Nicole+Gololobov+RP+Post+4

Source 4:

1. Should art be realistic?

2. "Realism and Realistic Art"

3. Smita Pandit

4. []

5. Found: 27 May 2014, on the internet.

6. Subject: Renaissance, realist art, nature, objectivity. idealism Occasion: Someone wanted to know the difference between different schools of art Audience: Artists, students, historians Purpose: To characterize realist art Tone: Academic, detached

7. Romantic art is described. Then, the traits of realist art, as well as its purpose and famous painters associated with it, are explained.

8. Realist art approaches subjects differently, emphasizing what they really looked like rather than idealizing them.

9. The article is factual, and facts are sometimes persuasive, so I'm convinced.

10. "Realism in the artistic world basically symbolizes the depiction of objects as they exist. This school of art emerged in response to Neoclassicism and Romanticism in art."

"For instance, an artist who follows the Realistic art tradition would never attempt to conceal any flaws in the object or scene he/she is painting."

"Realism in art is all about rejecting idealization."

"Their aim was to depict the daily life with as much accuracy as possible."

Source 5:

1. Should art be realistic?

2. "Realism in Poetry"

3. C. John Holcombe

4. []

5. Found: 28 May 2014 on the internet

6. Subject: Poetry, realism, writers Occasion: Someone really liked realism in poetry. Audience: Poet snobs, history buffs, people Purpose: To define realism as a literary term Speaker: Holcombe, audio book narrator Tone: Academic, laconic

7. Realism, classicism, and romanticism are all styles of writing, but they approach reality and form differently. Realism and naturalism are marked by contemporary settings, mundane events and characters, accuracy in representation, and simpler diction. Most poems don't use realism much, and some don't use it at all.

8. Realism is one style that a poem can be written in.

9. I don't understand modernism and post-modernism, but there's nothing obviously wrong with the parts about realism.

10. "Realism shows the world as it is, Romanticism as the heart tells us it should be, and Classicism as it would be in some ideal but public incarnation."

"mutes or removes the author's commentary"

"employs images in preference to symbols"

"deals with social/political issues of the day"

"focuses on character more than events or plot"

"promotes morality without overt moralizing"

"How can words properly represent reality?"