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Timeline of British Literature

Explore the timeline of British literature from the Anglo-Saxon period to the era of realism, witnessing the shift in themes, genres, and historical contexts. Discover the strong belief in fate, the influence of Christianity, the emergence of plays, and the rise of realism in literature.

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Timeline of British Literature

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  1. Timeline of British Literature

  2. Anglo-Saxon Period • 449-1066 • Strong belief in fate • Juxtaposition of the church and pagan worlds • Admiration of heroic warriors who prevail in battle • Express religious faith and give moral instruction through literature

  3. Anglo-Saxon Period • Christianity helps literacy spread • Introduces Roman alphabet to Britain • Oral tradition helps unite diverse people and their myths • Styles / Genres • Oral tradition of literature • Poetry is the dominant genre

  4. Anglo-Saxon Period • Historical Context • Life centered around ancestral tribes/clans that ruled themselves • At first, tribes/clans were warriors from invading outlying areas • Angles, Saxons, Jutes, and Danes • Later, they became primarily agricultural

  5. Medieval Period • 1066-1485 • Plays that instruct the illiterate masses in morals and religion • “Morality Plays” • Chivalric code of honor • Knights, their ladies fair • Religious devotion • Romances

  6. Medieval Period • Style / Genre • Oral tradition continues • Folk Ballads • A song that is traditionally sung by the common people of a region and forms part of their culture

  7. Medieval Period • Mystery plays • Focused on the representation of Bible stories in churches • Miracle plays • Specifically re-enact miraculous interventions by the saints into the lives of ordinary people • Morality Plays • A kind of drama with personified abstract qualities (think: sin, charity, Christian) as the main characters. Presented a lesson about good conduct and character.

  8. Medieval Period • Stock epithets • Any word or phrase applied to a person or thing to describe an actual or attributed quality • Ex: Richard the Lion-Hearted • Kenning • A poetic phrase used in place of the usual name of a person or thing • Ex: “A wave traveler” for “A boat”

  9. Medieval Period • Church instructs its people through the morality and miracle plays • An illiterate population is able to hear and see the literature

  10. Medieval Period • The Crusades bring the development of a money economy for the first time in Britain • Trading increases dramatically • Henry III crowned king in 1154 • Brings a judicial system, royal courts, juries, and chivalry to Britain

  11. The Renaissance • 1485-1660 • Worldview shifts from religion and afterlife to the human life on earth • Popular Themes • Development of human potential • Love (unrequited, constant, timeless, courtly, Love subject to change)

  12. The Renaissance • Styles / Genres • Poetry • Sonnets • Drama • Written in verse • Supported by royalty • Tragedies, comedies, histories • Metaphysical poetry • Elaborate, unexpected metaphors called “conceits”

  13. The Renaissance • Historical Context • War of Roses ends in 1485 and political stability arrives • The printing press helps stabilize English as a language and allows more people to read a variety of literature • Economy changes from farm-based to international trade

  14. The Restoration • 1660-1785 • 1660-1700: emphasis on decorum • 1700-1745: emphasis on satire and on a wide public readership • 1745-1785: emphasis on revolutionary ideas • Literacy has expanded to include the middle classes and even some of the poor • Emphasis on rules, reason, and logic • The Age of Enlightenment

  15. The Restoration • Styles / Genre • Satire • Uses irony and exaggeration to poke fun at human faults and foolishness in order to correct human behavior • Novels becoming better known than poetry • Essays • Letters, diaries, biographies • Notes

  16. The Restoration • Historical Context • 50% of men are functionally literate • Factories begin to spring up as the industrial revolution starts • Impoverished masses begin to grow as farming life declines and factories build • Coffee houses: educated men spend evening with literary and political associates

  17. Romanticism • 1785-1830 • A literary, artistic, and intellectual movement • Partly a reaction to the Industrial Revolution • It was a revolt against the aristocratic social and political norms of Enlightenment • Celebrated emotion, spontaneity, imagination, subjectivity, and the purity of nature

  18. Romanticism • Validated intense emotion as an authentic source of experience • New emphasis on • Apprehension • Horror and terror • Awe • Romantics wanted to escape the confines of population growth, urban sprawl, and industrialism

  19. Romanticism • Historical Context • The Industrial Revolution • Laissez Faire • “Let (people) do (as they please)” • The rich grew richer, the poor suffered even more

  20. Realism /Naturalism • 1830-1901 • Realism • Aimed for an honest portrayal over sensationalism, exaggeration, or melodrama • Desired an accurate and detailed portrayal of ordinary, contemporary life

  21. Realism /Naturalism • Naturalism • An offshoot of the realism movement • An intensification of realism • Used detailed realism to suggest that social conditions, heredity, and environment had inescapable force in shaping human character

  22. Realism /Naturalism • The novel begins to rise in popularity • Historical context • Great Reform Act • Slavery banned in British colonies • Irish potato famine • Ten Hour Act

  23. Modern/Post-Modern • 1900-1980 • The loss of the hero in literature • Major theme: technology’s destruction of society • Free verse poetry • Novelists begin writing in “stream of consciousness”

  24. Modern/Post-Modern • Increasing role of science and technology • Mass literacy and proliferation of mass media • Spread of social movements • Individualism • Industrialization • Urbanization

  25. Modern/Post-Modern • Historical Context • World War I • World War II

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