Chapter 20: Europe and America: 1800-1870 Flashcards

1
Q

The year 1848 was a pivotal one

A

revolutions in Italy, France, Germany, Denmark, the Habsburg Empire, parts of Poland, Belgium, the Danube States (Romania), and Ireland.

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2
Q

first railway

A

1825 between Stockton and Darlington England

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3
Q

1829- London

A

first British police force established by Sir Robert Peel, cops were called bobbies after their founder

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4
Q

Haussmann Plan

A

urbanization plan for Paris,

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5
Q

casus belli

A

justification for war, namely how secession was seen as treason in the States

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6
Q

Romanticism

A

An intellectual and artistic movement that began in Europe in the late 18th century and emphasized rejection of Classical (and Neo-Classical) forms and attitudes, interest in nature, the individual’s emotions and imagination, and revolt against social and political rules and traditions.

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7
Q

Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel

A

Like Kant, Hegel stressed art’s ability to reconcile and make sense of opposites—to provide a synthesis of the two opposing components of human existence, called thesis (an idea or pattern of behavior) and antithesis (the direct opposite).

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8
Q

Arthur Schopenhauer

A

But in his major work, The World as Will and Idea (1819), Arthur Schopenhauer (1788–1860) expressed the belief that people are selfish and rarely rational, and that the sciences and the humanities both create the false impression that the world is a reasonable place.

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9
Q

Karl Marx

A

belief in the inherent evil of capitalism and in the historical inevitability of a proletarian revolution was powerfully expressed in his Communist Manifesto

Marx’s belief that revolution was both unavoidable and necessary was based at least in part on his own observation of working conditions in industrial England, where his friend and fellow Communist Friedrich Engels (1820–1895) had inherited a textile factory

As for styles, the only one appropriate for the class struggle and the new state is Realism, which would be understood by the widest audience.

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10
Q

transitional figures between Neo-Classicism and Romanticism

A

Anne-Louis Girodet-Trioson (1767–1824) and Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres (1780–1867)

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11
Q

Romantic artists

A

prioritized emotions over reason and imagination over realism, but their ways of expressing this point of view differed markedly

Painters turned increasingly to landscape, composers evoked the rustling of leaves in a forest or the noise of a storm, and poets expressed their desire for union with the natural world

artists began to abandon the idealized, remote, and pristine world of Neo-Classical art for graphic images intended to convey the artist’s intense feelings and evoke them in the viewer.

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12
Q

Sturm und Drang (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe as the leader)

A

German for “storm and stress”; the German manifestation of Romanticism, which emphasized originality, imagination, and emotion.

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13
Q

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

A

wrote Faust, did the sad autobiographical type story The Sorrows of Young Werther where the guy committed suicide but in real life he wrote the book,

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14
Q

William Wordsworth (1770–1850) and Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772–1834)

A

usually credited with founding the Romantic movement in English poetry

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15
Q

among the most widely read poems in the English language

A

“The Lamb” is one of 19 poems from Blake’s Songs of Innocence

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16
Q

Percy Bysshe Shelley

A

Prometheus Unbound (1820), in which the means of salvation is the love of human beings for one another.

17
Q

Gothic novel

A

A kind of novel that shares Romantic roots with tales of horror, as in the novels Frankenstein and Dracula.

18
Q

characteristically Romantic attitudes

A

a love of nature, a passionate belief in the freedom of the individual, and a fiery temperament

19
Q

scherzo

A

A fast-moving, lighthearted piece of music (Italian for “joke”).

20
Q

Hector Berlioz

A

the most distinguished French Romantic composer

21
Q

Dies Irae

A

A medieval Latin hymn describing Judgment Day, used in some Roman Catholic requiems for the dead. (Latin for “day of wrath.”)

22
Q

lieder (Schubert)

A

German art songs. (The German word for “songs” [singular lied]).

23
Q

intermezzo (Brahms)

A

In music, an interlude.

24
Q

Frédéric Chopin

A

His concerts created a sensation throughout Europe, while his piano works exploited (if they did not always create) new musical forms like the nocturne—a short piano piece in which an expressive, if often melancholy, melody floats over a murmuring accompaniment. Chopin is characteristically Romantic in his use of music to express his own personal emotions. The structure of works like the 24 preludes of Op. 28 is dictated not by formal considerations but by the feeling of the moment.

mazurkas and polonaises (traditional Polish dances) and Liszt in his Hungarian Rhapsodies.

25
Q

the “Big Five”

A

Russia, a group of five composers—Mussorgsky, Balakirev, Borodin, Cui, and Rimsky-Korsakov

26
Q

bel canto

A

An Italian term for opera that is defined by “beautiful singing.”

27
Q

Gesamtkunstwerk

A

An artistic creation that combines several mediums, such as music, drama, dance, and spectacle, as in the operas of Wagner. (German for “total artwork.”)

28
Q

leitmotiv (wagner)

A

A leading motif; a recurring theme or idea in a literary, artistic, or musical work.

29
Q

Transcendentalism

A

A 19th-century New England literary movement that sought the divine in nature. More generally, the view that there is an order of truth that goes beyond what we can perceive by means of the senses and that it unites the world.

30
Q

heliography

Niépce

A

A 19th-century form of photography in which bitumen, or asphalt residue, is placed on a pewter plate to render the plate sensitive to light.

31
Q

daguerreotype

A

A 19th-century form of photography in which a thin sheet of chemically treated, silver-plated copper is placed in a camera obscura and exposed to a narrow beam of light.