Zusammenfassung der Ressource
From Satire to Sensibility:
Literature
- 1660-1700
- Principles
- Effort to bring
refinement to English lit.
- Most important
contemporary forms
- Verse
- Comedy
- 'Comedies of manners'
- Pick social
behaviour
apart
- Expose power struggles in the upper classes
- Tragedy
- Heroic play
- Translation
- Critical essay
- Ode
- Satire
- Desire for an
elegant simplicity
- A rising European trend
- Desire to reach a new audience
- Reaction against
extravagance of late
Renaissance lit.
- Lit. still tied to
aristocratic
heroic ideals,
however
- 'Augustan' lit.
- Named for the writers of
August Caesar's reign
(first Roman emperor)
- Virgil
- Horace
- Ovid
- Addressed their work
to the sophisticated
aristocracy
- Charles II brought
back from exile an
admiration of French
lit. & fashions
- Lit.: theoretical 'correctness'
- Poets tried to see and
represent Nature
- 'Universal and
permanent
elements in human
experience'
- Study of the
ancient poets
- Importance of craft
- Planning works to genres
- Epic
- Tragedy
- Comedy
- Pastoral
- Satire
- Ode
- Language & rhetoric
- Wit also crucial
- 1700-1745
- A new group of writers
emerged
- Inc. Swift & Pope
- Turned their wit
against fanaticism
& innovation
- A great age of satire
- Conservative but playful
- They responded more
spontaneously to
expanding commercialism
of printing industry
- Popular prose genres
- News
- Political allegories
- Biographies
of criminals
- Travelogues
- Gossip
- Romantic tales
- Birth of the modern novel
- See Swift's anonymous work
- Authors claim
'editorial' position
- 'Comedy of
manners' replaced
by moral,
sentimental plays
- Piety & middle-class values
- Aimed to
move
audience
to tears
- An 'invented luxury' of 18th C
- The stage
prospered
- Celebrity culture of actors/actresses
- However, dramatists
faded into the
background
- Theme of Nature
became increasingly
popular
- Tourists roamed the
countryside as well
as poets
- Looking for
first-hand
experiences
- Spiritual aspect
- Would inspire
the poetry of the
Romantic Age to
come
- 1740-1785
- Dominated
by prose
- Novelists better
known than poets
- Celebrity culture
- Johnson's Dictionary
- 1755
- First of its kind
- Codified the new style
of language in this
period
- Language to
formulate principles
of philosophy, history,
psychology & art
- 114,000
quotations for
definitions
from English
writers =
relevance to
lit. culture
- Poetry
- Morbid fascination
with suicide & the
grave developed
- Odes
became
more
popular
- Melancholia
- Cultivation of archaic
language/antique
forms
- The novel
- Medieval
revival similar
to poetry
- Produced the
Gothic novel genre
- Horace Walpole
- The Castle of Otranto
- 1765
- The laws of
nightmare
replace laws of
possibility
- Forbidden themes,
e.g. incest,
necrophilia,
atheism etc.
- Epistolary form
still highly popular
- Instruction/moral books
- Journals & letters
chronicling the history of
the times
- Samuel Richardson
- Pamela
- 1740