![]() | |
![]() |
![]() ![]() |
Politica de confidentialitate |
|
![]() | |
• domnisoara hus • legume • istoria unui galban • metanol • recapitulare • profitul • caract • comentariu liric • radiolocatia • praslea cel voinic si merele da aur | |
![]() |
![]() |
||||||
English Literature | ||||||
![]() |
||||||
|
||||||
INTRODUCTION English Literature, literature produced in England, from the introduction of Old English by the Anglo-Saxons in the 5th century to the present. The works of those Irish and Scottish authors who are closely identified with English life and letters are also considered part of English literature. OLD ENGLISH OR ANGLO-SAXON ERAThis period extends from about 450 to 1066, the year of the Norman-French conquest of England. The Germanic tribes from Europe who overran England in the 5th century, after the Roman withdrawal, brought with them the Old English, or Anglo-Saxon, language, which is the basis of Modern English. They brought also a specific poetic tradition, the formal character of which remained surprisingly constant until the termination of their rule by the Norman-French invaders six centuries later. Poetry Much of Old English poetry was probably intended to be chanted, with harp
accompaniment by the bard. Often bold and strong, but also mournful and elegiac
in spirit, this poetry emphasizes the sorrow and ultimate futility of life and
the helplessness of humans before the power of fate. Almost all this poetry
is composed without rhyme, in a characteristic line, or verse, of four stressed
syllables alternating with an indeterminate number of unstressed ones. This
line strikes strangely on ears habituated to the usual modern pattern, in which
the rhythmical unit, or foot, theoretically consists of a constant number (either
one or two) of unaccented syllables that always precede or follow any stressed
syllable. Another unfamiliar but equally striking feature in the formal character
of Old English poetry is structural alliteration, or the use of syllables beginning
with similar sounds in two or three of the stresses in each line. y3v8vv Prose in Old English is represented by a large number of religious works. The imposing scholarship of monasteries in northern England in the late 7th century reached its peak in the Latin work Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum (Ecclesiastical History of the English People, 731) by Bede. The great educational effort of Alfred, king of the West Saxons, in the 9th century produced an Old English translation of this important historical work and of many others, including De Consolatione Philosophiae (The Consolation of Philosophy), by Boethius. This was a significant work of largely Platonic philosophy easily adaptable to Christian thought, and it has had great influence on English literature. MIDDLE ENGLISH PERIODExtending from 1066 to 1485, this period is noted for the extensive influence
of French literature on native English forms and themes. From the Norman-French
conquest of England in 1066 until the 14th century, French largely replaced
English in ordinary literary composition, and Latin maintained its role as the
language of learned works. By the 14th century, when English again became the
chosen language of the ruling classes, it had lost much of the Old English inflectional
system, had undergone certain sound changes, and had acquired the characteristic
it still possesses of freely taking into the native stock numbers of foreign
words, in this case French and Latin ones. Thus, the various dialects of Middle
English spoken in the 14th century were similar to Modern English and can be
read without great difficulty today. In the north and west, poems continued to be written in forms very like the
Old English alliterative, four-stress lines. Of these poems, The Vision of William
Concerning Piers the Plowman, better known as Piers Plowman, is the most significant.
Now thought to be by William Langland, it is a long, impassioned work in the
form of dream visions (a favorite literary device of the day), protesting the
plight of the poor, the avarice of the powerful, and the sinfulness of all people.
The emphasis, however, is placed on a Christian vision of the life of activity,
of the life of unity with God, and of the synthesis of these two under the rule
of a purified church. As such, despite various faults, it bears comparison with
the other great Christian visionary poem, La divina commedia (The Divine Comedy),
by Dante. For both, the watchwords are heavenly love and love operative in this
world. A third alliterative poem, supposedly by the same anonymous author who wrote The Pearl, is Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (late 1300s), a romance, or tale, of knightly adventure and love, of the general medieval type introduced by the French. Most English romances were drawn, as this one apparently was, from French sources. Most of these sources are concerned with the knights of King Arthur and seem to go back in turn to Celtic tales of great antiquity. In Sir Gawain, against a background of chivalric gallantry, the tale is told of the knight's resistance to the blandishments of another man's beautiful wife. ChaucerTwo other important, no alliterative verse romances form part of the work of Geoffrey Chaucer. These are the psychologically penetrating Troilus and Criseyde (1385?), a tale of the fatal course of a noble love, laid in Homeric Troy and based on Il filostrato, a romance by the 14th-century Italian author Giovanni Boccaccio; and The Knight's Tale (1382?; later included in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales), also based on Boccaccio. Immersed in court life and charged with various governmental duties that carried him as far as Italy, Chaucer yet found time to translate French and Latin works, to write under French influence several secular vision poems of a semi allegorical nature (The Book of the Duchess, The House of Fame, The Parliament of Fowls,) and, above all, to compose The Canterbury Tales (probably after 1387). This latter work consists of 24 stories or parts of stories (mostly in verse in almost all the medieval genres) recounted by Chaucer through the mouths and in the several manners of a group of pilgrims bound for Canterbury Cathedral, representative of most of the classes of medieval England. Characterized by an extraordinary sense of life and fertility of invention, these narratives range from The Knight's Tale to sometimes indelicate but remarkable tales of low life, and they concern a host of subjects: religious innocence, married chastity, villainous hypocrisy, female volubility—all illumined by great humor. With extraordinary artistry the stories are made to characterize their tellers. Arthurian LegendsIn the 15th century a number of poets were obviously influenced by Chaucer but, in general, medieval literary themes and styles were exhausted during this period. Sir Thomas Malory stands out for his great work, Le morte d'Arthur (The Death of Arthur, 1469-1470), which carried on the tradition of Arthurian romance, from French sources, in English prose of remarkable vividness and vitality. He loosely tied together stories of various Knights of the Round Table, but most memorably of Arthur himself, of Galahad, and of the guilty love of Lancelot and Arthur's queen, Guinevere. Despite the great variety of incident and the complications of plot in his work, the dominant theme is the need to sacrifice individual desire for the sake of national unity and religious salvation, the latter of which is envisioned in terms of the dreamlike but intense mystical symbolism of the Holy Grail. THE RENAISSANCEA golden age of English literature commenced in 1485 and lasted until 1660.
Malory's Le morte d'Arthur was among the first works to be printed by William
Caxton, who introduced the printing press to England in 1476. From that time
on, readership was vastly multiplied. The growth of the middle class, the continuing
development of trade, the new character and thoroughness of education for laypeople
and not only clergy, the centralization of power and of much intellectual life
in the court of the Tudor and Stuart monarchs, and the widening horizons of
exploration gave a fundamental new impetus and direction to literature. The
new literature nevertheless did not fully flourish until the last 20 years of
the 1500s, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. Literary development in the
earlier part of the 16th century was weakened by the diversion of intellectual
energies to the polemics of the religious struggle between the Roman Catholic
church and the Church of England, a product of the Reformation. The poetry of the earlier part of the 16th century is generally less important,
with the exception of the work of John Skelton, which exhibits a curious combination
of medieval and Renaissance influences. The two greatest innovators of the new,
rich style of Renaissance poetry in the last quarter of the 16th century were
Sir Philip Sidney and Edmund Spenser. Renaissance Drama and Prose The poetry of the English Renaissance between 1580 and 1660 was the result of a remarkable outburst of energy. It is, however, the drama of roughly the same period that stands highest in popular estimation. The works of its greatest representative, William Shakespeare, have achieved worldwide renown. In the previous Middle English period there had been, within the church, a gradual broadening of dramatic representation of such doctrinally important events as the angel's announcement of the resurrection to the women at the tomb of Christ. Ultimately, performances of religious drama had become the province of the craft guilds, and the entire Christian story, from the creation of the world to the last judgment, had been reenacted for secular audiences. The Renaissance drama proper rose from this late medieval base by a number of transitional stages ending about 1580. A large number of comedies, tragedies, and examples of intermediate types were produced for London theaters between that year and 1642, when the London theaters were closed by order of the Puritan Parliament. Like so much non-dramatic literature of the Renaissance, most of these plays were written in an elaborate verse style and under the influence of classical examples, but the popular taste, to which drama was especially susceptible, required a flamboyance and sensationalism largely alien to the spirit of Greek and Roman literature. Only the Roman tragedian Lucius Annaeus Seneca could provide a model for the earliest popular tragedy of blood and revenge, The Spanish Tragedy (1589?) of Thomas Kyd. Kyd's skillfully managed, complicated, but sensational plot influenced in turn later, psychologically more sophisticated revenge tragedies, among them Shakespeare's Hamlet. A few years later Christopher Marlowe, in the tragedies Tamburlaine the Great, Part I (1587), and Edward II (1592?), began the tradition of the chronicle play of the fatal deeds of kings and potentates. Marlowe's plays, such as The Tragical History of Dr. Faustus (1588?) and The Jew of Malta (1589?), are remarkable primarily for their daring depictions of world-shattering characters who strive to go beyond the normal human limitations as the Christian medieval ethos had conceived them; these works are written in a poetic style worthy in many ways of comparison to Shakespeare's. ShakespeareElizabethan tragedy and comedy alike reached their true flowering in Shakespeare's works. Beyond his art, his rich style, and his complex plots, all of which surpass by far the work of other Elizabethan dramatists in the same field, and beyond his unrivaled projection of character, Shakespeare's compassionate understanding of the human lot has perpetuated his greatness and made him the representative figure of English literature for the whole world. His comedies, of which perhaps the best are As You Like It (1599?) and Twelfth Night (1600?), depict the endearing as well as the ridiculous sides of human nature. His great tragedies — Hamlet (1601?), Othello (1604?), King Lear (1605?), Macbeth (1606?), and Antony and Cleopatra (1606?) — look deeply into the springs of action in the human soul. His earlier dark tragedies were imitated in style and feeling by the tragedian John Webster in The White Devil (1612) and The Duchess of Malfi (1613-1614). In Shakespeare's last plays, the so-called dramatic romances, including The Tempest (1611?), he sets a mood of quiet acceptance and ultimate reconciliation that was a fitting close for his literary career. These plays, by virtue of their mysterious, exotic atmosphere and their quick, surprising alternations of bad and good fortune, come close also to the tone of the drama of the succeeding age. Late Renaissance and 17th Century The most influential figure in shaping the immediate future course of English
drama was Ben Jonson. His carefully plotted comedies, satirizing with inimitable
verve and imagination various departures from the norm of good sense and moderation,
are written in a more sober and careful style than are those of most Elizabethan
and early 17th-century dramatists. Those qualities, indeed, define the character
of later Restoration comedy. The best of Jonson's comedies are Volpone (1606)
and The Alchemist (1610). Professing themselves his disciples, the dramatists
Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher collaborated on a number of so-called tragicomedies
(for example, Philaster,1610?) in which morally dubious situations, surprising
reversals of fortune, and sentimentality combine with hollow rhetoric. This period extends from 1660, the year Charles II was restored to the throne,
until about 1789. The prevailing characteristic of the literature of the Renaissance
had been its reliance on poetic inspiration or what today might be called imagination.
The inspired conceptions of Marlowe, Shakespeare, and Milton, the true originality
of Spenser, and the daring poetic style of Donne all support this generalization.
Furthermore, although nearly all these poets had been far more bound by formal
and stylistic conventions than modern poets are, they had developed a large
variety of forms and of rich or exuberant styles into which individual poetic
expression might fit. In the succeeding period, however, writers reacted against
both the imaginative flights and the ornate or startling styles and forms of
the previous era. The quality of the later age is suggested by its writers'
admiration for Ben Jonson and his disciples; the transparent and apparently
effortless poetic medium of the “school of Ben,” along with its
emphasis on good taste, moderation, and the Greek and Latin classics as models,
appealed profoundly to the new generation. The poetry of John Dryden possesses a grandeur, force, and fullness of tone
that were eagerly received by readers still having something in common with
the Elizabethans. At the same time, however, his poetry set the tone of the
new age in achieving a new clarity and in establishing a self-limiting, somewhat
impersonal canon of moderation and good taste. His polished heroic couplet (a
unit of two rhyming lines of iambic pentameter, generally end-stopped), which
he inherited from less accomplished predecessors and then developed, became
the dominant form in the composition of longer poems. In the age of Alexander Pope (dated from about the death of Dryden in 1700
to Pope's death in 1744), the classical spirit in English literature reached
its highest point, and at the same time other forces became manifest. Dryden's
poetry had achieved grandeur, amplitude, and sublimity within a particular definition
of good taste and good sense and under the tutelage of the Roman and Greek classics.
To the poetry of Pope this characterization applies even more stringently. More
than any other English poet, he submitted himself to the requirement that the
expressive force of poetic genius should issue forth only in a formulation as
reasonable, lucid, balanced, compressed, final, and perfect as the power of
human reason can make it. Pope did not have Dryden's majesty. Perhaps, given
his predilection for correctness of detail, he could not have had it. Also,
the readers of succeeding times have concluded that the dictates of reason do
not all converge on only one poetic formula, just as the heroic couplet, which
Pope brought to final perfection, is not necessarily the most generally suitable
of English poetic forms. Nevertheless, the ease, harmony, and grace of Pope's
poetic line are still impressive, and his quality of precise but never labored
expression of thought remains unequaled. Pope's brilliant satiric masterpiece, The Rape of the Lock (1712; revised edition 1714), makes an epic theme of a trifling drawing-room episode: the contention arising from a young lord's having covertly snipped a lock of hair from a young lady's head. His most sustained satire, The Dunciad (1728; final version 1743), follows Dryden's Mac Flecknoe in its elegantly pointed, often malicious but always high-spirited mockery of the literary dullards who were Pope's enemies. Like Dryden, Pope made translations of classical works, notably of the Iliad, which was a great popular and financial success. His edition of Shakespeare's works bears witness to a range of taste not usually ascribed to him. It is only natural that the 18th-century preoccupation with the power of reason and good sense should have produced a large number of works in the more sober medium of prose. Jonathan Swift, who was, like Pope, a Tory conservative for the latter half of his life and a satirist, wrote a number of mordantly satirical prose narratives in which a profound and despairing perception of human stupidities and evil are in contrast with the social criticism of his great contemporaries. Swift's Tale of a Tub (1704) reduces the quarrels among three important religious divisions of his day to an allegory of three disreputable brothers. His generous anger on behalf of the poor of Ireland produced “A Modest Proposal” (1729), in which, with horrifying mock seriousness, he proposed that the children of the poor should be raised for slaughter as food for the rich. His best-known work, Gulliver's Travels (1726), purports to be a ship doctor's account of his voyages into strange places, but in reality it is a castigation of the human race. The accounts of Gulliver's first two voyages are often read as a children's book. The last part abandons, however, delicate fancy and unmasks the selfish and sick bestiality of humanity in the guise of the so-called Yahoos, who are the savage and improvident servants of a race of apparently reasonable and noble horses, called Houyhnhnms. This work, like all of Swift's, is written in a prose of unrivaled lucidity, energy, and polemical skill. Similarly noteworthy for the quality of their prose are the Spectator papers (1711-1712; 1714), written mainly by Joseph Addison and Richard Steele. Published daily, these essays, like many others, corresponded to the newly felt need of the day for popular journalism, but their enlightened comment and their criticism of contemporary society separate them from the mass of similar publications. The main intent of Addison and Steele may be defined in their own words: “To enliven morality with wit, and to temper wit with morality.” In a series of informal, conversational essays describing the activities of various ideal representatives of social groups, such as the Tory country squire Sir Roger de Coverley and the Whig merchant Sir Andrew Freeport, Addison and Steele salvaged and united some of the best sides of the contemporary English character. The lightly borne, free-and-easy manners of the court and the older landed classes should, according to these papers, exist side by side with the industry, uprightness, and deeply felt morality of the newly rich city merchants. The amorality associated with the one and the stubborn narrowness of the other should disappear. The emphasis on public decorum and individual rectitude and on sympathy with one's fellow beings in the Spectator papers is a measure of their distance from the cool indifference and frequent licentiousness of much Restoration literature, particularly comedy, although the purpose of both was to represent reason, moderation, and common sense. A quite different kind of journalism is represented by the work of the middle-class adventurer, hack writer, and political agent Daniel Defoe. Separated from the life of the upper classes and their erudite writers, as Bunyan had been before him, he produced, among many pieces of commissioned writing, a series of purportedly true but actually fictitious memoirs and confessions. The first of these, and the greatest, is Robinson Crusoe (1719), which reports the life and adventures of a shipwrecked sailor. Age of Johnson The age of Samuel Johnson, from 1744 to about 1784, was a time of changing
literary ideals. The developed classicism and literary conservatism associated
with Johnson fought a rear-guard action against the cult of sentiment and feeling
associated in various ways with the harbingers of the coming age of romanticism.
Johnson composed poetry that continued the traditions and forms of Pope, but
he is best known as a prose writer and as an extraordinarily gifted conversationalist
and literary arbiter in the cultivated urban life of his time. His conservatism
and sturdy common sense are what might be expected given his intellectual tradition,
but his individual quality has little to do with literary tendencies. His curiously
lovable and upright personality, along with his intellectual preeminence and
idiosyncrasies, have been preserved in the most famous of English biographies,
the Life of Samuel Johnson (1791), by James Boswell, a Scottish writer with
an appetite for literary celebrities. Extending from about 1789 until 1837, the romantic age stressed emotion over reason. One objective of the French Revolution (1789-1799) was to destroy an older tradition that had come to seem artificial, and to assert the liberty, spirit, and heartfelt unity of the human race. To many writers of the romantic age this objective seemed equally appropriate in the field of English letters. In addition, the romantic age in English literature was characterized by the subordination of reason to intuition and passion, the cult of nature much as the word is now understood and not as Pope understood it, the primacy of the individual will over social norms of behavior, the preference for the illusion of immediate experience as opposed to generalized and typical experience, and the interest in what is distant in time and place. The Romantic PoetsThe first important expression of romanticism was in the Lyrical Ballads (1798)
of William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, young men who were aroused
to creative activity by the French Revolution; later they became disillusioned
with what followed it. The poems of Wordsworth in this volume treat ordinary
subjects with a new freshness that imparts certain radiance to them. On the
other hand, Coleridge's main contribution, “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner,”
masterfully creates an illusion of reality in relating strange, exotic, or obviously
unreal events. These two directions characterize most of the later works of
the two poets. A second generation of romantic poets remained revolutionary in some sense throughout their poetic careers, unlike Coleridge, Wordsworth, and Scott. George Gordon, Lord Byron, is one of the exemplars of a personality in tragic revolt against society. As in his stormy personal life, so also in such poems as Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (1812) and Don Juan (1819-1824), this generous but egotistical aristocrat revealed with uneven pathos or with striking irony and cynicism the vagrant feelings and actions of great souls caught in a petty world. Byron's satirical spirit and strong sense of social realism kept him apart from other English romantics; unlike the rest, he proclaimed, for example, a high regard for Pope, whom he sometimes imitated. The other great poet-revolutionary of the time, Percy Bysshe Shelley, seems much closer to the grandly serious spirit of the other romantics. His most thoughtful poetry expresses his two main ideas, that the external tyranny of rulers, customs, or superstitions is the main enemy, and that inherent human goodness will, sooner or later, eliminate evil from the world and usher in an eternal reign of transcendent love. It is, perhaps, in Prometheus Unbound (1820) that these ideas are most completely expressed, although Shelley's more obvious poetic qualities—the natural correspondence of metrical structure to mood, the power of shaping effective abstractions, and his ethereal idealism—can be studied in a whole range of poems, from “Ode to the West Wind” and “To a Skylark” to the elegy “Adonais,” written for John Keats, the youngest of the great romantics. More than that of any of the other romantics, Keats's poetry is a response to sensuous impressions. He found neither the time nor the inclination to elaborate a complete moral or social philosophy in his poetry. In such poems as “The Eve of St. Agnes”, ”Ode on a Grecian Urn” and “Ode to a Nightingale”, all written about 1819, he showed an unrivaled awareness of immediate sensation and an unequaled ability to reproduce it. Between 1818 and 1821, during the last few years of his short life, this spiritually robust, active, and wonderfully receptive writer produced all his poetry. His work had a more profound influence than that of any other romantic in widening the sensuous realm of poetry for the Victorians later in the century. Romantic Prose Certain romantic prose parallels the poetry of the period in a number of ways. The evolution of fundamentally new critical principles in literature is the main achievement of Coleridge's Biographia literaria (1817), but like Charles Lamb (Specimens of English Dramatic Poets, 1808) and William Hazlitt (Characters of Shakespeare's Plays, 1817), Coleridge also wrote a large amount of practical criticism, much of which helped to elevate the reputations of Renaissance dramatists and poets neglected in the 18th century. Lamb is famous also for his occasional essays, the Essays of Elia (1823, 1833). An influential romantic experiment in the achievement of a rich poetic quality in prose is the phantasmagoric, impassioned autobiography of Thomas De Quincey, Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (1821). THE VICTORIAN ERAThe Victorian era, from the coronation of Queen Victoria in 1837 until her
death in 1901, was an era of several unsettling social developments that forced
writers more than ever before to take positions on the immediate issues animating
the rest of society. Thus, although romantic forms of expression in poetry and
prose continued to dominate English literature throughout much of the century,
the attention of many writers was directed, sometimes passionately, to such
issues as the growth of English democracy, the education of the masses, the
progress of industrial enterprise and the consequent rise of a materialistic
philosophy, and the plight of the newly industrialized worker. In addition,
the unsettling of religious belief by new advances in science, particularly
the theory of evolution and the historical study of the Bible, drew other writers
away from the immemorial subjects of literature into considerations of problems
of faith and truth. Nonfiction The historian Thomas Babington Macaulay, in his History of England (5 volumes,
1848-1861) and even more in his Critical and Historical Essays (1843), expressed
the complacency of the English middle classes over their new prosperity and
growing political power. The clarity and balance of Macaulay's style, which
reflects his practical familiarity with parliamentary debate, stands in contrast
to the sensitivity and beauty of the prose of John Henry Newman. Newman's main
effort, unlike Macaulay's, was to draw people away from the materialism and
skepticism of the age back to a purified Christian faith. His most famous work,
Apologia pro vita sua (Apology for His Life, 1864), describes with psychological
subtlety and charm the basis of his religious opinions and the reasons for his
change from the Anglican to the Roman Catholic church. The three notable poets of the Victorian Age became similarly absorbed in social issues. Beginning as a poet of pure romantic escapism, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, soon moved on to problems of religious faith, social change, and political power, as in “Locksley Hall,” the elegy In Memoriam (1850), and Idylls of the King (1859-1885). All the characteristic moods of his poetry, from brooding splendor to lyrical sweetness, are expressed with smooth technical mastery. His style, as well as his peculiarly English conservatism, stands in some contrast to the intellectuality and bracing harshness of the poetry of Robert Browning. Browning's most important short poems are collected in Dramatic Romances and Lyrics (1841-1846) and Men and Women (1855). Matthew Arnold, the third of these mid-Victorian poets, stands apart from them as a more subtle and balanced thinker; his literary criticism (Essays in Criticism, 1865, 1888) is the most remarkable written in Victorian times. His poetry displays a sorrowful, disillusioned pessimism over the human plight in rapidly changing times (for example, “Dover Beach,” 1867), a pessimism countered, however, by a strong sense of duty. Among a number of lesser poets, Algernon Charles Swinburne showed an escapist aestheticism, somewhat similar to Pater's, in sensuous verse rich in verbal music but somewhat diffuse and pallid in its expression of emotion. The poet Dante Gabriel Rossetti and the poet, artist, and socialist reformer William Morris were associated with the Pre-Raphaelite movement, the adherents of which hoped to inaugurate a new period of honest craft and spiritual truth in property and painting. Despite the otherworldly or archaic character of their romantic poetry, Morris, at least, found a social purpose in his designs for household objects, which profoundly influenced contemporary taste. The Victorian NovelThe novel gradually became the dominant form in literature during the Victorian
Age. A fairly constant accompaniment of this development was the yielding of
romanticism to literary realism, the accurate observation of individual problems
and social relationships. The close observation of a restricted social milieu
in the novels of Jane Austen early in the century (Pride and Prejudice, 1813;
Emma, 1816) had been a harbinger of what was to come. The romantic historical
novels of Sir Walter Scott, about the same time (Ivanhoe, 1819), typified, however,
the spirit against which the realists later were to react. It was only in the
Victorian novelists Charles Dickens and William Makepeace Thackeray that the
new spirit of realism came to the fore. Dickens's novels of contemporary life
(Oliver Twist, 1837-1839; David Copperfield, 1849-1850; Great Expectations,
1861; Our Mutual Friend, 1865) exhibit an astonishing ability to create living
characters; his graphic exposures of social evils and his powers of caricature
and humor have won him a vast readership. Thackeray, on the other hand, indulged
less in the sentimentality sometimes found in Dickens's works. He was also capable
of greater subtlety of characterization, as his Vanity Fair (1847-1848) shows.
Nevertheless, the restriction of concern in Thackeray's novels to middle and
upper class life, and his lesser creative power, render him second to Dickens
in many readers' minds. The same spirit of social criticism inspired the plays of the Irish-born George Bernard Shaw, who did more than anyone else to awaken the drama from its 19th-century somnolence. In a series of powerful plays that made use of the latest economic and sociological theories, he exposed with enormous satirical skill the sickness and fatuities of individuals and societies in England and the rest of the modern world. Man and Superman (1903), Androcles and the Lion (1913), Heartbreak House (1919), and Back to Methuselah (1921) are notable among his works. His final prescription for a cure, a philosophy of creative evolution by which human beings should in time surpass the biological limit of species, showed him going beyond the limits of sociological realism into visionary writing. 20TH-CENTURY LITERATURETwo world wars, an intervening economic depression of great severity, and the austerity of life in Britain following the second of these wars help to explain the quality and direction of English literature in the 20th century. The traditional values of Western civilization, which the Victorians had only begun to question, came to be questioned seriously by a number of new writers, who saw society breaking down around them. Traditional literary forms were often discard |
||||||
![]() |
||||||
![]() |
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
Copyright© 2005 - 2025 | Trimite document | Harta site | Adauga in favorite |
![]() |
|