 1, 2022 - 14:30

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