American
Romanticism
Bruce Harvey
VERY BRIEF SUMMARY OF 1st THIRD OF COURSE
With Douglass, we turn to the second broad arc of themes/authors we're
covering this semester.
The first third of the course traces the rejection of bourgeois social values
(history, conventionality, family, etc) in Emerson, Thoreau, and Melville's
“Bartleby” (or Irving’s and Hawthorne’s stories) for spontaneous insight,
eccentricity, epiphany, and deep interiority: i.e., insight rather than
sight/imitation/routine. That interiority--how to convey in narrative or
poetry?--was further explored in Dickinson and Poe, each of who create, if you
think about it, a very individualistic style/set of narrative devices. You
should make links between Poe and Dickinson to Emerson-the-Transcendentalist,
even though neither Poe nor Dickinson were
transcendentalists. The speed-up/tumult/climatic blank at the end of many
of Poe's stories may be considered what I call the "dark
sublime." His sensation/Gothic stories, rather than producing
revelations/epiphanies of knowledge, must produce the opposite: he wants the ummmph of a revelation, but it must be devoid of content.
So rather than cosmic oversoul or eyeball that
expands into all space (Emerson) or seeing a world of eternal spring/freshness
(Thoreau at the end of Walden) you get the opposite . . . nothingness, a
house collapsed in on itself (i.e, Poe’s “Fall of the
House of Usher”).
We now, in the second third of the course, turn to authors writing in the
American Romantic period who are not typically called "Romantic"
writers (they might be called antebellum authors or American Renaissance
authors). These authors, as it were, reintroduce the social
dimension/texture that a writer such as Poe largely walls out. That is,
they are concerned with history and its all-too-material effects.
However, your heightened sensitivity to "Romantic" themes such as
interiority/sublimity/issues of representation (Poe) should lead you to read,
for instance, Douglass in a fashion that extends beyond his exemplary status as
a slave narrative author (i.e. politically); just as, vice versa, you should reflect
back upon Poe and Dickinson for the potential political elements of their texts
that I mostly ignored. The culmination of social protest fiction and all
the themes of Romanticism will be in Melville's difficult but intriguing
"Benito Cereno."
The final third of the course covers Romanticism in what could be called the
"epic" mode--Melville's omnibus Moby-Dick and Whitman's epic
lyric (get the paradox--epic, but lyric!) Song of Myself.
As we proceed through Douglass and Stowe, please ponder the above so that you
will get a sense of the logic of the syllabus and, by extension, the
literary-cultural period we are studying.
The final take-home synthesis exam will ask you to trace an issue or theme
through five or six of our writers, and it is important that you begin to see
connections and divergences among them.