Unit 4: La literatura romántica, realista y naturalista

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50 Terms

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Romanticism (Romanticismo)

A 19th-century literary and cultural movement that rejects fixed, “universal” artistic rules and centers emotion, inner experience, imagination, and the individual’s truth over social norms.

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Neoclassicism (Neoclasicismo)

An earlier aesthetic that valued reason, balance, and adherence to established artistic rules—ideas Romanticism reacts against.

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Subjectivity

A focus on personal, emotional perspective in which the speaker’s inner life shapes the text’s meaning.

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Individualism

A Romantic emphasis on the exceptional “I” (often rebellious or marginal) whose desires and conflicts dominate the work.

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Yearning for freedom (Ansia de libertad)

Romantic rejection of social, moral, and artistic limits, defending freedom of expression and breaking traditional literary norms.

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Imagination and the non-rational

A Romantic openness to what exceeds reason, including mystery, intense emotion, and experiences that cannot be explained logically.

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Supernatural

A frequent Romantic element (apparitions, mystery, the uncanny) used to intensify atmosphere and explore what lies beyond rational explanation.

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Objective correlative (Correlato objetivo)

A strategy in which concrete images (often from nature) function as an external equivalent for an internal emotion, making feelings visible and tangible.

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Idealization

A Romantic tendency to long for an “absolute” (perfect love, beauty, or freedom), often imagining it as attainable.

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Disillusionment (Desengaño)

The painful recognition that reality frustrates Romantic ideals, producing loss, resignation, or bitterness.

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Lyrical voice (Voz lírica)

The speaking presence in a poem whose tone, emotion, and perspective guide the reader’s interpretation.

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Apostrophe (Apóstrofe)

Direct address to a “you” (a person, nature, death, the night, etc.) that heightens emotional intensity.

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Anaphora (Anáfora)

Repetition of the same word(s) at the beginning of successive lines or clauses, creating insistence or obsession.

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Parallelism (Paralelismo)

Use of repeated or mirrored grammatical structures to reinforce an idea and produce rhythmic, logical emphasis.

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Antithesis / Contrast (Antítesis)

A device that stages oppositions (ideal vs. reality, dream vs. waking, life vs. death) to dramatize Romantic conflict.

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Natural symbols

Romantic images (storm, sea, wind, night, ruins) that function as emotional meaning—not mere scenery.

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Metaphor

A figure of speech that equates one thing with another to suggest deeper meaning indirectly, central to Romantic symbolism.

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Elegiac tone

A mournful, reflective tone associated with loss; in Romantic poetry it often signals resignation rather than rage.

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Post-Romanticism (Posromanticismo)

A later Romantic tendency (e.g., Bécquer) marked by more intimate, contained emotion rather than theatrical grandiosity.

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“Rima LIII” (Bécquer)

A post-Romantic poem about lost love and the irreversibility of the past, built through repetition, parallelism, and nature imagery.

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“Volverán” vs. “no volverán”

The structural contrast in “Rima LIII” that opposes nature’s cyclical return to the impossibility of repeating the same love.

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Swallows (Golondrinas) in “Rima LIII”

A symbol of return/renewal used to emphasize what does not return: the unique, irrecoverable experience of the past love.

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Honeysuckle (Madreselvas) in “Rima LIII”

A nature image tied to cyclical return that supports the poem’s argument: nature repeats, but a particular love does not.

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The sublime (Lo sublime)

An emotion combining awe and fear before overwhelming greatness; not “pretty” or calm, but vast and unsettling.

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“En una tempestad” (Heredia)

A Romantic poem in which a storm becomes an encounter with the sublime and can suggest political chaos, oppression, and longing for freedom.

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Personification of nature

Giving nature human will or action (the storm “acts”), making it a powerful agent that shapes the speaker’s experience.

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Alliteration (Aliteración)

Repetition of consonant sounds to imitate or intensify effects (e.g., the roar of wind), reinforcing rhythm and violence in storm imagery.

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Allegory (Alegoría)

An extended metaphor in which a scene (like a storm) represents broader conflicts, such as inner turmoil or social/political struggle.

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Romantic drama (Drama romántico)

A theatrical form that favors passionate conflict, striking scenes, extreme characters, and freedom of structure over classical restraint.

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Breaking the three unities

A Romantic drama practice that rejects strict unity of time, place, and action, allowing shifting settings and dynamic plot movement.

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Don Juan Tenorio (Zorrilla)

A Romantic reworking of the Don Juan myth that explores transgression, honor, guilt, and the possibility of moral/spiritual transformation.

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Romantic hero

An exceptional, excessive, conflicted figure who defies norms and lives at the limit; “heroic” in intensity rather than morality.

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Doña Inés

A character often associated with Romantic idealization and spirituality whose dramatic function centers the theme of Don Juan’s redemption.

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Honor code (Honra)

Social reputation and public morality; in Romantic theater it clashes with inner guilt, desire, and the question of salvation.

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Redemption (Redención)

The possibility that a morally guilty individual can transform and be saved—central to the moral arc of Don Juan Tenorio.

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Stage directions (Acotaciones)

Non-dialogue theatrical notes that shape interpretation by indicating actions, tone, setting, and dramatic effects.

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Realism (Realismo)

A 19th-century movement that shifts focus from the exceptional self to everyday life and the social mechanisms that shape individuals.

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Verisimilitude (Verosimilitud)

A realistic effect created through plausible events and concrete detail, making the narrative feel credible and socially grounded.

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Positivism (Positivismo)

A 19th-century intellectual climate emphasizing observable facts and “scientific” thinking, influencing Realism’s social focus.

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Determinism (Determinismo)

The idea that human lives are strongly conditioned by external forces (class, environment, institutions); intensified in Naturalism.

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Omniscient third-person narrator

A common Realist narrator who knows broadly (sometimes commenting), allowing analysis of distance, judgment, and access to characters’ minds.

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Social criticism

A Realist/Naturalist goal of exposing poverty, inequality, hypocrisy, or lack of opportunity as products of social structures.

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Significant detail

A concrete detail that does more than decorate: it reveals class, values, power relations, or a social conflict.

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Naturalism (Naturalismo)

An intensified Realism that portrays harsh conditions and emphasizes how environment and heredity can restrict or destroy human choice.

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Darwinism (influence)

A 19th-century scientific framework (alongside determinism) that helps shape Naturalism’s focus on forces beyond individual control.

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“Las medias rojas” (Pardo Bazán)

A Naturalist short story in which a pair of red stockings becomes a material symbol that exposes poverty, patriarchal control, and violence.

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Ildara

The young woman in “Las medias rojas” whose desire for change and autonomy collides with poverty and domestic patriarchy.

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Clodio

Ildara’s father in “Las medias rojas,” who interprets her stockings as a threat to control and responds through violence and domination.

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“¡Adiós, Cordera!” (Clarín)

A Realist story where the cow “Cordera” becomes an emotional and social symbol of rural life, vulnerability, and loss under modern change.

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Train as a symbol of modernity/progress

In “¡Adiós, Cordera!” the train represents modernization and economic logic, raising the question of “progress for whom” and who pays its cost.

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