American Realism: 1865-1910[1]
In most people's minds, the years
following the Civil War symbolized a time of healing and rebuilding. For those engaged
in serious literary circles, however, that period was full of upheaval. A
literary civil war raged on between the camps of the romantics and the realists and later, the naturalists. People waged verbal battles over the
ways that fictional characters were presented in relation to their external
world.
Using plot and character development, a
writer stated his or her philosophy about how much control mankind had over his
own destiny. For example, romantic writers such as Ralph Waldo Emerson
celebrated the ability of human will to triumph over adversity. On the other
hand, Mark Twain, William Dean Howells and Henry James were influenced by the
works of early European Realists, namely Balzac's La Comedie Humaine
(begun in the 1830s); Turgenev's Sportsman's Sketches (1852);
and Flaubert's Madame Bovary (1856).
These American
realists believed that humanity's freedom of choice was limited by the power of
outside forces. At another extreme were naturalists Stephen Crane and Frank
Norris who supported the ideas of Emile Zola and the determinism
movement. Naturalists argued that individuals have no choice because a
person's life is dictated by heredity and the external environment. In
summary, here's how the genres portrayed their characters:
|
Genre |
American Author |
Perceived the individual as... |
|
Romantics |
Ralph Waldo Emerson |
a god |
|
Realists |
Henry James |
simply a person |
|
Naturalists |
Stephen Crane |
a helpless object |
Emergence of American Realism
The industrial revolution that took place
at the end of the 19th century changed our country in remarkable ways.
People left rural homes for opportunities in urban cities. With the development
of new machinery and equipment, the
The realism of the 1880s featured the
works of Twain, Howells and James among other writers. American Realists
concentrated their writing on select groups or subjects. Examples of this
practice include:
The writing during this period was also very
regional. The industrial revolution called for standardization, mass production
of goods and streamlined channels of distribution.
Spurring Change
At its basic level, realism was grounded
in the faithful reporting of all facets of everyday American life. According to
William Dean Howells, "Realism is nothing more and nothing less than the
truthful treatment of material" (Carter, 36). The reading public's
preference for realism parallels the changes that were occurring at the end of
the 19th and into the 20th century. For example, the modern scientific
revolution advocated that truth and knowledge be based on empirical data.
Reinforcing that notion, the industrial revolution proclaimed that a better
civil society could be built upon machinery and factory labor. Given this
atmosphere, several developments occurred around the same time: (1)The growth
of investigative journalism; (2) the rise of muckrakers; and (3) the establishment of a new-found
fascination with the camera as a means of capturing the realities of a single
instant, unvarnished by sentimentality.
In many ways, these turn of the century
developments are still alive and well. With regard to contemporary literature,
realism is so pervasive that it seems natural and unimportant. However,
upon close examination, we realize that realism planted the seeds for many of
Basic Tenets
As with all literary genres, we cannot
rely on generalizations to interpret a work. After all, realistic
literature reflected more than mere external reality. According to
Richard Chase's The American Novel and Its Tradition, realism has specific social, political, and artistic
characteristics that set it apart from other genres. Below are the salient
points that Chase makes about realism:
Plot and Character
Structure of Prose
Other Important Aspects
Works Cited
Carter,
Everett. Howells and the Age of Realism .
Chase,
Richard. The American Novel and Its Tradition. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1957
"The
Literature of an Expanding Nation." The Harper American Literature. Donald McQuade, editor.
Definitions
§
Determinism is the philosophical belief that events
are shaped by forces beyond the control of human beings. Scientific
Determinism , important to literature at the end of the nineteenth century
(see Naturalism), assigns control especially to heredity and environment,
without seeking their origins further than science can trace. (The
Harper Handbook of Literature)
§
Muckrakers were American journalists and novelists of
the first decade of the twentieth century who exposed corruption in big
business and government. Theodore Roosevelt invented the term in a 1906 speech,
agreeing with some of the muckrakers' findings but deploring the methods as
irresponsible sensationalism. He alluded to the "man with a
Muck-rake" in John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress (1678), who
could look only downward as he stirred the filth, unable to see the heavenly
crown held above him. Mass circulation magazines such as The Arena, Colliers,
Cosmopolitan, Everybody's, The Independent, and McClures financed the investigations and
published the work of muckrakers Lincoln Steffens, Ida Tarbell, David Graham
Phillips, Ray Stannard Baker, T.W. Lawson, Mark Sullivan, and Samuel Hopkins
Adams. Examples of muckraking novels include: Phillips' Great God Success (1901); Upton Sinclair's Jungle
(1901); and the later books of the American Winston Churchill. (The
Harper Handbook of Literature)
§
Naturalism
was a literary movement
of the late nineteenth century that yielded influence on the twentieth.
It was an extension of realism, a reaction against the restrictions inherent in
the realistic emphasis on the ordinary, as naturalists insisted that the
extraordinary is real, too. In place of the middle-class realities of a George
Eliot, or a William Dean Howells, the naturalists wrote about the fringes of
society, the criminal, the fallen, the down-and-out, earning as one definition
of their work the phrase sordid realism. Naturalism came largely from
scientific Determinism. Darwinism was especially important to the genre,
as the naturalists perceived a person's fate as the product of blind external
or biological forces (chiefly heredity and environment). But in the typical
naturalistic novel, change played a large part as well. (The
Harper Handbook of Literature)
§
Romanticism
was a movement in
literature that celebrated the individual. Romantics believed in
humankind's innate goodness and eventual perfectibility. The genre accepted
experimentation as an expression of an artist's individuality. For example,
Romantic literature discarded the formality of the closed heroic couplet and
embraced a lyrical openness of style. In essence, the Romantic view was
egalitarian. Equal at birth, inherently good, valued as individuals, all people
were encouraged toward self-development. Romanticism stressed the value
of expressing human abilities that were common to all from birth rather than
from training. Thus, emotional, intuitive, and sensual elements of artistic,
religious, and intellectual expression were counted in some ways more valid
than the products of education and reason. Romanticism embraced nature as
a model for harmony in society and art. Jean Jacques Rousseau is
considered the father of romanticism. His noble savage characterized an
idealized vision of humanity freed from the stifling boundaries of
civilization. (The Harper Handbook of Literature)
& Overview of Realism
Principles Of Realism
Identifying Characteristics Of
Realistic Writing
Realistic Complexity And Multiplicity: Complexity
refers to the interwoven, entangled density of experience; multiplicity
indicates the simultaneous existence of different levels of reality or of many
truths, equally "true" from some point of view.
Realistic Characterization: There is the belief among the Realists that humans
control their destinies; characters act on their environment rather than simply
reacting to it. Character is superior to circumstance.
The Use Of Symbolism And Imagery: The
Realists generally reject the kind of symbolism suggested by Emerson when he
said "Every natural fact is a symbol of some spiritual fact." Their
use of symbolism is controlled and limited; they depend more on the use of
images.