European
European
European
EUROPE
• The name Europe is derived from the name Europa, which is the
name of a goddess in Greek mythology
• birthplace of Western civilization
• Parthenon in Athens and the Coliseum in Rome most
famous examples of architecture
EUROPEAN LITERATURE
• The history of European literature and of each of its standard
periods can be illuminated by comparative consideration of the
different literary languages within Europe and of the relationship of
European literature to world literature.
• European literature includes literature in many languages; among
the most important of the modern written works are those in
English, Spanish, French, Dutch, Polish, German, Italian,
Modern Greek, Czech, Russian, Bosnian and works by the
Scandinavians and Irish.
• Important classical and medieval traditions are those in Latin, Ancient
Greek, Old Norse, Medieval French and the Italian Tuscan dialect of the
renaissance.
• The global history of literature from the ancient Near East to the present
can be divided into five mains, overlapping stages. European literature
emerges from world literature before the birth of Europe—during
antiquity, whose classical languages are the heirs to the complex heritage
of the Old World.
• Consists of the Periods: Renaissance- 1485- 1680, Enlightenment- 1650-
1800, Romanticism- 1798- 1870, Realism- 1820- 1920, Victorian period-
1837- 1901, Modernism- 1910-1965, and Post- modernism- 1965-present.
PERIODS
OF
EUROPEAN LITERATURE
RENAISSANCE
(1485-1680)
• “Renaissance” is a French word which means “rebirth”.
• used to refer to the rebirth of learning caused by the
discovery of hundreds of Greek and Latin manuscripts which had
been lost during the Middle Ages.
• Dante’s greatest work, "The Divine Comedy," which still gets name-checked by
a variety of modern-day works such as Dan Brown’s "Inferno"; in fact, any time
you refer to a “circle of hell” you are referencing Dante’s vision of Satan’s
kingdom.
"THE DIVINE COMEDY"
• is a poem that follows Dante himself
as he travels through hell, purgatory,
and heaven. It’s extremely complex
in its structure and references, and
quite beautiful in its language even in
translation. While concerned with
many theological and religious
themes, it shows its Renaissance
trappings in the many ways Dante
critiques and comments on
contemporary Florentine politics,
society, and culture
ENLIGHTENMENT
(1650-1800)
• The Enlightenment, also known as the Age of
Reason, was a philosophical movement that took
place primarily in Europe and, later, in North
America, during the late 17th and early 18th
century. Its participants thought they were
illuminating human intellect and culture after the
"dark" Middle Ages.
• Characteristics of the Enlightenment include:
reason
liberty
scientific method
•Enlightenment philosophy was
skeptical of religion — especially the
powerful Catholic Church —
monarchies and hereditary aristocracy.
Enlightenment philosophy was
influential in ushering in the French
and American revolutions and
constitutions.
ENLIGHTENMENT CONCEPTS
• Reason
Enlightenment philosophers believed that rational thought
could lead to human improvement and was the most
legitimate mode of thinking. They saw the ability to reason
as the most significant and valuable human capacity,
according to PBS.
• Skepticism
Rather than being content with blind faith, Enlightenment
thinkers wanted proof that something was true.
• Religious tolerance
though skeptical of religious institutions, many
Enlightenment thinkers believed that people should be
free to worship as they wished.
• Liberty
The Enlightenment tolerance of religion is related to
the movement's emphasis on personal liberty. This
concept holds that God and/or nature gave all humans
basic rights and humans should be free to act without
oppressive restriction.
• Progress
The centuries before the Enlightenment were characterized by rapid
changes, from the discoveries of the Scientific Revolution to the
exploration of the world and the advancement in art technique during the
Renaissance.
Empiricism vs. Rationalism
• Empiricism
is associated with British Enlightenment philosophers, including John Locke,
George Berkeley and Hume. Empiricists argued that all human knowledge
comes through the senses and sensory experiences.
• Rationalists
who lived primarily in continental Europe, argued that senses were
untrustworthy and knowledge came from the mind, through conceiving of
or intuiting ideas, according to Loyola University New Orleans.
JOHN COMENIUS (1592-1670)
• Was a Czech intellectual who
espoused universal education
and practical instruction.
• He advocated for lifelong
learning and the development
of logical thinking as opposed
to memorization by rote. He
wanted education to be given
to women and impoverished
children.
THE DUTCHMAN HUGO GROTIUS (1583-
1645)
• Was a prodigious intellectual who laid the foundation for international law based on
the concept of natural law. He was one of the pioneers in putting forth the idea of a
society of states governed not by force and warfare but by laws and mutual
agreement to enforce those laws.
THOMAS HOBBES (1588-1679) AND JOHN
LOCKE (1632-1704)
• Englishmen who were
influential in the
Enlightenment.
• Hobbes championed
absolutism for the sovereign
but he believed in the right
of the individual and the
equality of all men.
• Locke promoted the
opposite type of
government, which was a
representative government.
BARON DE MONTESQUIEU (1689-1755)
• wrote the book "The Social Contract," in which he championed for a form of
government based on small, direct democracy, which openly signifies the will of the
population.
DENIS DIDEROT (1713-1784)
• He embarked on a mammoth
project to create the
"Encyclopedia, or a Systemic
Dictionary of the Sciences, Arts,
and Crafts." Many writers
contributed to the 35-volume
work, which as edited by Diderot
and Jean le Rond d'Alembert. The
"Encyclopedia" would incorporate
all of the world's knowledge and
spread it to other countries all
over the world.
DAVID HUME (1711-1776)
• was a Scottish philosopher who
gained fame as an essayist,
according to the Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy. He
was a highly influential
empiricist who argued that
humans were a bundle of
sensations with no true selves
(this is called the Bundle
Theory) and that ethics were
based on emotion rather than
moral principles.
IMMANUEL KANT (1724-1804)
• a close friend of Hume, was a Scottish philosopher and economist most famous for his
theory of the "invisible hand of the market," according to the Stanford Encyclopedia of
Philosophy. His book "The Wealth of Nations" laid the foundation for free market
economics.
ISAAC NEWTON (1642-1727)
• was an English mathematician and physicist who laid the foundation for classical
mechanics and calculus. Newton developed the laws of motion and universal gravitation,
which led to improvements in understanding the Copernican heliocentric universe,
according to the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences
THOMAS JEFFERSON (1743-1826)
• a visionary poet who was also an artist and engraver, with a particular interest in
childhood and a strong hatred of mechanical reason and industrialization;(The
Ancient of Days, Nebuchadnezzar, Newton).
ROBERT BURNS (1759-1796)
• who worked as a ploughman and farm labourer but who had received a good
education and was interested in early Scots ballads and folk-song;(Auld Lang
Syne,A Red,Red Rose,Tam o’ Shanter, no pics)
WALTER SCOTT (1771-1832)
• another Scot, who developed his interest in old tales of the Border and early
European poetry into a career as poet and novelist. (The Lay of the Last
Minstrel,Waverley, Ivanhoe no pics)
THE LAKE POETS
• Tolstoy’s first self-proclaimed novel, Anna Karenina, tells the story of the eponymous
Russian society woman who, initially trapped by societal conventions, dares to leave her
loveless marriage for an illicit love and meets with tragic consequences.
“WAR AND PEACE (1869)”
• War and Peace broadly focuses on
Napoleon’s invasion of Russia in 1812 and
follows three of the most well-known
characters in literature:
Pierre Bezukhov, the illegitimate son of a
count who is fighting for his inheritance
and yearning for spiritual fulfillment
Prince Andrei Bolkonsky, who leaves his
family behind to fight in the war against
Napoleon
Natasha Rostov, the beautiful young
daughter of a nobleman who intrigues
both men.
HENRIK IBSEN (1828-1906)
• One of the most famous and controversial writers in world
literature.
• His plays broke new ground and earned him the nick name "the
father of realism," a style of theater that focused on domestic
interactions. Ibsen is a founder of the Modernist theater
movement.
• Ibsen is best known for the play A Doll's House, which deals with
the limitations and harsh expectations of women at the time.
• Other works of Henrik Ibsen are Pillars of Society (1877)
and The League of Youth (1869)
A DOLL'S HOUSE ( 1879)
• The novel was the first of the author’s works to realistically depict the
impoverished London underworld and to illustrate his belief that poverty leads
to crime.
• The book was inspired by how Dickens felt as an impoverished child forced to
get by on his wits and earn his own keep.
A CHRISTMAS CAROL (1843)
• Dickens tapped into his own personal experiences, from his difficult childhood
to his work as a journalist.
• Although David Copperfield is not considered Dickens’ best work, it was his
personal favorite.
ÉMILE-ÉDOUARD-CHARLES-ANTOINE
ZOLA (ÉMILE ZOLA) (1840-1902)
• French novelist, critic, and political
activist who was the most prominent
French novelist of the late 19th
century.
• He was noted for his theories
of naturalism, which underlie his
monumental 20-novel series Les
Rougon-Macquart, and for his
intervention in the Dreyfus
Affair through his famous open letter,
“J’accuse.”
LES ROUGON-MACQUART
• Novel
• Poetry
• Theater
• Nonfiction
• Gothic and supernatural literature
• Children‘s literature
NOVELS
• Novel was the dominant genre during the Victorian
period.
Early Victorian Novels :
-portraited difficult lives ; where hard work,
love and perseverance were always rewarded.
Late Victorian Novels:
-reflected an inner struggle to conquer the
flaws of human nature through effort and virtue.
POETRY
• Many characteristics of romantic poetry continued in
poetry of the Victorian period. However, Victorian poetry, in
general, is less subjective than the romantic.
• The themes are more realistic, discussing such issues as
child labor, the rights of women, science and religion.
• Victorian poetry is mostly pictorial, heavily relying on visual
imagery.
• The elegy is one of the most popular poetic forms in the
period, a form of poetry that laments the dead or the past.
THEATER
• Theater became an extremely popular form of
entertainment for all social classes during this era and
Queen Victoria promoted it. Plays usually had a strong
comedic element, both high and low, and the plots were
full of mistaken identities, coincidences and mistiming’s.
Oscar Wilde was the leading dramatist of the late
Victorian period and his comic masterpiece The
Importance of Being Earnest is a satiric reflection of the
time.
NONFICTION
• The Victorian era was a period of great
scientific discovery and the Victorians tried to
describe and classify the world they lived in.
Among others, Charles Darwin with On the
Origin of Species, Friedrich Engels with his
Condition of the Working Classes in England
and John Stuart Mill with his philosophical
works, changed the way the Victorians thought
about themselves and about the world.
SUPERNATURAL AND GOTHIC
LITERATURE
Possible features in a
gothic novel are
monsters, ghosts, curses,
hidden rooms, mad
women in the attic and
witchcraft.
CHILDREN‘S LITERATURE
• ROBERT BROWNING
- Husband of Elizabeth Barrett.
- His poems are known for their irony,
characterization, dark humour, social
commentary, historical settings, and
challenging vocabulary and syntax.
Notable works:
-Pied Piper of Hamelin Men and Women
-The Ring and the Book
- Dramatic Romances and Lyrics
THEATER
• OSCAR WILDE
-was the leading dramatist of the
late Victorian period and his comic
masterpiece “The Importance of Being
Earnest” is a satiric reflection of the
time.
MODERNISM
(1910-1965)
BACKGROUND
relative
CHARACTERISTICS OF THIS PERIOD
Central preoccupation of
Modernism is with the inner self
and consciousness; thus,
literature took the form of the
first person which is considered
deviant to the classical and
traditional forms.
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE LITERATURE
1. VIRGINIA WOOLF
(January 25, 1882 – March 28,
1941)
• British writer born and raised
in London, England
• style is complex, psychological,
intricate, and dense.
FAMOUS WORKS
• Mrs. Dalloway
• A Room of One's
Own
• To The Lighthouse.
FAMOUS AUTHORS DURING THIS ERA
• Ulysses
FAMOUS AUTHORS DURING THIS ERA