Honestly, what does it matter. Here I have just spent hours of my
life pouring out my honest thought process while trying to study and better
understand realism and romanticism, and now I need to close it up. As I sit
here trying to compose my thoughts I can't help but wonder, why does it matter.
Why does it matter that I understand what realism and romanticism is? Why does
it matter that I try to explain what it is to my readers? Why does it matter
that the two styles of writing don't exist without the other? Why does it
matter that the meaning of such styles would be the same with or without the
other style? Why does it matter?
I don't think the point of realism and romanticism was to ever
include the theory that they can't exist without each other. I am confident in
saying it is just my theory; however, it is a theory that I created
therefore it is valuable. Even if it is just valuable to me, it still
matters.
Realism in "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" is
obvious. Ambrose Bierce is known for being a realist author, and I think he
made a statement about what realism actually is through this story. As readers
we see that realism is the shell that covers romanticism. I have said it
several times and I will stand by this forever. Realism and romanticism cannot
exist without each other. Realism; however, allows a reader to know what the
picture looks like. It gives us a glimpse into what is there. We know what the
story is about and what the big picture looks like. Whereas romanticism is the
zoom on that lens. Romanticism is much more than just looking at the flowery
language used to describe the story. It gives us the chance to look beyond the
surface and recognize what the story is truly about.
That being said, the meaning of "An Occurrence at Owl Creek
Bridge" has two. The first meaning being one about the lesson or moral of
the story. I think the meaning is the ability to change our fatality. Peyton
was a man with dignity; he knew he was going to die, but he died in a manner
that made him feel like he was dying the way he deserved. I think this sends a
message of respect yourself enough to the point of when you are at a point in
your life and you have no other choice in life but to accept that things can't
be changed. You need to respect yourself enough to decide how you will be defeated,
even if being defeated is unavoidable. Bierce shows this message through the
actions Peyton takes throughout his journey to the end of his life. I am pretty
confident that the entire story is a dream in Peyton's mind, and I am also
pretty sure it was his way of keeping his dignity to decide to fight to the
very last minute.
The second meaning or message that I gained through my study of
this story is the idea that realism and romanticism are surrounding elements in
our lives. Realism represents our entire life. It represents the big picture,
from start to finish. Romanticism is everything that happens within our lives.
Romanticism is the meat, the middle. Without romanticism in our lives we
wouldn't have realism and vice versa. I think this was an underlying message
that Bierce was making while using the two styles together. They work together
because they are meant to be together.
So the end question, why does it matter? It matters because it is
your life. While romanticism and realism are not the terms you will use to
describe your actual life in essence all that romanticism and realism encompass
is what happens in our lives. With that comes what I think Bierce was actually
trying to say with his story; hold to your dignity and live your life the way
want to.
I have really enjoyed dissecting these terms and I really have
learned a lot that I know will help me throughout my future...and I hope you
did too!
Thanks for reading!
-Staci Browning
