148
Visual Timeline This could be mindbogglingly huge so, I will show some restraint with who gets a mention and not sneak in all my favourite authors. Our topic is LOVE through the ages, so an aspect of love ought to be explored. You need to be aware of the evolution of literature – Kings and Queens, centuries and decades make reasonable divisions – I am sticking to British authors with the occasional important American thrown in. Use this with any knowledge of historical, social and cultural context and you will be

English Literature Timeline

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: English Literature Timeline

Visual Timeline

This could be mindbogglingly huge so, I will show some restraint with who gets a mention and not sneak in all my favourite authors. Our topic is

LOVE through the ages, so an aspect of love ought to be explored. You need to be aware of the

evolution of literature – Kings and Queens, centuries and decades make reasonable divisions

– I am sticking to British authors with the occasional important American thrown in. Use this with any

knowledge of historical, social and cultural context and you will be alright with A03 & A04.

Page 2: English Literature Timeline

14th and 15th Century

Period – Medieval/Gothic

Monarch Richard II 1377-99

Genres• Mystery/Morality

plays• Tales• Epic Prose

Page 3: English Literature Timeline

• Chaucer 1343 – 1400• The Canterbury

Tales

Page 4: English Literature Timeline

Renaissance period

Genres:• Tragedies, comedies.

Sonnets, classical verse, allegorical poetry

HO HO HO!I had a big hit with

GreensleevesDon’t you know!!!

(Not so much luck with the wenches though)

Monarch =Henry VIII 1509 – 47

Page 5: English Literature Timeline

Sir Thomas Wyatt (1503 – 42)

• My heart I gave thee, not to do it pain; • But to preserve, it was to thee taken. • I served thee, not to be forsaken, • But that I should be rewarded again. • I was content thy servant to remain • But not to be paid under this fashion. • Now since in thee is none other reason, • Displease thee not if that I do refrain, • Unsatiate of my woe and thy desire, • Assured by craft to excuse thy fault. • But since it please thee to feign a default, • Farewell, I say, parting from the fire: • For he that believeth bearing in hand, • Plougheth in water and soweth in the sand.

Page 6: English Literature Timeline

Elizabethan

Elizabeth I

(1558 – 1603)

Genres (as Henry VIII – her father)

• Tragedies, comedies. Sonnets, classical verse, allegorical poetry

Page 7: English Literature Timeline

ON MONSIEUR'S DEPARTUREQueen Elizabeth I

•I grieve and dare not show my discontent, I love and yet am forced to seem to hate, I do, yet dare not say I ever meant, I seem stark mute but inwardly to prate. I am and not, I freeze and yet am burned. Since from myself another self I turned. 

My care is like my shadow in the sun, Follows me flying, flies when I pursue it, Stands and lies by me, doth what I have done. His too familiar care doth make me rue it. No means I find to rid him from my breast, Till by the end of things it be supprest. 

Some gentler passion slide into my mind, For I am soft and made of melting snow; Or be more cruel, love, and so be kind. Let me or float or sink, be high or low. Or let me live with some more sweet content, Or die and so forget what love ere meant. 

Page 8: English Literature Timeline

Spenser (1552 – 99)• So passeth, in the passing of a day,

Of mortall life the leafe, the bud, the flowre,Ne more doth flourish after first decay,That earst was sought to decke both bed and bowre,Of many a Ladie, and many a Paramowre:Gather therefore the Rose, whilest yet is prime,For soone comes age, that will her pride deflowre:Gather the Rose of love, whilest yet is time, Whilest loving thou mayest loved be with equall crime.

• [Edmund Spenser (I552-I599): The Faerie Queene II.XII.75]

Page 9: English Literature Timeline

Michael Drayton (1563 – 1631)• Since there’s no help, come let us kiss and

part --Nay, I have done: you get no more of me;And I am glad, yea, glad with all my heart,That thus so cleanly I myself can free.Shake hands for ever, cancel all our vows;And when we meet at any time again,Be it not seen in either of our browsThat we one jot of former love retain.Now, at the last gasp of Love’s latest breath,When, his pulse failing, Passion speechless lies,When Faith is kneeling by his bed of death,And Innocence is closing up his eyes, --Now, if thou wouldst, when all have given him over,From death to life thou mightst him yet recover.

Page 10: English Literature Timeline

Sir Philip Sidney (1554 – 86)

• The names Astrophil and Stella mean Star-lover and Star, suggesting the impossibility of their union because of the distance between them

Page 11: English Literature Timeline

William Shakespeare (1564 – 1616)

Page 12: English Literature Timeline

Christopher Marlowe (1564 -93)

Page 13: English Literature Timeline

Ben Jonson (1572 -1637)

Page 14: English Literature Timeline

John Ford (1586 – 1639)

Page 15: English Literature Timeline

Commentary

• At this time drama becomes important – London Playhouses, Masque and spectacular, Also courtly love poetry

• Henry and Elizabeth were both (apparently) authors penning, respectively, Greensleeves and On Monsignoir’s Departure and other poetry.

Page 16: English Literature Timeline

Critical theory- Defense of Poesy

• Sidney – Apology for Poetry 1595

• Characters: Sidney, in his historical persona as Sir Philip Sidney, poet and courtier [both carefully constructed "roles," so don't treat him as a politically naive truth-teller!]; Edward Wotton, a courtier and friend to Sidney who shared his Continental tour; John Pietro Pugliano, Italian riding master to the Emperor; and all the poets who ever had been.

Page 17: English Literature Timeline

16th and 17th Century

• Period = Jacobean

Monarch - James I (1603 – 25)

• Genres• Metaphysical poetry• Revenge Tragedy

Page 18: English Literature Timeline

Thomas Dekker (1570 – 1632)

• The Roaring Girle

Page 19: English Literature Timeline

John Donne (1572 – 1631)

Page 20: English Literature Timeline

Thomas Heywood (1572 – 1650)

• A woman killed with kindness

Page 21: English Literature Timeline

John Webster (1580 – 1625)

• T.S. Eliot described Webster as the poet who was "much possessed by death, and saw the skull beneath the skin."

Page 22: English Literature Timeline

Thomas Middleton (1580 – 1627)

• Middleton & Rowley• The Changeling

(1622)

Page 23: English Literature Timeline

Francis Beaumont (1584 – 1616)

Page 24: English Literature Timeline

William Rowley (1585 – 1626)

Page 25: English Literature Timeline

George Herbert (1593 – 1633)

You won’t find any saucy references in my poetry.

I’m not like dirty old Donne. My only loves are almighty

God And my lovely mum

(and the wife too I suppose)

Page 26: English Literature Timeline

The Caroline era

• Period/monarch• Charles I (1625 – 49)

• Charles I was executed 1649

Page 27: English Literature Timeline

Critical Theory

• Dryden Essay on Dramatic Poesy 1668

Page 28: English Literature Timeline

Interregnum

• Monarch = NONE!!!!

Period Commonwealth:

1649 – 60• Civil War

• Commentary• Puritans closed the

theatres

Page 29: English Literature Timeline

John Milton (1608 – 74)

Page 30: English Literature Timeline

Anne Bradstreet (1612 – 72)

• The first woman in • America to achieve• Distinction as a poet

Page 31: English Literature Timeline

Andrew Marvell (1621 -78)

Page 32: English Literature Timeline

Henry Vaughn (1622 – 95)

• SON-DAYS

• Bright shadows of true Rest! some shoots of bliss, Heaven once a week; The next world's gladness prepossest in this; A day to seek; Eternity in time; the steps by which We Climb above all ages; Lamps that light Man through his heap of dark days; and the rich, And full redemption of the whole week's flight.

2

The Pulleys unto headlong man; time's bower; The narrow way; Transplanted Paradise; God's walking hour; The Cool o'th' day; The Creatures' _Jubilee_; God's parle with dust; Heaven here; Man on the hills of Myrrh, and flowers; Angels descending; the Returns of Trust; A Gleam of glory, after six-days'-showers.

3

The Church's love-feasts; Time's Prerogative, And Interest Deducted from the whole; The Combs, and hive, And home of rest. The milky way chalked out with suns; a clue That guides through erring hours; and in full story A taste of Heav'n on earth; the pledge, and cue Of a full feast: And the Out Courts of glory.

Page 33: English Literature Timeline

Robert Herrick

Page 34: English Literature Timeline

Richard Lovelace(1618-1658) • TO AMARANTHA, THAT SHE

WOULD DISHEVEL HER HAIR • AMARANTHA sweet and fair, • Ah, braid no more that shining hair! • As my curious hand or eye • Hovering round thee, let it fly! •   • Let it fly as unconfined • As its calm ravisher the wind, • Who hath left his darling, th' East, • To wanton o'er that spicy nest. •   • Every tress must be confest, • But neatly tangled at the best; • Like a clew of golden thread • Most excellently ravellèd. •   • Do not then wind up that light • In ribbands, and o'ercloud in night, • Like the Sun in 's early ray; • But shake your head, and scatter day!

Page 35: English Literature Timeline

Sir John Suckling

Page 36: English Literature Timeline

Aphra Behn (1640 – 89)

Page 37: English Literature Timeline

17th Century

Period: RestorationMonarch - Charles II

(1660 – 85)

Genres:• Restoration drama• Social comedy

Page 38: English Literature Timeline

Commentary

• Theatres re-opened 1660 – comedy of manners.

• Influence of Court on drama and poetry – bawdy, cynical and amoral.

Page 39: English Literature Timeline

William Wycherley (1640 – 1716)

Page 40: English Literature Timeline

John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester(1648 – 80)

Page 41: English Literature Timeline

Congreve (1670 – 1729)

Page 42: English Literature Timeline

18th Century

• Period = Regency

Monarchs:

Queen Anne, George I and George II

Genres:• Satire• Epic• Political essays• Epistolary • Picaresque novels• Bawdy verse

Page 43: English Literature Timeline

Daniel Defoe (1660 – 1731)

Page 44: English Literature Timeline

Sir John Vanbrugh (1664 – 1726)

Page 45: English Literature Timeline

Jonathan Swift (1667 – 1745)

Page 46: English Literature Timeline

Alexander Pope (1688 – 1744)

Page 47: English Literature Timeline

Henry Fielding (1707 -54)

Page 48: English Literature Timeline

18th Century – The Enlightenment

The Augustan Age

Monarch - George III• Romantic I• Genres:• Lyric poetry, gothic

poetry and prose, narrative poetry, romantic novels

Page 49: English Literature Timeline

Oliver Goldsmith (1728 – 74)

• She stoops to conquer

Page 50: English Literature Timeline

Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751 – 1816)

Page 51: English Literature Timeline

Fanny Burney (1752 – 1840)

Page 52: English Literature Timeline

William Blake (1757 – 1827)

I write poetry, inspirational speeches, do engravings,

paint, sculpt and get naked communicate with angels in

the back garden!

Page 53: English Literature Timeline

Robert Burns (1759 – 96)

Page 54: English Literature Timeline

Commentary

• New genre of novel in early 1700s with Defoe• Popularity of biting satire, attacking those in

power• By end of the period 3 volume confessional,

satirical or picaresque novels well established – as well as the romantic novels to cater for female readership; importance of lending libraries

• Blake is a precursor of Romantic movement with interest in childhood and individual

Page 55: English Literature Timeline

Critical Theory

• Johnson Lives of the Poets –

• Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709 – 84)

Page 56: English Literature Timeline

William Wordsworth (1770 – 1850)

Page 57: English Literature Timeline

Walter Scott (1771 – 1832)

Page 58: English Literature Timeline

Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1776 – 1849)

Page 59: English Literature Timeline

Jane Austen (1775 – 1817)

Page 60: English Literature Timeline

Commentary

• First generation of Romantic writers

• Passion and imagination in literature, especially poetry

• Influence of Middle Ages and Gothic era in settings, plots and characters

• Reaction against previous period –

• Importance of rebellion and independence

• Worship of Nature in all aspects

Page 61: English Literature Timeline

Critical theory

• Wordsworth – Preface to Lyrical Ballads

1800

Coleridge – Biographia Literaria 1817

Page 62: English Literature Timeline

John Clare (1793 – 1864)

Page 63: English Literature Timeline

19th Century

• Period: Romantic II

Monarch - George IV (1820 – 37)

Genres• The second

generation of Romantics

Page 64: English Literature Timeline

Lord Byron (1788 – 1824)

Page 65: English Literature Timeline

Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792 -1822)

Page 66: English Literature Timeline

John Keats (1795 – 1821)

Page 67: English Literature Timeline

Mary Shelley (1791 – 1851)

I won the scary writing competition – properly kicking the arses of husband

Percy and bad boy Byron! Frankenstein is still read more than some of their

scribblings. Ha Ha - one nil to the fair sex.

Page 68: English Literature Timeline

Victorian Period (19th century)

• Queen Victoria (1837 – 1901)

Genres in Victorian times =

• Serial novels, political, patriotic, religious verse,

• Social and industrial novels

Page 69: English Literature Timeline

Industrial Revolution

Page 70: English Literature Timeline

Pre-Raphaelite Movement

• A group of artists and writers formed in 1848 in reaction to the existing conventions in art and literature. They wanted a return to simple sincerity and believed that this was to be found in the art of the early artists before Raphael, whose technique was the model of the academicians. Most of the brotherhood were concerned with painting.

Page 71: English Literature Timeline

William Morris (1834 – 96)

Page 72: English Literature Timeline

Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828 – 82)

Page 73: English Literature Timeline

William Holman Hunt

Page 74: English Literature Timeline

John Everett Millais

Page 75: English Literature Timeline

Christina Rossetti (1830 – 94)

Page 76: English Literature Timeline

Nathaniel Hawthorne 1804 - 64

Page 77: English Literature Timeline

Elizabeth Barrett-Browning(1806 – 61)

Page 78: English Literature Timeline

Elizabeth Gaskell (1810 – 65)

Page 79: English Literature Timeline

Charlotte Bronte (1816 – 1855)

Page 80: English Literature Timeline

Emily Bronte (1818 – 48)

Page 81: English Literature Timeline

Anne Bronte (1820 - 49 )

Page 82: English Literature Timeline

George Eliot (1819 – 55)

Page 83: English Literature Timeline

Emily Dickinson (1830 – 86)

Page 84: English Literature Timeline

Mary Elizabeth Braddon (1837 -1915)

Page 85: English Literature Timeline

Alfred Lord Tennyson (1809 – 92)

Page 86: English Literature Timeline

William Makepeace Thackeray(1811 – 63)

Page 87: English Literature Timeline

Walt Whitman (1819 – 92)

Page 88: English Literature Timeline

Charles Dickens (1812 – 70)

Page 89: English Literature Timeline

Mrs Henry Wood (1814 – 87)

Page 90: English Literature Timeline

Anthony Trollope (1815 – 82)

Page 91: English Literature Timeline

Wilkie Collins (1824 – 89)

Page 92: English Literature Timeline

Robert Browning (1812 – 89)

Page 93: English Literature Timeline

Thomas Hardy (1840 – 1928)

Page 94: English Literature Timeline

Oscar Wilde (1856 – 1900)

• Fingall O’Flahartie Wills

Page 95: English Literature Timeline

George Bernard Shaw (1856 – 1950)

Page 96: English Literature Timeline

Edith Wharton (1862 – 1937)

Page 97: English Literature Timeline

William Butler Yeats (1865 – 1939)

Page 98: English Literature Timeline

Arnold Bennett (1867 – 1931)

Page 99: English Literature Timeline

Raymond Chandler (1888 – 1959)

The High Window was one of my books – 1942 – So OY – Larkin give me some money – you’ve stolen my title (almost) and my look.

“I like smooth shiny girls, hardboiled and

loaded with sin.”Not really!! - Don’t mix me up with Marlowe!!

Page 100: English Literature Timeline

Edna St Vincent Millay (1892 – 1950)

Page 101: English Literature Timeline

e.e. cummings (1894 – 1962)

• Edward estlin

Page 102: English Literature Timeline

Noel Coward (1899 – 1973)

Page 103: English Literature Timeline

Commentary• Themes of duty, nationalism and trade,

education and morality until World War One• Class and gender divide• Family values – happy domesticity – woman as

angel of the house• Effect of Darwin on ideas• Wide reading public – serialisation, e.g. Dickens• More restrained than Romantics but still

preoccupied with countryside, children and feelings.

Page 104: English Literature Timeline

Critical Theory

• Shelley – Defence of Poetry 1821

• Hazlitt – Lectures on the English Poets 1818

• Liberal Humanism – Matthew Arnold – Culture and Anarchy 1869

Page 105: English Literature Timeline

20th Century

Period = Edwardian

Monarch= Edward VII (1901 – 10)

• Genres:• War poetry,

psychological novels, symbolist novels, short stories

Page 106: English Literature Timeline

John Steinbeck (1902 – 68)

Page 107: English Literature Timeline

H.G. Wells (1866 – 1946)

• Herbert

• George

Page 108: English Literature Timeline

Edward Thomas (1878 – 1917)

Page 109: English Literature Timeline

Seigfried Sassoon (1886 – 1967)

Page 110: English Literature Timeline

Wilfred Owen (1893 – 1918)

Page 111: English Literature Timeline

E.M. Forster (1879 -1970)

Page 112: English Literature Timeline

Commentary

• First half of the 20th century , World War One brought upheaval and questioning to all aspects of life – rupture with past and its beliefs, e.g. heroes

• Writers turned to art – art for art’s sake

• Interest in theory, experimentalism and breaking rules

Page 113: English Literature Timeline

20th Century

Period = Modernism

Monarch = George V 1910 -36

• Genres:• Science Fiction• Stream of

Consciousness novel

Page 114: English Literature Timeline

Virginia Woolf (1882 – 1941)

Page 115: English Literature Timeline

James Joyce (1882 – 1941)

Page 116: English Literature Timeline

D.H. Lawrence (1885 – 1930)

Page 118: English Literature Timeline

John Betjemen (1906 -197-)

Page 119: English Literature Timeline

Arthur Miller (1915 -

Page 120: English Literature Timeline

J.D. Salinger (1919 – 2010)

Page 121: English Literature Timeline

Truman Capote (1924 - )

Page 122: English Literature Timeline

Kurt Vonnegut, Jr (1922 – 2009)

Page 123: English Literature Timeline

Commentary

• New genres of science fiction and psychological novel sprang from preoccupation with social and personal identity

• Writer alienated from society• Influence of Freudian psychology –

exploring the workings of the unconscious, fascination for sexual fantasy, mysticism and use of symbols

Page 124: English Literature Timeline

Critical Theory

• The New Practical Criticism – T.S. Eliot 1920s

• I.A. Richards Practical Criticism 1924

Page 125: English Literature Timeline

Twentieth Century

• Period/monarch• George VI (1936 –

52)

• Genres:• Socialist poetry and

fiction

Page 126: English Literature Timeline

T.S. Eliot (1888 – 1965)

Page 127: English Literature Timeline

Samuel Beckett (1906 – 89)

Page 128: English Literature Timeline

W.H. Auden (1907 – 73)

Page 129: English Literature Timeline

Commentary

• Traditional chronological narrative replaced by connotation, association and use of symbols

• Recognition of instability and complexity of personality

• Concept of epiphany

• Growth of feminist writing

Page 130: English Literature Timeline

Critical Theory

• W. Empson (Ms Empson’s grandfather!!!) – Seven Types of Ambiguity 1930

• F.R.Leavis – The Common Pursuit 1952

• Formalism

Page 131: English Literature Timeline

Twentieth Century

Post-modernism

Monarch = Queen Elizabeth II (1952 – present day)

• Genres:• Post-modern novel• Political and social

poetry and drama• Drama of the absurd• Post-colonial and

feminist poetry, prose and drama

Page 132: English Literature Timeline

Tennessee Williams (1911 – 83)

Page 133: English Literature Timeline

Dylan Marlais Thomas (27 October 1914 – 9 November 1953)

Page 134: English Literature Timeline

Philip Larkin (1922 – 85)

Page 135: English Literature Timeline

Brian Friel (1929 - )

Page 136: English Literature Timeline

Harold Pinter (1930 -2009 )

Page 137: English Literature Timeline

Ted Hughes (1930 – 98)

Page 138: English Literature Timeline

Sylvia Plath (1932 – 63)

Page 139: English Literature Timeline

Tom Stoppard (1937 - )

Page 140: English Literature Timeline

Margaret Atwood (1937 - )

Page 141: English Literature Timeline

Alan Bennett

Page 142: English Literature Timeline

Seamus Heaney ( 1939 - )

Page 143: English Literature Timeline

Alice Walker ( 1944 - )

Page 144: English Literature Timeline

Ian McEwan (1948 - )

Page 145: English Literature Timeline

Carol Ann Duffy (1955 - )

Page 146: English Literature Timeline

Simon Armitage

Page 147: English Literature Timeline

Commentary• From 1960s to present, preoccupations of

modernism shared but taken further • Traditional linear narrative mocked and rejected

and comfort of closure rejected• Randomness, discontinuity and contradiction,

pastiche and deliberate irony• Makes us reflect on act of writing and

relationship between writer, character, and reader

• Parallelism, binary opposition, doublings, mixing fictional and historical characters, twisting well known myths

Page 148: English Literature Timeline

Critical Theory

• Structuralism• Post-structuralism• New Historicism• Cultural materialism• Marxist• Psychoanalytical• Feminist• Post-colonialism