American Romanticism By Washington Irving And James Fenimore Cooper

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American Romanticism When many hear “Romanticism” they think of love, but Romanticism isn’t mainly about love. Yes, it may have some love, but it’s also about reasoning, nature, imaginations, and individualism. Like American Romanticism, that occurred from 1830 – 1865. It was actually caused by Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper. For Americans, “it was a time of excitement over human possibilities, and of individual ego. American writers didn’t know what “America” could possibly mean in terms of literature, which was American and not British. It questioned their identity and place in society, creatively” (Woodlief). It was characterized by an interest in nature, and the significance of the individual’s expression on emotion and …show more content…

He was a descendent of the Puritan ancestors in the Salem witch trials. His last name was actually “Hathorne”, but he later added in the “w”. His father died when he was four due to a yellow fever. His uncle helped financed his college education at Bowdoin College. He stated, “I do not want to be a doctor and live by men's diseases, nor a minister to live by their sins, nor a lawyer and live by their quarrels. So, I don't see that there is anything left for me but to be an author.” He wrote his first novel, Fanshawe – published in 1828 anonymously, and turned out unsuccessful. He later married Sophia Peabody; they moved to Concord, Massachusetts and had three children. When he returned to Salem, he dedicated himself in writing The Scarlet Letter; he worked on the novel with determination. Later on, he also wrote The Blithedale Romance. After he returned to Concord, he went on to travel and live in France and Italy. He returned to Wayside, just before the Civil War started and published “Chiefly About War Matters”. He passed away on May 19, 1864, in Plymouth, New Hampshire, due to suffering severe bouts of dementia. By that time, his work The Dolliver Romance was published. He was buried in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Concord,

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