Please contact Dr. Works (keworks@fsu.eu) for additional help: Submission navigation links for Research Symposium Program Portal WF ‹ Previous submission Next submission › Submission information Submission Number: 203 Submission ID: 9051 Submission UUID: 54be5c1c-0c5a-44ad-99f4-e95f1728b995 Submission URI: /student-research/symposium/research-symposium-program-portal Submission Update: /student-research/symposium/research-symposium-program-portal?token=sgBKjArehCZzqM3Qpn6BMRXVyMUg0QyRNmKg7CR2Vuw Created: Fri, 01/30/2026 - 09:04 AM Completed: Fri, 01/30/2026 - 09:50 AM Changed: Fri, 01/30/2026 - 09:50 AM Remote IP address: 146.201.10.35 Submitted by: Anonymous Language: English Is draft: No Webform: Research Symposium Program Portal WF Submitted to: Student Research Symposium Program Portal Primary Student Contact First Name Primary Student Contact Last Name Pronouns Primary Student Contact FSU Student Email Photo of all individuals presenting this work SDS_headshot.jpg10.84 KB Remove Upload requirementsOne file only.2 MB limit. Major(s) of all individuals presenting this work Bio of all individuals presenting this work I am a high school student at The Collegiate School and dual enrolled at FSU Panama City, pursuing an Associate of Arts degree. I am an aspiring architecture major with interests in art, art history, general history, and mathematics. Poster Title Abstract Romanticism was a complex social movement and period of history, which is associated with the Romantic line of thought that originated during that time and continues today. With mass changes stemming from human discovery, an equally massive backlash tends to follow. Romanticism is one of these backlashes. Best known for its explosive expansion around the Industrial Revolution, Romanticism became the name for those holding beliefs such as an affinity for nature and a subsequent opposition to the evolution of technology. Many experts, such as Edwin Berry Bergum and Edward F. Kravitt, have attempted to define Romanticism, but have been unable to encompass all of its facets, given the flexible outlines of Romantic thought, undeterminable chronical start to the movement, and indiscernible ending to the movement (if one has yet to, or could, occur). Without a widely recognized definition of Romanticism, the movement must be considered by the works that uphold its legacy. The arts became an outlet for Romantics, with authors like Jane Austen and Mary Shelly, musicians like Vaughan Williams, and artists like Ivan Aivazovsky, utilizing their passions to create pieces representing their beliefs. It is the intention of this paper to examine the correlation between Romanticism as an outlet to express belief in the nineteenth century, and the subsequent increase of Romantic art at the time. Specifically, the goal is to use these findings to aid the understanding of human expression and how it can be identified, and therefore further studied as the wonderous curiosity that it is. Research Mentor Name Research Mentor's College (or High School) Research Mentor's Department (or Subject) Research Mentor's Email Additional Research Mentor(s) Co-presenter(s) Keywords Poster Session/Number Work Complete Exploratory (the research question has been identified and design of approach is outlined) Presentation Modality Face to Face Poster session Synchronous Online Presentation Asynchronous Online Presentation Poster PDF Upload Upload requirementsOne file only.100 MB limit. Poster Thumbnail Please take a screenshot of your poster to be a thumbnail on your Symposium Program Profile. Upload Upload requirementsOne file only.2 MB limit. I will be printing my poster CAPTCHA What code is in the image? Enter the characters shown in the image. This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions. Save Leave this field blank