Home Literary Studies 7 Romanticism and Social Reform
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

7 Romanticism and Social Reform

  • Sandra Harbert Petrulionis
Become an author with De Gruyter Brill
Handbook of American Romanticism
This chapter is in the book Handbook of American Romanticism

Abstract

Social reform is one of the most defining characteristics of American literary Romanticism and is essential to any consideration of this field. The reform impulse in the Americas has been a prevalent literary theme since the writings of Spanish and French missionaries, Quakers, Puritans, and others in the so-called “new world.” By the turn of the nineteenth century, an empowering inheritance of both the Second Great Awakening and Enlightenment-era thinking was a belief in the individual’s ability to agitate for and effect social reform. Eighteenth and nineteenth-century reform movements in Great Britain and Europe also fostered parallel efforts in the early American Republic. This chapter considers the social reform writings that are central to the Romantic era in America, from roughly the 1830s to the start of the Civil War in 1861. American authors during these years addressed profoundly important causes, from antislavery to the rights of women and native peoples, to prisons and mental institutions, to temperance and other health reforms. Diverse authors writing across equally diverse genres identified reform as both a literary theme and a propaganda tool, framing it as necessary in order for the young American nation to fulfill its founding promises of “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” for all.

Abstract

Social reform is one of the most defining characteristics of American literary Romanticism and is essential to any consideration of this field. The reform impulse in the Americas has been a prevalent literary theme since the writings of Spanish and French missionaries, Quakers, Puritans, and others in the so-called “new world.” By the turn of the nineteenth century, an empowering inheritance of both the Second Great Awakening and Enlightenment-era thinking was a belief in the individual’s ability to agitate for and effect social reform. Eighteenth and nineteenth-century reform movements in Great Britain and Europe also fostered parallel efforts in the early American Republic. This chapter considers the social reform writings that are central to the Romantic era in America, from roughly the 1830s to the start of the Civil War in 1861. American authors during these years addressed profoundly important causes, from antislavery to the rights of women and native peoples, to prisons and mental institutions, to temperance and other health reforms. Diverse authors writing across equally diverse genres identified reform as both a literary theme and a propaganda tool, framing it as necessary in order for the young American nation to fulfill its founding promises of “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” for all.

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. The Editors’ Preface V
  3. Contents VII
  4. 0 Introduction 1
  5. Part I: Definitions, Backgrounds, Contexts
  6. 1 Antebellum Period and Romanticism: Definitions and Demarcations 9
  7. 2 Antebellum Literary Culture: The Institutions of Romanticism 33
  8. 3 Transnational Dimensions of Romanticism 55
  9. 4 American Romanticism and Religion 81
  10. 5 Romanticism and European Philosophy, or “Idealism As It Appears in 1842” 119
  11. Part II: Intellectual, Spiritual, and Political Debates
  12. 6 Romanticism and Democracy 143
  13. 7 Romanticism and Social Reform 163
  14. 8 American Romanticism and Esotericism 185
  15. 9 America as Interior Space: Artificial Landscapes and the Modernization of Literature in Edgar Allan Poe’s Short Fiction 207
  16. Part III: Contestations of Authorship and Genre
  17. 10 Authorship as Profession and the Uses of Genre in Antebellum America 229
  18. 11 Poet-Prophets and Seers: American Romanticism, Authorship, and Literary Institutions 249
  19. 12 Life Writing and Romantic Expressivism 269
  20. 13 The Fireside and Sentimental Poets 293
  21. Part IV: Close Readings
  22. 14 Ralph Waldo Emerson’s Nature (1836): American Romantic “Manifesto” 313
  23. 15 Woman in the Nineteenth Century (1845): Romanticism and (Proto)Feminism 335
  24. 16 The Continuous Creation of Walden 355
  25. 17 Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick (1851) 375
  26. 18 Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter (1850) and the Historical Imagination in American Romanticism 389
  27. 19 Romanticism and History: Göttingen and George Bancroft’s History of the United States (1834) 415
  28. 20 Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852) and the Politics of Sentimentalism 435
  29. 21 Myth and Mythmaking in the Douglass Circle 453
  30. 22 “The Soul Selects Her Own Society”: Emily Dickinson’s Poetry and the Creation of the Self 477
  31. 23 The Great Psalm of the Republic: Walt Whitman’s Democratic Poetics 495
  32. Part V: Reception Histories
  33. 24 Transcendentalist Legacies in American Philosophy 517
  34. 25 Rethinking Gender in Antebellum American Literature 537
  35. 26 “In the Woods We Return to Reason and Faith”: American Romanticism, Environmentalism, and Seeker Spirituality 561
  36. Index of Names 579
  37. Index of Subjects 589
  38. List of Contributors 599
Downloaded on 24.1.2026 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110592238-008/html
Scroll to top button