Term
How does studying the portrayal of love over time enhance one's understanding of humanity. (2 answers) |
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Definition
1. The study of Love in all its forms (eros, agape, and platonic love) illustrates a distinction in types of love that has captured the attention of artists.
2. The conept of eros or romantic love has developed over time, and reflects changes in society's norms for marriage. |
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Term
What is the difference between a myth and a monomyth? |
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Definition
A monomyth is a myth that is shared between many cultures, while a myth is a story particular to a culture. |
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Term
How does the visual art and architecture of Greece and Rome differ? |
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Definition
Much of the sculpture and architecture in Greece was focused on honoring deities. Rome valvued deities, but also used art to glorify the Roman Empire. |
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Term
What would have been a cultural exchange and diversity in the classical Period? |
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Definition
The travelers along the silk Road brought Manichaeism, Daosim, and Buddhism to Europe |
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Term
How does humanism relate to individualism? |
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Definition
Humanism emphasizes individual development towards an ideal. |
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Term
How does art from the Renaissance illustrate cultural exchange and diversity? (2 answers) |
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Definition
Renaissance artists such as the glassmakers in Italy received inspiration from glassware from the Muslim artisans.
Carved ivory from Africa was featured in the homes of European royalty during the renaissance. |
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Term
Which philosophical approach required direct observation and experimentation for proof? |
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Definition
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Term
How does the Enlightenment focus on order and clarity affect Classical Music? |
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Definition
Classical Music became more homophonic and lyrical. |
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Term
How did slave narratives sucha s athe interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano affect cultural exchange and diversity within the Enlightenment period? |
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Definition
Slave narrative confirmed anti-abolitionist viewpoints of enslaved Africans. |
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Term
How does the Neoclassical Period influence our contemporary culture? (2 answers) |
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Definition
Classical music from the Neoclassical period continues to be performed today including a symbolic performance of Beethoven in front of the Brandenburg gate.
Contemporary political satire shows like the Daily Show reflect the use of political satire in the Neoclassical period. |
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Term
What was the common emphasis displayed by artists across a spectrum of the disciplines during the Romantic Era? |
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Definition
Dramatic action and emotions appeared in various art forms from music to painting. |
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Term
What is true about the excerpt from William Blake's "London"?
I wander thro' each charter'd street,
Near where the charter'd Thames does flow
and mark in every face I meet
Marks of weakness, marks of woe |
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Definition
City Dwellers in the poem display the negative impacts of industrialization and urbanization. |
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Term
How does Chopin's Nocturne Opus 27 Number 1 display characteristics of Romantic period music? |
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Definition
The piece has drastic tempo changes and shifts in mood that evokes strong changes in emotion. |
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Term
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Definition
1. Napolean commissioned the painting as a piece of propaganda hiding the truth of his lack of compassion for the dying.
2. Exoticism is shown in the location and the costumes of the people. |
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Term
How did the people of the Romantic period participagte in Cultural Exchange? (2 answers) |
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Definition
1. They read literature which portrayed exotic cultures from the East, Middle East, and North Africa.
2. American Artists such as George Caitlin produced two major collections of paintings of Native Americans. |
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Term
How did the art world react to the negative impacts of the Industrial Revolution? |
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Definition
Social progressives created works of art that depicted the ill health and dangerous living conditions of the poor. |
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Term
How did Darwin's On the Orgin of Species affect the humanities? |
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Definition
Darwin's theory of natural selection inspired the movement of literary Naturalism which aimed to show humans as the product of their environments and heredity. |
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Term
How do the 200 human figures sculpted in bronze on the Gates of Hell by Augueste Rodin reflect the themes of the Realist period? |
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Definition
The human figures display a variety of human emotions |
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Term
What is a true statement about the theme of heroism? |
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Definition
Contemporary culture continues to be fascinated by heroes including the epic hero and romantic hero. |
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Term
The Muses represent which classical period theme? |
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Definition
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Term
What are 2 statements that are ture about music from the Classical Period? |
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Definition
1. Classical philosophers applied themes of balance to music discovering ratios responsible for harmonies.
2. Music from ancient Greece and Rome shares qualities fround in the Middle Eastern tradition of music. |
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Term
What is a true statement about the Roman Republic? |
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Definition
The Roman Republic was a representative government with a separation of powers. |
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Term
How did humanism contribute to the Age of Exploration? |
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Definition
Humanism emphasized reason and scientific thinking which helped to improve the design of ships and navigation for REnaissance explorers. |
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Term
How did the printing press affect cultural exhange within the Renaissance? |
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Definition
The printing press allowed for maps, texts and musical scores to be printed and distributed facilitating cultural exchange |
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Term
How did the 35 volume Encyclopedie by Diderot and d'Alembert reflect the values of the Enlightenment? |
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Definition
The large work facilitated the organization and preservation of human knowledge. |
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Term
What accounts for the popularity of nonfiction genres such as letters, travel narratives, essays during the Enlightenment? |
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Definition
Non-Fiction allowed the reader to gain knowledge of the real-world experience of travelers and wrestle with philosophical ideas. |
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Term
What term represents the view that is the goal of civilized societies to convey enlightenment and civilization to the more primitive cultures? |
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Definition
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Term
What are two critical differences between the philosophers of the Enlightenment period and the philosophers of the Romantic Period. |
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Definition
1. Application of empiricism and rationality to nature.
2. Importance of subjective experience. |
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Term
What was a popular American patriotic song that had its beginning in the Romantic period? |
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Definition
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Term
What were some of the advances in science during the 19th Century that impacted artistic disciplines during the realist period? (2 answers) |
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Definition
1. the invention of photography
2. The airplane |
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Term
Name the Major themes for the Classical Period: |
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Definition
1. Balance
2. Truth/Reason
3.Democracy/Republic
4. Polytheism
5. Humanism |
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Term
Name the Major themes for the Renaissance Period: |
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Definition
1. Rebirth of Classicism
2. Humanism
3. Rationalism/Scientific Expansion
4. Expansion of the University System
5. Individualism/Self-fashioning
6. Reformation |
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Term
Name the major themes of
Neoclassical & The Enlightenment Period: |
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Definition
1. Skepticism
2.Rationalism
3. Empiricism
4. Logic
5. Progress
6.Revolution
7.Order
8.Clarity
9.Deism
10. Classicism |
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Term
Name the Major themes for the Romantic Period: |
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Definition
1. Nationalism
2. Exoticism
3. Revolution
4. Heroism
5.Passion
6. Individualism, Imagination & Genius
7. Naturalism
8. Mysticism and the Occult |
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Term
Name the major themes for the Realist Period: |
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Definition
1. Darwinism
2. Industrialization
3. Individualism
4. Age of Doubt |
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Term
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Definition
Greatest Good for the greatest number of people |
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Term
Leonardi De Vinci's Painting
The Last Supper |
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Definition
Linear Perspective to create the illusion of depth on a flat surface |
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Term
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Definition
It is longer and incorporated Choral movements |
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Term
Darwin's writings & theories of evolution -Human existence |
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Definition
Humans only existed for 6000 years |
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Term
The Theme of Renaissance Humanism - Contempory Life |
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Definition
High value is placed on Human rights, education, and promoting social rights. |
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Term
What is an aesthic experience? |
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Definition
A feeling of pleasure that justifies itself |
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Term
What were two themes of the "DollHouse"
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Definition
1. Individual rejection of social convention
2. the rights of women |
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Term
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Definition
Secular songs married the song of music to written words. |
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Term
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Definition
Passionate Love favored by Greek Poets |
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Term
How did philosopher Rousseau's concept of "noble savage" set the stage for Enlightenment debates of teh corruption & evils of slavery? |
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Definition
He argued that slavery was the most destructive evil of mankind & should be immediatedly ended throughout the world. |
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Term
How did the devolpment of democracy impact the classical period? |
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Definition
the democratic republic emerged as an alternative to tyrannical forms of government. |
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Term
How did the writings of romatic poets & novelists impact society during the romantic period? |
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Definition
They demonstrated the importance of subjects experience and emotion. |
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Term
How does Leo Tolstoy's work War & Peace represent realist Themes? |
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Definition
It emphasizes individual characters facing true-to-life situations. |
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Term
How does the contemporary idea of progress relate to the Enlightenment idea of progress? |
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Definition
Contemporary society places great emphasis on an individual's education, which parallels the Enlightenment view that the pursuit of knowledge was a form of moral progress. |
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Term
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Definition
Non-sexual love emphasized by the Ancient Greeks |
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Term
What does Classicism refer to as used in the term neoclassicism? |
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Definition
Promoting a Roman style checks and balances government. |
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Term
What is the significance of the Kouros in terms of cultural exchange during the classical period? |
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Definition
It is a Greek refinement of the Egyptian figural sculpture, was also used by wealthy Greeks. |
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Term
What was the effect of rationalism during the Renaissance? |
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Definition
Rationalism supplied a new perspective for people to think about science & nature instead of relying on superstitious or religious explanations for natural phenomena. |
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Term
What political ideology arose in the romantic period? |
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Definition
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Term
What two beliefs are characteristic of the Renaissance? |
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Definition
Scientific inquiry will increase human knowlege of the world.
Classical literary & Philosophical works provide resources for learning and living. |
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Term
Why is Sappho's classical poem "A lament for Adonis" considered lyrical poetry? |
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Definition
It expresses feelings of romantic love |
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Term
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Definition
The study of Humanities seeks to understand what humans believe and why.
refers to humans and their culture. |
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Term
During the classical period, the Greeks borrowed what from the Phoenicians? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
a life-like stance in which the figure's weight rest on one leg. |
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Term
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Definition
a belief in multiple gods |
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Term
What were three pieces to Aristotle's system of argument? |
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Definition
ethos, pathos, and logos. |
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Term
Plato's Allegory of the Cave theory: |
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Definition
Most men live in ignorance and can only come to see the truth in the world around them through difficult and often painful reflection. |
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Term
Plays included what 3 types: |
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Definition
1. tragedy
2. Comedy
3. tragicomedy |
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Term
What was the Golden Mean? |
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Definition
Aristotle's term for the desirable middle between two extremes, between excess and inadequacy. |
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Term
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Definition
Goddesses of inspiration for literature, art, and Science |
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Term
What was the Spanish "Golden Age" |
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Definition
resulted from Spain's acquistition of gold and silver from the Americas. |
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Term
What is a Renaissance Man? |
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Definition
a person who has broad knowledge and versatile talents spanning from many intellectual and artistic disciplines. |
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Term
What was Martin Luther's ninety five Theses known for? |
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Definition
Challenged the doctrine of the catholic church. Martin Luther was later excommunicated from the Catholic Church and he started the Luthern church. |
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Term
The Prince, by Machiavelli defended the principle that: |
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Definition
the ends justify the means |
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Term
What was forbidden to act during Shakespeare's time? |
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Definition
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Term
Shakespearean sonnet was divided into ______ quatrains and a rhyming couplet. |
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Definition
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Term
A sonnet contained how many lines? |
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Definition
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Term
What were two innovations in Renaissance Art that were widespread: |
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Definition
1. Use of oil painting as a medium
2. development of mathematical or linear perspective in painting. |
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Term
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Definition
The process of fashioning one's individual sense of self and public persona according to a set of socially acceptable standards. |
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Term
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Definition
The creation of the illusion of depth through gradations of light and shade |
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Term
What is aerial perspective? |
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Definition
The creation of the illusion of distance by reducing color saturation, value contrast, and detail in order to imply the natural haziness between a viewer and distant objects. |
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Term
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Definition
That which separates one unique person from another, as well as the social and philosophical viewpoint that celebrates that difference. |
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Term
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Definition
The belief that God created the natural laws that govern nature but does not directly intervene or interfere in any way |
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Term
What were three prominent philosophical movements during the Enlightenment period: |
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Definition
1. rationalism
2. empiricism
3. skepticism |
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Term
Who is famous for saying " I think therefore I am" |
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Definition
Rene Descartes, a french philosopher |
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Term
Which philosopher focused on duty-driven ethics |
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Definition
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Term
Who was repsonisble for creating the Encyclopedia? |
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Definition
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Term
What was Alexander Pope's "The rape of the Lock" about? |
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Definition
Pokes fun at the upper class's preoccupation with appearance rather than such virtues as humor and grace
is a mock-epic poem, where a card game amongst the wealthy is related to a battle and a woman values her vanity over good humor. |
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Term
In Voltaire's Candide, Candide questions _____and struggles with __________ |
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Definition
questions optimism
and struggles with keeping his view of humanity positive |
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Term
Name at least 3 Romantic Period authors: |
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Definition
1. William Wordsworth
2. Samuel Taylor Coleridge
3. Percy Bysshe Shelley
4. John Keats
5. Lord Byron
6. William Blake |
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Term
Who is considered to be the Father of American Literature? |
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Definition
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Term
Who wrote the novel "Little Women"? |
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Definition
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Term
Mary Shelly, gothic author, was famous for what work? |
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Definition
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Term
Who wrote the legend of Sleepy Hollow? |
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Definition
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Term
What three things did Romantic artists stress? |
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Definition
1. passion
2. emotion
3. exotic settings with dramatic action |
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Term
Name 3 Romantic Composers: |
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Definition
1. Ludwig Van Beethoven
2. Johannes Brahms
3. Hector Berlioz
4. Franz Schubert
5. Frederic Chopin
6. Richard Wagner |
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Term
What is transcendentalism? |
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Definition
Philosophical movement during the Romantic era tht emphasized feeling over reason and the role of the individual finding an intuitive relation to the universe through solitude amid nature. |
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Term
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Definition
A sterotypical character of a Romantic novel: an exceptional and figted loner, perhaps misunderstood, who was driven to follow personal passion rather than traditional societal expectations. |
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Term
What was the type of painting called that was founded on inspiration from the Japanese? |
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Definition
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Term
What was John Stuart Mill known for? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
believes in the rights of the individual as long as it does not interfere with happiness and welfare of the society as a whole. |
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Term
Who wrote The adventures of Huckeberry Finn? |
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Definition
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Term
Composer John Philip Sousa spearheaded the music style that came to be known as ______ |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Art movement of teh late 19th Century that emplasized simplified composition and the effect of light and color to capture a painter's visual impression |
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