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Literary Ages

  πŸ“š Literary Periods (Chronological Order) πŸ›️ 1. Old English / Anglo-Saxon Period (450–1066) Beowulf , epic poetry, riddles 🏰 2. Middle English Period (1066–1500) Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales Religious and courtly literature πŸ‘‘ 3. The Renaissance (1500–1660) a. Elizabethan Era (1558–1603) Shakespeare, Marlowe, Sidney b. Jacobean Era (1603–1625) John Donne, Ben Jonson c. Caroline & Commonwealth Era (1625–1660) Cavalier poets , Metaphysical Poetry – Literary Movement , Milton 🎭 4. The Neoclassical Period (1660–1798) a. Restoration Age (1660–1700) Dryden, satire, comedy of manners b. Augustan Age (1700–1745) Pope, Swift, prose and poetry c. Age of Sensibility / Pre-Romantic (1745–1798) Johnson, Gray, Burns 🌿 5. The Romantic Period (1798–1837) Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Keats, Shelley 🎩 6. The Victorian Period (1837–1901) Dickens, Tennyson, Browning, BrontΓ« sisters 🧠 7. The Edwardian Period (19...

poetry: critics and their views on poetry

a clean, age-wise, exam-oriented document with major critics + their exact views on poetry , perfectly structured for UGC NET / SET / university answers . Age-wise Critics And Views On Poetry (exam-oriented) poetry: critics and their vies on poetry Classical Age (Greek & Roman) Plato (427–347 BCE) Poetry is imitative (mimesis) and thrice removed from truth. Poets appeal to emotions, not reason → dangerous for the ideal state . Proposed banishment of poets from the Republic. Aristotle (384–322 BCE) Poetry is imitation of action , but more philosophical than history . Introduced Tragedy , Plot (mythos) as the soul of tragedy. Concept of Catharsis (purgation of pity and fear). Defended poetry against Plato. Horace (65–8 BCE) Poetry should teach and delight ( dulce et utile ). Emphasized decorum , unity, and craftsmanship. Medieval Age St. Augustine Poetry must serve Christian morality . Suspicious of pagan poetic pleasure. Dante (1265–1321) Poetry as allegory with moral and ...

🌿 The Romantic Period (1798–1837)

 πŸŒΏ The Romantic Period (1798–1837) The Romantic Period (1798–1837) marks one of the most significant and revolutionary phases in the history of English literature . It officially begins with the publication of William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s Lyrical Ballads (1798) and ends with the accession of Queen Victoria in 1837 . Romanticism arose as a reaction against Neo-Classicism , opposing its emphasis on reason, order, rules, and imitation , and replacing them with emotion, imagination, individualism, and love for nature . πŸ“œ Historical and Intellectual Background The Romantic Period was deeply shaped by powerful historical and social changes. The French Revolution (1789) played a crucial role in inspiring Romantic writers with its ideals of liberty, equality, fraternity, and human rights . Initially welcomed with enthusiasm, the Revolution symbolized freedom from tyranny and rigid authority. However, the later violence and chaos also introduced themes of disi...

Age of Sensibility / Pre-Romantic Age (1745–1798)

  🌿 Age of Sensibility / Pre-Romantic Age (1745–1798) The Age of Sensibility , also called the Pre-Romantic Age , acts as a bridge between Neo-Classicism and Romanticism . This period marks a shift from reason to emotion , rules to imagination , and urban life to nature . πŸ”Ή Historical Background Time Period: 1745–1798 Transitional phase between: Age of Pope (Neo-Classical) Age of Romanticism Rise of individual feeling, emotion, sympathy, and nature The Age of Sensibility (1745–1798) , also known as the Pre-Romantic Age , developed as a reaction against the excessive emphasis on reason, order, and classical rules of the Neo-Classical Age. By the mid-eighteenth century, writers began to feel that strict rationalism suppressed human emotions, imagination, and individual experience . This period largely unfolded during the reigns of King George II (1727–1760) and King George III (1760–1820) , a time marked by political unrest such as the Jacobite Rebellion (1...

πŸ“˜ Mother Courage and Her Children – Summary

  Author: Bertolt Brecht Year: 1939 Genre: Epic Theatre / Anti-war play Background: Written during World War II, set in the Thirty Years’ War (1618–1648) Core Ideas War is shown as a business , not a heroic activity. Ordinary people suffer; profiteers survive. Capitalism feeds on war. War destroys morality, family, and humanity . Mother Courage (Central Character) A war trader who sells goods to soldiers. Strong but morally blind . Loves her children but values survival and money more. Learns nothing from her suffering. Represents people who profit from war and are destroyed by it . Children – Symbolic Meaning Eilif: False heroism Violence praised in war, punished later Swiss Cheese: Honesty and morality Executed for being truthful Kattrin: True humanity and sacrifice Moral center of the play πŸ”Ή Short Summary Mother Courage and Her Children is an anti-war play that exposes the brutality, hypocrisy,...