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An Overview of British Literature. Literature is the question minus the answer. ~Roland Barthes. Anglo-Saxon Literature. strong belief in fate religious and pagan subjects heroic warriors who prevail in battle literature - expresses religious faith - gives moral instruction
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An Overview of British Literature Literature is the question minus the answer. ~Roland Barthes
Anglo-Saxon Literature • strong belief in fate • religious and pagan subjects • heroic warriors who prevail in battle • literature - expresses religious faith - gives moral instruction • oral tradition - poetry
Middle English Literature • morality plays - instructed the illiterate masses in morals and entertained • mystery plays – representations of Bible stories • miracle plays - re-enacted miraculous interventions by the saints into the lives of ordinary people • romances - stories about the adventures of knights goes on quests - the chivalric code of honor – ‘courtly love’
Geoffrey Chaucer Canterbury Tales- 1483
When fair April with his showers sweet,Has pierced the drought of March to the root's feetAnd bathed each vein in liquid of such power,Its strength creates the newly springing flower;When the West Wind too, with his sweet breath,Has breathed new life - in every copse and heath -Into each tender shoot, and the young sunFrom Aries moves to Taurus on his run,And those small birds begin their melody,(The ones who 'sleep` all night with open eye,)Then nature stirs them up to such a pitchThat folk all long to go on pilgrimageAnd wandering travellers tread new shores, strange strands,Seek out far shrines, renowned in many lands,And specially from every shire's endOf England to Canterbury they wendThe holy blessed martyr there to seek,Who has brought health to them when they were sick.
Elizabethan Age • Elizabeth I (1558- 1603) – the last Tudor monarch • the golden age – prosperity, stability and peace • expeditions – settlement of America • the printing press • The Globe
English Renaissance • world view shifts from religion and after life to one stressing the human life on earth – themes: - development of human potential - aspects of love Sonnets : Edmund Spenser, Sir Philip Sidney Metaphysical poetry: John Donne Drama: Christopher Marlowe, William Shakespeare
William Shakespeare Comedies All's Well That Ends Well As You Like It The Comedy of Errors Cymbeline Love's Labours Lost Much Ado About Nothing The Taming of the Shrew The Tempest Twelfth Night The Merry Wives of Windsor The Merchant of Venice A Midsummer Night's Dream Two Gentlemen of Verona Winter's Tale Sonnets Historical plays King John Richard II, III Henry IV, V, VI, VIII
Tragedies Antony and Cleopatra Romeo and Juliet Hamlet (1600)Julius Caesar King Lear Macbeth Othello
The Restoration after the Civil War (1642-1649) Commonwealth (1649-1653) Protectorate – Oliver Cromwell (1653-1658) Charles II (1660) restored to the throne 1707 – the Act of Union
Neoclassical Period • emphasis on reason and logic - harmony, stability, wisdom • reaction to censorhip • emphasis on the individual • approach to life: “the world as it should be” • JohnLocke – “the social contract” between the government and the people
Enlightenment – The Age of Reason • Satire: irony and exaggeration to correct human behavior • Poetry: Alexander Pope, William Blake • Essays: John Locke, Steele & Addison • Letters, diaries, biographies: Samuel Pepys • drama- the comedy of manners • Novels: John Bunyan – The Pilgrim’s Progress
1st novel in British literature • Samuel Richardson Pamela, or Virtue Rewarded – 1740 -epistolary novel -serialised “Oh, please, Mr Richardson, don’t let her die!”
Novels 1719 1726
Romanticism • human knowledge consists of impressions and ideas formed in the individual’s mind • nature - comfort and peace • gothic elements and terror/horror stories and novels
Romantic Poetry • William Blake • Lyrical Ballads • William Wordsworth (1798) • Samuel Coleridge – • Lord George Gordon Byron • Percy Shelley • John Keats
Victorian Times • Golden age- colonial expansion • improved quality of life • the Industrial Revolution • rise of the lower classes - highlighted in literature to insist on reform • 1893- Labour Party is created
Cosumerism of novels Factors: • Growth of middle classes • Improved educational system • Improved printing techniques • More freedom for women SERIALISATION – cliff-hangers
Victorian LiteratureCharles Dickens Bronte sisters Oliver Twist – 1837-39
Later Victorianism Crisis of faith Pessimism REBELLION against conventions – Th. Hardy, R.L. Stevenson Oscar Wilde Pre-Raphaelite poets 1859
20th century (1900-1950) World War I, II 1921- Eire- a free state 1926- The British Commonwealth of Nations 1918-1928 – the suffragette movement – the flapper 1930s – the Great Depression Trade Unions the Welfare State
Radical Changes INNOVATION EXPERIMENTATION VARIETY – to reflect COMPLEXITY
Modernist literature • lonely individual fighting to find peace and comfort in a world that has lost its absolute values and traditions • no absolute values • mixing of fantasy with nonfiction; blurs lines of reality for reader - MAGIC REALISM • loss of the hero in literature • Inner psychology - STREAM OF CONSCIOUSNESS - no chronological plot - disjointed flashes of thought
Virginia Woolf James Joyce 1882-1941 1882-1941 “We all indulge in the strange, pleasant process called thinking, but when it comes to saying…then how little we are able to convey” “The artist, like the God of the creation, remains within or behind or beyond or above his handiwork, invisible, refined out of existence, indifferent, paring his fingernails.”
1890 1899 1891
Looking into the Future 1895 1948 1872 1932
1886 1894 1887
20th Century prose 1924 1954 1920 1969 1906-1921
Modernist Drama 1895 1953 1913
Modernist Poetry 1885-1972 1888-1965 1865-1939 1914-1953
20th century- 1950- 2000 The Cold War
20th century- 1950- 2000 Korea Vietnam
20th century- 1950- 2000 Fall of Communism
20th century- 1950- 2000 Post-industrial world
20th century- 1950- 2000 Advertising
20th century- 1950- 2000 Consumer Society
20th century- 1950- 2000 Entertain ment
20th century- 1950- 2000 Pop culture
20th century- 1950- 2000 Globalisation
20th century- 1950- 2000 Information
Contemporary/ post-modern literature • Intertextuality - parody • de-centralisation • back to the storytelling • No absolute truth MY truth • No past, no future NOW • No underlying meaning or purpose MY meaning
1962 1962 1956 1964 1962
1978 1984 1981 1969 1989
2000 1991 2002 1993 2005