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Cultural Values As A Mirror Of French Literature

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 5.05
  Total Words: 1263
  Total Characters: 6754
  Number of Sentences: 66


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 19.14
  Characters per Words: 5.35


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 50.63
  Fog Scale Level: 14.43
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 10.95  

Cultural Values as a Mirror of French Literature

     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...

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