Key Themes Of Individualism And Nature In The American Romantic Movement

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The American Romantic movement was a diverse literary movement with a range of authors, including Emerson, Thoreau, Poe, and Hawthorne. Writers of this period of time were witness to great growth. The stories of these writers show an enormous shift in the attitude of many Americans. American romanticism writers were fairly outspoken in their support of human rights. Romantics focused on themes of individualism and nature in their writings.

Emerson Ralph Waldo Emerson was a writer in the American Romanticism movement. Key ideas of his work include individualism, nonconformity, and transcendentalism. The key idea of individualism is that you should rely on yourself and trust yourself as well as make your own decisions outside of religions …show more content…

Self-reliance is the belief that you should rely on your own resources and beliefs rather than others. Minimalism is the belief that you should live your life as simply as possible by living with only the things you really need. Some things that I could take away from Thoreau’s work and apply to my life are the idea of self-reliance. Each person should live according to their own resources and beliefs because what may work for one person may not work for another. Each person is living in a different situation and must live accordingly. I use the main aspects of self-reliance on a daily basis in order to do what is best for …show more content…

He supported these claims through use of stylistic elements, evidence and reasoning. In Walden Thoreau states, “....he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away.” This is stating that the man is being himself rather than acting like other people or following other people’s beliefs. In Civil Disobedience Thoreau started his essay by agreeing with the statement, “That the government is best which governs least.” His agreeance with the statement starts off the essay by showing a general distaste for the government. He then continues, “I should like to see it acted up more rapidly and systematically.” This shows how Thoreau believes that the government should not govern and rather people should be disobedient to the government. He later says, “Men generally, under such a government as this, think that they ought to wait until they have persuaded the majority to alter them. They think that, if they should resist, the remedy would be worse than the evil.” Here Thoreau is stating that while he believes people should take action the majority believes that if they take action it will be worse. Thoreau’s use of stylistic elements improve his stance by giving clear statements as to what he thinks and relating it back to the general

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