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An Overview

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Title: An Overview


1
Major Periods of English American Literature
  • An Overview

2
What is meant by period?
  • A period is a dominant mode, style, or type of
    literature within a specific historical context.
  • A period is usually indicative of the controlling
    philosophical perspective of the time.
  • As such, periods are not generally confined to
    the literature of the time rather, their
    characteristics can be seen in other art forms as
    well as non-literary texts.
  • Dates are approximations.

3
Old English (450-1066)
  • Few surviving texts with little in common.
  • Language closer to modern German than modern
    English.
  • Frequently reflect non-English influence.
  • Beowulf, The Wanderer

4
Middle English (1066-1500)
  • Works frequently of a religiously didactic
    content.
  • Written for performance at court or for
    festivals.
  • Geoffrey Chaucer (The Canterbury Tales)
  • The Cuckoos Song, mystery plays

5
English Renaissance (1500-1660)
  • Influence of Aristotle, Ovid, and other
    Greco-Roman thinkers, as well as science and
    exploration.
  • Primarily texts for public performance (plays,
    masques) and some books of poetry.
  • William Shakespeare, Christopher Marlowe, Ben
    Jonson, Francis Bacon, John Fletcher, Francis
    Beaumont.

6
Neoclassical Period(Enlightenment/Age of Reason)
  • England 1660-1785 America 1750-1800
  • Reaction to the expansiveness of the Renaissance
    in the direction of order and restraint.
  • Developed in France (Moliere, Rousseau,
    Voltaire).
  • Emphasized classical ideals of rationality and
    control (human nature is constant through time).
  • Art should reflect the universal commonality of
    human nature. (All men are created equal.)
  • Reason is emphasized as the highest faculty
    (Deism).

7
Neoclassical Period (cont.)
  • Writing should be well structured, emotion should
    be controlled, and emphasize qualities like wit.
  • England John Locke, John Milton (Paradise Lost),
    Alexander Pope (Essay on Man), Jonathon Swift
    (Gullivers Travels), Henry Fielding (Tom Jones),
    Daniel Defoe (Robinson Crusoe), Jane Austen
    (Sense and Sensibility, Emma, Pride and
    Prejudice).
  • America Benjamin Franklin (Poor Richards
    Almanack, autobiography), Thomas Paine (Common
    Sense), Thomas Jefferson (The Declaration of
    Independence), James Madison (The Constitution
    of the United States).

8
Romantic Period
  • England 1785-1830 America 1800-1860
  • Reaction against the scientific rationality of
    Neoclassicism and the Industrial Revolution.
  • Developed in Germany (Kant, Goethe).
  • Emphasized individuality, intuition, imagination,
    idealism, nature (as opposed to society social
    order).
  • Elevation of the common man (folklore, myth).
  • Mystery and the supernatural.

9
Romantic Period (cont.)
  • England Robert Burns (To a Mouse), William
    Blake (Songs of Innocence, Songs of Experience),
    William Wordsworth (Lyrical Ballads, Tintern
    Abbey, Intimations of Immortality, I Wandered
    Lonely as a Cloud), Samuel Taylor Coleridge
    (The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Kubla
    Kahn), Lord Byron (Don Juan), Percy Bysshe
    Shelley (Ozymandias), Mary Wollstonecraft
    Shelley (Frankenstein), John Keats (Ode on a
    Grecian Urn), Sir Walter Scott (Ivanhoe).

10
Romantic Period (cont.)
  • America Washington Irving (Rip Van Winkle,
    The Legend of Sleepy Hollow), Edgar Allan Poe
    (The Raven, Tales of the Grotesque and
    Arabesque, The Murders in the Rue Morgue, The
    Philosophy of Composition), James Fennimore
    Cooper (The Last of the Mohicans), Herman
    Melville (Moby-Dick, Billy Budd), Nathaniel
    Hawthorne (Twice-Told Tales, The Scarlet Letter),
    William Cullen Bryant (To a Waterfowl), Oliver
    Wendell Holmes (The Chambered Nautilus), Henry
    Wadsworth Longfellow (Paul Reveres Ride),
    James Russell Lowell (The First Snowfall).

11
Romantic Period (cont.)
  • American Transcendentalism (Romantic philosophy)
  • Named for the core belief that our spiritual
    nature transcends rationality and religious
    doctrine thus, it is found in intuition.
  • Developed in New England, influenced by Eastern
    philosophy.
  • Pro-suffrage abolitionist.
  • Ralph Waldo Emerson (Nature, The American
    Scholar), Henry David Thoreau (Walden, Civil
    Disobedience), Walt Whitman (Leaves of Grass).

12
Victorian Period (England 1832-1901)
  • Named for the reign of Queen Victoria, Britains
    longest reigning monarch.
  • Period of stability and prosperity for Britain.
  • British society extremely class conscious.
  • Literature seen as a bridge between Romanticism
    and Modernism.
  • Generally emphasized realistic portrayals of
    common people, sometimes to promote social
    change.
  • Some writers continue to explore gothic themes
    begun in Romantic Period.

13
Victorian Period (cont.)
  • Charles Dickens (David Copperfield, Oliver Twist,
    Great Expectations), George Eliot (Middlemarch),
    Thomas Hardy (Tess of the DUbervilles), Robert
    Louis Stevenson (The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll
    and Mr. Hyde), Rudyard Kipling (Jungle Book),
    Lewis Carroll (Alices Adventures in Wonderland),
    Charlotte Brontë (Jane Eyre), Emily Brontë
    (Wuthering Heights), Alfred, Lord Tennyson (In
    Memoriam), Elizabeth Barrett Browning (Sonnets
    from the Portuguese), Robert Browning (My Last
    Duchess), Matthew Arnold (Dover Beach), Oscar
    Wilde (The Importance of Being Earnest).

14
Realistic Period (America 1860-1914)
  • Reaction against Romantic values (Civil War).
  • Developed in France (Balzac, Flaubert, Zola).
  • Emphasized the commonplace and ordinary (as
    opposed to the romanticized individual).
  • Sought to depict life as it was, not idealized.
  • Mark Twain (The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn),
    Ambrose Bierce (An Occurrence at Owl Creek
    Bridge), William Dean Howells (A Modern
    Instance), Theodore Dreiser (Sister Carrie).

15
Realistic Period (cont.)
  • Naturalism hyper-realism
  • Named for the belief that man is simply a higher
    order animal, and thus under the same natural
    constraints and limitations as other animals.
  • Controlled by heredity and environment.
  • Stephen Crane (Maggie A Girl of the Street, The
    Red Badge of Courage), Jack London (To Build a
    Fire), Upton Sinclair (The Jungle).

16
Edwardian Period (England 1901-1914)
  • Named for King Edward.
  • Some see as a continuation of Victorian Period
    however, the status quo is increasingly
    threatened.
  • Distinction between literature and popular
    fiction.
  • Joseph Conrad (Lord Jim, Heart of Darkness), H.G.
    Wells (War of the Worlds), E.M. Forster (A Room
    with a View, A Passage to India), George Bernard
    Shaw (Major Barbara), A.C. Bradley (Shakespearean
    Tragedy).

17
Modern Period (1914-1945)
  • Reaction against the values which led to WWI.
  • Influenced by Schopenhauer (negation of the
    will), Nietzsche (Beyond Good and Evil),
    Kierkegaard (Fear and Trembling), as well as
    Darwin and Marx.
  • If previous values are invalid, art is a tool to
    establish new values (Pound Make it new).
  • Writers experiment with form.
  • Form and content reflect the confusion and
    vicissitudes of modern life.
  • Expositions and resolutions are omitted themes
    are implied rather than stated.

18
Modern Period (cont.)
  • Poetry
  • Ezra Pound (The Fourth Canto), T.S. Eliot
    (Prufrock and other Observations, The Waste Land,
    The Hollow Men), W.B. Yeats (The Wanderings of
    Oisin and Other Poems, The Swans at Coole), H.D.
    (Pear Tree), Wallace Stevens (Harmonium),
    William Carlos Williams (The Red Wheelbarrow,
    This Is Just to Say), Robert Frost (Mending
    Wall, The Road Not Taken).

19
Modern Period (cont.)
  • Fiction
  • James Joyce (Dubliners, A Portrait of the Artist
    as a Young Man), Franz Kafka (The Metamorphosis,
    The Trial, The Castle), Ernest Hemingway (In Our
    Time, The Sun Also Rises), William Faulkner (As I
    Lay Dying, The Sound and the Fury), F. Scott
    Fitzgerald (The Great Gatsby), John Steinbeck
    (The Grapes of Wrath), Thornton Wilder (Our Town,
    The Bridge at San Luis Rey), D.H. Lawrence (The
    Rainbow), Virginia Woolf (Mrs. Dalloway, To the
    Lighthouse).

20
Post-Modern Period (1945-?)
  • Critical dispute over whether an actual period or
    a renewal and continuation Modernism post-WWII.
  • Influenced by Freud, Sartre, Camus, Derrida, and
    Foucault.
  • Deconstruction Text has no inherent meaning
    meaning derives from the tension between the
    texts ambiguities and contradictions revealed
    upon close reading.
  • Some believe it leads directly to the
    counter-cultural revolution of the 1960s.

21
Post-Modern Period (cont.)
  • Samuel Beckett (Waiting for Godot), Gabriel
    Garcia Marques (One Hundred Years of Solitude),
    William Burroughs (Naked Lunch), J.D. Salinger (A
    Catcher in the Rye), Kurt Vonnegut
    (Slaughterhouse Five), Thomas Pynchon (Gravitys
    Rainbow), John Updike (Rabbit Run), Phillip Roth
    (Portnoys Complaint, American Pastoral), J.M.
    Coetzee (Life Times of Michael K), Joyce Carol
    Oates (Where Are You Going, Where Have You
    Been?), Margaret Atwood (The Handmaidens Tale),
    Cormac McCarthy (Blood Meridian), Allen Ginsberg
    (Howl and Other Poems), Charles Bukowski (The
    Last Night of the Earth Poems).
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