Classical Antiquity: Oedipus, the Odyssey, Aristotle; essentially, Ancient Greek and Roman Tragedy.
· Iambic trimester and lyric style
· uses elevated language
· poetry, meant to be sung
· heavily features tragedy using catharsis, and epics
· tragedies end in a final scene of suffering
· features a tragic hero with a fatal flaw (hamartia) who fails to follow the will of the gods and suffers
· Contains the message: follow the gods, or bad things will happen
· Strict code of masculinity,
Medieval: Beowulf, Canterbury Tales, Le Morte de Arthur
· translated from Old English
· elevated language, long, and detailed
· Poetry, meant to be sung
· Epic tales of knights and kings and smiting
· Strict code of masculinity, and honorable death in battle
Renaissance: Shakespeare!!!!!
· originated in Italy and spread to the rest of Europe
· Took great interest in Classical Antiquity, allusions to Greek and Roman literature
· Humanists take interested in the mind of the human being
· Reflects reality
Romantic/Victorian: Dickens, the Brontes, Hugo, Jane Eyre, Oliver Twist, Les Miserables
· Looks at issues of gender, class, money, industrial society, religion
· Challenges society, often political and pushing for reform
· Authors think about marriage—for love or for money? And Social Darwinism—are the poor to blame for their own situation?
· Writers start really writing the way people actually talk
Realist/Naturalist: Wordsworth
· Relationship between man and nature
· Realistic portrayal of life, about everyday people, and their everyday lives. Often quite pessimistic
· Naturalists looked at human beings and how they are governed by passion and struggle to keep a cap on their tumultuous emotions, and their struggle with their inner beast and strong emotions of lust and passion. Nature shapes the actions of man, and is a very indifferent force. In this era, authors tend to argue that free will is an illusion.
Modern/Post Modern: Albee, Miller,
· Tests the conventional limits of literature: plots tend not to be chronological, or not everything is resolved at the end. The theatre of the Absurd emerges.
· Playwrights Albee and Miller are social critics of the consumer society around them
Maya--Do you really mean to say that the Renaissance began in Italy and spread to... Italy? Wanna fix this? =)
ReplyDeleteAlthough it is a good idea to know basic eras information for the AP, I don't know that I would have made them an entirely separate category when synthesizing the course. We really only spend a few days on them. Still, this is a very thorough list, perhaps even more in depth than what we learned in class. Good job!
ReplyDeleteI didn't take many notes on the eras, so this is wonderful! Your examples of the people and books we've read grounded it, and you gave relevant information throughout.
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