Innocence
Lexi Norton
oso foreign
Ryane Overlien
arricapri
Wiki User
∙ 6y agoImagination
Breanna Torres
Idealism
Trinity Sanders
Wiki User
∙ 11y agoromance
Puritans were very minimalist and always wore black. Romantics were extravagant and colourful. Romantics liked art and poetry whereas puritans opposed it.
The dawning of a new era of freedom, equality, and brotherhood it what it represented to many Romantics.
Reasonreason
inner feelings
the value of the individual
IdealismYou're welcome :)
Fun.
The Romantics had a wonderful view on the world and it's value. These Romantics valued love and emotion in the world.
subjectivity; objectivity
Romantics in the 1700s believed in the power of emotion, individualism, nature, and the supernatural. They valued personal experience over reason and sought to evoke strong emotions and connect with the natural world in their art and writing. Romanticism was a reaction against the rationalism and industrialization of the Enlightenment period.
Romantic ideas centered around art as inspiration, the spiritual and aesthetic dimension of nature, and metaphors of organic growth. Art, rather than science, Romantics argued, could best express universal truth. The Romantics underscored the importance of expressive art for the individual and society.
Franklin valued individualism; Winthrop valued the submission of individual will to the good of the community.
Romantics believed that reason, logic, and science were overvalued by society. They felt that these aspects of human existence tended to suppress emotion, imagination, and connection to nature, which they viewed as essential for a fulfilled and enriched life.
Fast Romantics was created in 2007.
Romantics Anonymous was created in 2010.
The Romantics emphasized feelings and imagination as sources of knowing. They valued intuition, emotions, individualism, and nature, believing that these elements were essential in understanding the world and human experiences. Romantic poets and artists often explored themes of intense emotion, awe of nature, and the power of the individual imagination.
overturning social and literary conventions to create new freedoms.