Passion vs Realism

 

 



A movement geared towards the characterization of literature and the arts beginning in the late 18th century. A knew ideology or visionary lens for the world to observe the beauty of the world through. Unaligned with the rules or conforming to the herd of society romanticism became a belief for an individual to branch out as the black sheep and listen to ones own imagination and creative mind. Although romanticism began over a hundred years ago it continues to surpass in a contemporary style to modern day life. Movies today illustrate romanticized lifestyles often as glorified scammers, druggies, and killers. As the expansion of the ideology continues to reform and deviate from the norm one must understand the origins of romanticism. The principles of romanticism derive from the complexity of oneself. Ones own mind looks within to examine self behavior and attitude to reflect outward on the beauties of nature. In truth there are no exact principles as there are no singular people alike. Individuals acquire private passions of their own accord mirroring their own creative identity. While romanticism is thoroughly highlighted throughout the ages of literature the main learning objective may come from the actual minds of the people in each time period that correlated to the ideology and kept its spirit alive. In comparison to neoclassicism that solely focuses on intellect and reasoning, romanticism diverges into a train of thought based on the imagination. As if a representation of the human minds right and left brain. The right brain invokes creativity and art while the left follows sequences of logic and realism. Neoclassicism and romanticism becomes a conflicting divide between self to follow a course of reason or passion. When a writer chooses one over the other to illustrate a characters being it accentuates a larger part of the complexity behind not only the character but the theme of the story. 







Comments

  1. I enjoyed reading your blog post about romanticism. I appreciate your reference to modern day romanticism, as it makes the concept easier to comprehend. I also liked how to compared romanticism to neoclassicism, which helped to differentiate the two.

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