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Literature - a Mirror of Society



         The literature of a country is affected and influenced by how
 the people of that country live.  This paper will prove that The
 French Revolution greatly influenced 19th Century French Romanticism.
  First, the cultural values of the revolution will be identified. 
 Then, the different aspects of Romanticism will be presented.  The
 cultural values of The French Revolution and Romanticism will then be
 linked.  Finally, literary examples will be shown to support this
 connection between the two movements.

        Before the Revolution, the citizens of France lived in a
 strict, confined society with no freedom to express their feelings. 
 Government had imposed strong, unfair laws on the common people
 (Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia "French Revolution").   They
 wanted a voice in a stable government with a strong economy (Johnson
 105) and a strong sense of individuality and independence within the
 people. (Moss and Wilson 180) 
         Eighteenth- century literature was much like the society in
 which it was produced, restrained.  Society was divided into
 privileged and unprivileged classes,  (Leinward 452) with Eighteenth-
 century writers focusing on the lives of the upper class.  (Thompson
 857)  These writers followed "formal rules"(Thorlby 282), and based
 their works on scientific observations and logic (Thompson 895).
         The Revolution gave the common people and writers more freedom
 to express feelings and stimulated them to use reason.  According to
 Thompson, The Revolution "had a major impact on Nineteenth- Century
 European Life."  (895)  It sent a strong wave of emotion and revival
 throughout France (Peyre 59).  This lead to new laws and standards for
 the citizens, including newer, less imposing literary standards.
         Romanticism marked a profound change in both literature and
 thought.  Romanticism, according to Webster's Dictionary, is defined
 as "a literary movement (as in early 19th century Europe) marked
 especially by an emphasis on the imagination and emotions and by the
 use of autobiographical material."  Although this may be true, there
 is no single commonly accepted definition of Romanticism, but it has
 some features upon which there is general agreement.  First, it
 emphasized upon human reason, feeling, emotion, and expression 
 (Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia, "Romanticism") while emphasizing
 the love of nature, beauty, and liberty. (Leinward 528-529)  Thompson
 defines Romanticism as " a major literary and cultural movement" that
 was inspired by the imaginations, inner feelings, and emotions of the
 Romantics.  (895)
         If one term can be used to describe the forces that have
 shaped the modern world, it is Romanticism.  (Peyre, 2)  Romanticism
 has had such a profound effect on the world since the late 18th
 century that one author has called it "the profoundest cultural
 transformation in human history since the invention of the city." 
 (Compton's Encyclopedia, "Romanticism") 
         Harvey and Heseltine state that "The outstanding
 characteristic of 18th-century French literature had been attached to
 reason.... About the turn of the century.... literature became a
 matter of senses and emotions."  (633)  They also say that the
 movement of Romanticism "gave practical expression to the new
 spirit..." because it recognized that the bounds on literature were
 "too rigid".  (634)
         There are many direct relations how the French Revolution
 influenced the French Romanticism that followed it in the Nineteenth-
 century.
         The French Revolution had a major impact on the timeline and
 progression of Romanticism.  Vinaver states that "Neither a revolt or
 a reaction, Romanticism was a revolutionary fulfillment... And this in
 turn explains why the European event known as the French Revolution is
 at once the climax [of Romanticism]...It's [French Revolution} date,
 1789, conveniently divides the Pre- Romanticism [era] from the full
 flowering of the new culture." (6)  Romanticism starts in about 1774,
 but does not take off until the last decade of the 18th- century, the
 same time as the Revolution.
         The French Revolution provided for many of the problems and
 basis for many Romantic literary works.  First of all, the political
 change brought by the Revolution, along with the intellectual
 reverberations brought upon Romanticism.  (Harvey and Heseltine 634) 
 Also, Thompson states that " [Romanticism was] shaped by the ideals of
 the French Revolution."  (895)  Finally, Vinaver declares that the
 Revolution served as "a great source of the problems and tendencies of
 Romantic proper."  (6) 
         The Revolution also inspired many writers to write
 romantically.  Peyre points this out when he says that it is wrong to
 call writers "revolutionaries" but when he writes about revolution-
 inspired works, he states: "in almost all of them [revolution-
 inspired romantic writers] could be detected a feeling of
 revolt...inspired by passion and directed against morals which were
 considered too constraining."  (59)  This shows how the writers stood
 for and supported the revolution that had occurred forty years before.
  Thompson makes a clear point along this line when he states that
 "Romanticism was a major literary and cultural movement that emerged
 out of the French Revolutionary spirit of the late 1700's..."  (895)
         In France, the Romantic Poets, especially Victor Hugo and
 Alfred de Vigney, gave their attention towards the problems arising
 out of the French Revolution. (Peyre 59) Alfred de Musset wrote
 philosophically moving lyrics. (Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia
 "French Literature")  Alphonse de Lamartine "delicately analyzed his
 own emotions". (Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia "French
 Literature")  Joseph de Maistre, another major figure whose strong
 political views made him totally oppose the war, still took the
 Revolution in to consideration when writing.  (60)  Leinward supports
 this idea when he says "Poets were moved by the great events of their
 lives, including the French Revolution."  (528)
         Hugo, the greatest poet of the 19th century France, perhaps of
 all French Literature, was the major figure of the Romantic Movement.
  (Harvey and Halestine 350)  His Hernani helped win the revolt against
 the classic rules of literature.  (Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia,
 "French Literature")  His most famous work,  Les Miserables, was a
 novel about the suffering of humanity during the Revolution. 
 (Leinward 529)
         Vigney, a poet, dramatist, and novelist, played a large role
 in the Romanticism of the 1820's.  His play, Chatterton, dramatized
 the misfortune of the poet in a "materialist and pitiless" society. 
 (Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia "Vigny")
         Alfred de Musset's philosophical poetry played a major role in
 the Romanticism of the 1820's. (Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia
 "French Literature") Harvey and Heseltine say that "Musset is usually
 classed with Hugo, Lamartine, and Vigny as one of the four great
 figures of the Romantic Movement..." (Harvey and Heseltine 502)  His
 lyrical poetry mixed suffering and passion such as in Le Souvenir.
 (502)
         Lamartine, described by Harvey and Heseltine as "one of the
 four great poets of the Romantic Movement" (390), expressed his
 appreciation for nature as a "reflection of his own moods" in his
 Meditations poetiques. (390)  This shows how Romantic poets could
 display their love for nature and human qualities of thought at the
 same time.
         Joseph de Maistre whose "inconsistent and impassioned ideas
 [about the Revolution] influenced Vigny, was impressed by the divine
 greatness of the Revolution...." (Peyne 59)  The Revolution and the
 idea how it was "controlled by a mighty force" inspired him to write
 and celebrate it as being divine in Te Deum.  (59)
         The research presented in this paper has shown that the French
 Revolution of 1789 greatly influenced the Romantic literature of the
 proceeding 19th century France.  The French cultural values before and
 during the revolution have been presented.  The different aspects of
 Romanticism have been reviewed in detail.  Then relations with
 examples between the Revolution and Romanticism were presented.  In
 closing, I have shown how the French Revolution has had a remarkable
 effect on French Romantic literature in the 19th century.


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