MAJORSHIP
Area: ENGLISH
Focus: English and
American Literatures
LET Competencies:
1.
Trace
the major literary works produced in English and American literatures.
2.
Explain
the tenets of specific literary movements in English and American literatures.
3.
Define
literary terms and concepts exemplified in selected literary texts.
A.
OLD ENGLISH PERIOD
1.
Ecclesiastical History
of the English People. Written by The Venerable Bede (673-735) who is
considered as the Father of English
History and regarded as the greatest Anglo-Saxon scholar.
2.
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. Different monks traces the annals that chronicle Anglo-Saxon history, life
and culture after the Roman invasion
·
Alfred the Great (848?-899) who was King of the southern
Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Wessex from 871-899 championed Anglo-Saxon culture by
writing in his native tongue and by encouraging scholarly translations from
Latin into Old English (Anglo-Saxon). It is believed that the Anglo-Saxon
Chronicle was begun during his reign.
3.
Cædmon’s Hymn. (7th century). An unlearned cowherd who was
inspired by a vision and miraculously acquired the gift of poetic song produced
this nine-line alliterative
vernacular praise poem in honor of God.
4. Fates of the Apostles, Juliana, Elene, and
Christ II or The Ascension. These Old English Christian poems
were popularized by Cynewulf in the 8th century.
5.
Beowulf. The National
epic of England which appears in the Nowell Codex manuscript from the 8th
to 11th century. It is the most notable example of the earliest
English poetry, which blends Christianity and paganism.
·
Epic is a long
narrative poem written about the exploits of a supernatural hero.
6.
Dream of the Rood. One of the
earliest Christian poems preserved in the 10th century Vercelli
book. The poem makes use of dream
vision to narrate the death and resurrection of Christ from the perspective
of the Cross or Rood itself.
7.
The Battle
of Brunanburg. This is a heroic old English poem that records, in nationalistic
tone, the triumph of the English against the combined forces of the Scots,
Vikings and Britons in AD 937.
8.
The Battle
of Maldon. Another heroic poem that recounts the fall of
the English army led by Birhtnoth in the hands of the Viking invaders in AD
991.
9.
The
Wanderer. The lyric poem is composed of 115 lines of alliterative verse that
reminisces a wanderer’s (eardstapa) past glory in the company of his
lord and comrades and his solitary exile upon the loss of his kinsmen in
battles.
10. The Seafarer. An Old English lyric recorded in the Exeter Book that
begins by recounting in elegiac tone the perils of seafaring and ends with a
praise of God.
B. MIDDLE ENGLISH PERIOD
1.
Everyman is
regarded as the best of the morality
plays. It talks about Everyman
facing Death. He summons the help of all his friends but only Good Deeds is
able to help him. Characters in this morality play are personifications of abstractions like Everyman, Death, Fellowships,
Cousins, Kindred, Goods, Good Deeds, etc. which makes the play allegorical in
nature.
·
Allegory is a form
of extended metaphor, in which objects, persons, and actions in a narrative,
have meanings that lie outside the narrative itself. The underlying meaning has
moral, social, religious, or political significance, and characters are often
personifications of abstract ideas as charity, greed, or envy.
2.
English and
Scottish ballads preserved the local events, beliefs, and characters in an easily
remembered form. One familiar ballad is Sir
Patrick Spens, which concerns Sir Patrick’s death by drowning.
·
Ballad. A narrative poem meant to be sung. It is characterized
by repetition and often by a repeated refrain (a recurrent phrase or series of
phrases). The earliest ballads were anonymous works transmitted orally from
person to person through generations.
3.
Sir Gawain
and the Green Knight. The best example of the romance of the Middle
Ages attributed to the Pearl Poet (14th century).
·
Medieval
Romance is a
long narrative poem idealizing knight errantry. As such, it pictures chivalrous
knights engaged in a number of adventures to protect their King, to pay homage
to their lady love and to prove their honor.
4.
The
Canterbury Tales. Geoffrey Chaucer’s frame narrative (story within a story) which
showcases the stories told by 29 pilgrims on their way to the shrine of the
martyr Saint Thomas Becket at Canterbury - the seat of religious activities
during the Middle English period. The collection of tales presents a microcosm
of the Middle English society composed of the nobility, the religious, the
merchant class and the commoners.
5.
Le Morte
d'Arthur. Originally written in eight books, Sir Thomas Mallory’s collection of
stories revolves around the life and adventures of King Arthur and the Knights
of the Round Table.
C. THE RENAISSANCE
(16th Century)
1. Doctor Faustus. Christopher
Marlowe (Father of English Tragedy) powerfully exemplifies the sum total
of the intellectual aspirations of the Renaissance through his play Dr. Faustus.
In the play, Faustus sells his soul to the devil in exchange of power and
knowledge.
2. The Faerie Queene. Edmund
Spenser composed this elaborate allegory in honor of the Queen of
Fairyland (Queen Elizabeth I).
·
Each verse in the Spenserian stanza contains nine lines: eight
lines of iambic pentameter, with five
feet, followed by a single line of iambic hexameter, an "alexandrine," with six. The rhyme scheme
of these lines is ababbcbc-cdcdee.
·
Spenserian
sonnet consists of three quatrains and a concluding couplet in iambic
pentameter with the rhyme pattern abab-bcbd-cdcd-ee
3.
Song to Celia. A love poem written by Ben Jonson - a poet,
dramatist, and actor best known for his lyrics and satirical plays.
Drink to me, only with thine eyes,/ And I will
pledge with mine;
Or leave a kiss but in the cup,/ And I'll not look for wine.
The thirst, that from the soul doth rise,/ Doth ask a drink divine:
But might I of Jove's nectar sup,/ I would not change for thine.
Or leave a kiss but in the cup,/ And I'll not look for wine.
The thirst, that from the soul doth rise,/ Doth ask a drink divine:
But might I of Jove's nectar sup,/ I would not change for thine.
4.
The King James Bible. One of the supreme achievements of the
English Renaissance. This translation was ordered by James I and made by 47
scholars working in cooperation. It was published in 1611 and is known as the
Authorized Version. It is rightly regarded as the most influential book in the
history of English civilization.
5.
Shakespearean Sonnets. Also known as the Elizabethan or English sonnets, Shakespearean
sonnets are composed of three quatrains and one heroic couplet with the rhyme
scheme - abab-cdcd-efef-gg.
6.
Elizabethan Tragedies, Comedies and Historical
Plays
·
William Shakespeare is the
great genius of the Elizabethan Age (1564-1616). He wrote more than 35 plays as
well as 154 sonnets and 2 narrative poems –Venus and Adonis and The
Rape of Lucrece.
Examples
of Shakespearean Plays
Tragedies
|
Comedies
|
Historical Plays
|
a.
Antony and Cleopatra
b.
Coriolanus
c.
Hamlet
d.
Julius Caesar
e.
King Lear
f.
Macbeth
g.
Othello
h.
Romeo and Juliet
i.
Timon of Athens
j.
Titus Andronicus
|
a.
All's Well That Ends Well
b.
As You Like It
c.
The Merchant of Venice
d.
A Midsummer Night's Dream
e.
Much Ado About Nothing
f.
Taming of the Shrew
g.
The Tempest
h.
Twelfth Night
i.
Two Gentlemen of Verona
j.
Winter's Tale
|
a.
Henry IV, part 1
b.
Henry IV, part 2
c.
Henry V
d.
Henry VI, part 1
e.
Henry VI, part 2
f.
Henry VI, part 3
g.
Henry VIII
h.
King John
i.
Richard II
j.
Richard III
|
Some quotable quotes from
Shakespeare
a.
The play’s the thing wherein I'll
catch the conscience of the king - Hamlet
b.
All the world’s a stage, and all
the men and women merely players. They have their exits and their entrances;
And one man in his time plays many parts" - As You Like It
c.
Good Night, Good night! Parting is such sweet
sorrow, that I shall say good night till it be morrow. - Romeo and Juliet
d.
What's in a name? That which we
call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet. - Romeo and Juliet
e.
If you prick us, do we not bleed?
if you tickle us, do we not laugh? If you poison us, do we not die? And if you
wrong us, shall we not revenge? - The Merchant of Venice
f.
Cowards die many times before their
deaths; The valiant never taste of death but once. - Julius Caesar
g.
How sharper than a serpent's tooth
it is to have a thankless child! - (King Lear, Act I, Scene
IV).
h.
Out, out, brief
candle! Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player that struts and frets his
hour upon the stage and then is heard no more: it is a tale told by an idiot,
full of sound and fury, signifying nothing. - Macbeth
i.
But love is blind, and lovers cannot see/ The petty follies that
themselves commit. - Merchant of Venice
j.
The fool doth
think he is wise, but the wise man knows himself to be a fool. - As You Like It
D. THE AGE OF REASON (17TH Century)
1.
The Essays (Francis Bacon). The greatest literary contribution of the 17th century is
the essay. Francis Bacon is hailed as the Father of Inductive Reasoning and the Father of the English Essay.
Some quotable quotes from
Bacon
a.
Some books are to be tasted, others to be
swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested; that is, some books are to
be read only in parts; others to be read, but not curiously; and some few to be
read wholly, and with diligence and attention. - Of Studies
b.
He
that hath wife and children hath given hostages to fortune; for they are
impediments to great enterprises, either of virtue or mischief. - Of Marriage
and Single Life
c.
Wives
are young men’s mistresses, companions for middle age, and old men’s
nurses. - Of Marriage and Single Life
e. If a man will begin
with certainties, he shall end in doubts; but if he will be content to begin
with doubts, he shall end in certainties.- Advancement of Learning
2.
The Pilgrim's
Progress (John Bunyan). An allegory that shows Christian tormented by
spiritual anguish. Evangelist, a
spiritual guide visits him and urges him to leave the City of Destruction.
Evangelist claims that salvation can only be found in the Celestial City, known
as Mount Zion. Christian embarks on a
journey and meets a number of other characters before he reaches the Celestial
City.
·
Allegory is a story illustrating an idea
or a moral principle in which objects and characters take on symbolic meanings
external to the narrative.
3.
Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained (John Milton)
·
Paradise Lost is an epic
poem in blank verse that tells of the fall of the angels and of the creation of
Adam and Eve and their temptation by Satan in the Garden of Eden ("Of
Man's first disobedience, and the fruit/ Of that forbidden tree . . . ").
·
Paradise Regained centers on the temptation of Christ and the
thirst for the word of God.
4.
Holy Sonnets (John
Donne)
·
Metaphysical Poetry makes use
of conceits or farfetched similes and metaphors intended to
startle the reader into an awareness of the relationships among things
ordinarily not associated.
Holy Sonnets XIV
John Donne
Batter my heart, three-person'd
God, for you
As yet but knock, breathe, shine, and seek to mend;
That I may rise and stand, o'erthrow me, and bend
Your force to break, blow, burn, and make me new.
I, like an usurp'd town to'another due,
Labor to'admit you, but oh, to no end;
Reason, your viceroy in me, me should defend,
But is captiv'd, and proves weak or untrue.
Yet dearly'I love you, and would be lov'd fain,
But am betroth'd unto your enemy;
Divorce me,'untie or break that knot again,
Take me to you, imprison me, for I,
Except you'enthrall me, never shall be free,
Nor ever chaste, except you ravish me.
As yet but knock, breathe, shine, and seek to mend;
That I may rise and stand, o'erthrow me, and bend
Your force to break, blow, burn, and make me new.
I, like an usurp'd town to'another due,
Labor to'admit you, but oh, to no end;
Reason, your viceroy in me, me should defend,
But is captiv'd, and proves weak or untrue.
Yet dearly'I love you, and would be lov'd fain,
But am betroth'd unto your enemy;
Divorce me,'untie or break that knot again,
Take me to you, imprison me, for I,
Except you'enthrall me, never shall be free,
Nor ever chaste, except you ravish me.
5.
Easter Wings and the Altar (George Herbert). Concrete poems that deal with man's thirst for God and
with God's abounding love.
The Altar
A broken A L T A R, Lord, thy servant reares,
Made of a heart, and cemented with teares:
Whose parts are as thy hand did frame;
No workmans tool hath touch’d the same.
A H E A R T alone
Is such a stone,
As nothing but
Thy pow’r doth cut.
Wherefore each part
Of my hard heart
Meets in this frame,
To praise thy Name;
That, if I chance to hold my peace,
These stones to praise thee may not cease.
O let thy blessed S A C R I F I C E be mine,
And
sanctifie this
A L
T A R to be
thine.
6.
Cavalier Poems. Popularized
by Thomas Carew, Richard Lovelace, Sir John Suckling and Robert Herrick, cavalier poems are known for their
elegant, refined and courtly culture. The poems are often erotic and espouse carpe
diem, "seize the day."
From To the Virgins to Make Much of Time
Robert Herrick
Gather ye rosebuds while ye may,
Old time is still a-flying:
And this same flower that smiles to-day
To-morrow will be dying.
Old time is still a-flying:
And this same flower that smiles to-day
To-morrow will be dying.
The glorious lamp of
heaven, the sun,
The higher he's a-getting,
The sooner will his race be run,
And nearer he's to setting.
The higher he's a-getting,
The sooner will his race be run,
And nearer he's to setting.
E. THE
RESTORATION (18th Century)
1.
Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)
·
A Modest Proposal is a
bitter pamphlet that ironically suggests that the Irish babies be specially
fattened for profitable sale as meat, since the English were eating the Irish
people anyhow – by heavy taxation.
·
Gulliver's Travels is a
satire on human folly and stupidity. Swift said that he wrote it to vex the
world rather than to divert it. Most people, however, are so delightfully
entertained by the tiny Lilliputians and by the huge Brobdingnagians that they
do not bother much with Swift's bitter satire on human pettiness or crudity.
2.
Alexander Pope (1688-1744) published
an exposition of the rules of the classical school in the form of a poem An
Essay on Criticism.
·
The Rape of the Lock mockingly
describes a furious fight between two families when a young man snips off a
lock of the beautiful Belinda's hair. Pope wrote in heroic couplets, a
technique in which he has been unsurpassed. In thought and form he carried
18th-century reason and order to its highest peak.
3.
Thomas Gray (1716-71) wrote Elegy
Written in a Country Churchyard, which is a collection of
18th-century commonplaces expressing concern for lowly folk.
4.
Henry Fielding (1707-54)
is known for his Tom Jones, which tells the story of a young
foundling who is driven from his adopted home, wanders to London, and
eventually, for all his suffering, wins his lady.
5.
Laurence Sterne (1713-68)
wrote Tristram Shandy, a novel in nine
volumes showcasing a series of loosely organized funny episodes in the
life of Shandy.
6.
Oliver Goldsmith (1728-74)
·
She Stoops
to Conquer is a comedy of manners that satirizes the 18th Century
aristocracy who is overly class conscious.
F. THE
ROMANTIC MOVEMENT
1. In the
Preface to Lyrical Ballads, William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge declared that “poetry should express, in genuine language, experience as filtered
through personal emotion and imagination; the truest experience was to be found
in nature.”
2. The most
important tenets of Romanticism include:
·
Belief in the importance of the individual, imagination, and
intuition
·
Shift from faith in reason to faith in the senses, feelings, and
imagination; from interest in urban society and its sophistication to an
interest in the rural and natural; from public, impersonal poetry to subjective
poetry; and from concern with the scientific and mundane to interest in the
mysterious and infinite.
3. Because of
this concern for nature and the simple folk, authors began to take an interest
in old legends, folk ballads, antiquities, ruins, "noble savages,"
and rustic characters.
·
Many
writers started to give more play to their senses and to their imagination.
·
They
loved to describe rural scenes, graveyards, majestic mountains, and roaring
waterfalls.
·
They
also liked to write poems and stories of such eerie or supernatural things as
ghosts, haunted castles, fairies, and mad folk.
Romantic
Writers
1. Robert
Burns (1759-96) is also known as the national poet of Scotland because
he wrote not only in Standard English, but also in the light Scot’s dialect.
2. Horace Walpole (The Castle of Otranto), Ann Radcliffe (The Mysteries of Udolpho) and Matthew Gregory Lewis (The
Monk) are Gothic writers who crafted stories of terror and
imagination.
·
Gothic Literature is a literary style popular during the
end of the 18th century and the beginning of the 19th. This style usually
portrayed fantastic tales dealing with horror, despair, the grotesque and other
“dark” subjects.
3. Mary
Wollstonecraft Shelley (1797-1851) followed Gothic tradition in her
Frankenstein.
4.
William Blake (1757-1827) was both poet
and artist. He not only wrote books, but he also illustrated and printed them.
He devoted his life to freedom and universal love. He was interested in
children and animals the most innocent of God's creatures.
from The Lamb
William
Blake
Little Lamb, who made
thee?
Dost thou know who made
thee?
Gave thee life, and bid
thee feed
By the stream and o'er
the mead;
Gave thee clothing of
delight,
Softest clothing,
woolly, bright;
Gave thee such a tender
voice,
Making all the vales
rejoice?
Little Lamb, who made
thee?
Dost thou know
who made thee?
from The Tyger
William
Blake
Tyger! Tyger! burning
bright
In the forests of the night,
What immortal hand or eye
Could frame thy fearful symmetry?
In the forests of the night,
What immortal hand or eye
Could frame thy fearful symmetry?
______
When the stars threw
down their spears,
And watered heaven with their tears,
Did he smile his work to see?
Did he who made the Lamb make thee?
And watered heaven with their tears,
Did he smile his work to see?
Did he who made the Lamb make thee?
The Sick Rose
William
Blake
O ROSE, thou art sick!
The invisible worm,
That flies in the night,
In the howling storm,
Has found out thy bed
Of crimson joy;
And his dark secret love
Does thy life destroy.
5. Samuel
Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834) wrote a
long narrative poem about sinning and redemption in The Rime of the Ancient
Mariner
6. William
Wordsworth (1770-1850), together with Coleridge,
brought out a volume of verse, Lyrical Ballads, which signaled the beginning of
English Romanticism. Wordsworth found beauty in the realities of nature, which
he vividly reflects in the poems: The World is Too Much with Us, I Wandered
Lonely as a Cloud, She Dwelt Among the Untrodden Ways, and She was a Phantom of
Delight.
7. Charles
Lamb (1775-1834) wrote the playful essay Dissertation
on Roast Pig. He also rewrote many of Shakespeare's plays into stories for
children in Tales from Shakespeare.
8. Sir Walter
Scott (1771-1832) wrote poems and novels. The
Lay of the Last Minstrel and The Lady of the Lake are representative of Scott's
poems. Between 1814 and 1832 Scott wrote 32 novels which include Guy Mannering
and Ivanhoe
9. Jane Austen
(1775-1817) a writer of realistic novels
about English middle-class people. Pride
and Prejudice is her best-known work. Her other novels include: Northanger
Abbey, Persuasion, Mansfield Park, Emma, and Sense and Sensibility.
10.
George Gordon Byron
(1788-1824) was an outspoken critic of the evils of his time. He hoped for
human perfection, but his recognition of man's faults led him frequently to
despair and disillusionment. He is much remembered for his poems: Childe
Harold’s Pilgrimage, She Walks in Beauty, and The Prisoner
of Chillon.
11. Percy
Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822), together with John Keats, established the romantic
verse as a poetic tradition.
·
Many of his works are meditative like Prometheus Unbound;
others are exquisitely like The Cloud, To a Skylark,
and Ode to the West Wind. Adonais, an elegy he
wrote for his best friend John Keats, ranks among the greatest elegies.
·
In Ode to the West Wind, Shelley shows an evocation of
nature wilder and more spectacular than Wordsworth described it.
12.
John Keats (1795-1821) believed that
true happiness was to be found in art and natural beauty.
·
His Ode to a Nightingale spoke of what Keats called “negative capability,” describing it as
the moment of artistic inspiration when the poet achieved a kind of
self-annihilation – arrived at that trembling, delicate perception of beauty.
From A Thing of
Beauty is a Joy Forever
John Keats
A thing of beauty is a joy for ever:
Its loveliness increases; it will never
Pass into nothingness; but still will keep
A bower quiet for us, and a sleep
Full of sweet dreams, and health, and quiet breathing.
Its loveliness increases; it will never
Pass into nothingness; but still will keep
A bower quiet for us, and a sleep
Full of sweet dreams, and health, and quiet breathing.
G. THE
VICTORIAN AGE
Major
Victorian Poets - shifted from the extremely personal expression (or subjectivism)
of the Romantic writers to an objective surveying of the problems of human
life.
1.
Alfred Tennyson (1809-92)
wrote seriously with a high moral purpose.
·
Idylls of the King is a
disguised study of ethical and social conditions. Locksley Hall, In
Memoriam, and Maud deal with conflicting scientific and
social ideas.
2.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806-1861)
wrote the most exquisite love poems of her time in Sonnets from the
Portuguese. These lyrics were written secretly while Robert Browning
was courting her.
Sonnet 43
Elizabeth
Barrett Browning
How do I
love thee? Let me count the ways.
I love thee to the depth and breadth and height
My soul can reach, when feeling out of sight
For the ends of Being and ideal Grace.
I love thee to the level of everyday's
Most quiet need, by sun and candle-light.
I love thee freely, as men strive for Right;
I love thee purely, as they turn from Praise.
I love thee with a passion put to use
In my old griefs, and with my childhood's faith.
I love thee with a love I seemed to lose
With my lost saints, --- I love thee with the breath,
Smiles, tears, of all my life! --- and, if God choose,
I shall but love thee better after death.
I love thee to the depth and breadth and height
My soul can reach, when feeling out of sight
For the ends of Being and ideal Grace.
I love thee to the level of everyday's
Most quiet need, by sun and candle-light.
I love thee freely, as men strive for Right;
I love thee purely, as they turn from Praise.
I love thee with a passion put to use
In my old griefs, and with my childhood's faith.
I love thee with a love I seemed to lose
With my lost saints, --- I love thee with the breath,
Smiles, tears, of all my life! --- and, if God choose,
I shall but love thee better after death.
3.
Robert Browning (1812-89)
is best remembered for his dramatic monologues. My Last Duchess, Fra
Lippo Lippi, and Andrea del Sarto are excellent examples.
· Dramatic
monologue is a long speech by an imaginary character used to expose
pretense and reveal a character’s inner self.
4.
The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood is a group
of painters and poets who rebelled against the sentimental and the commonplace.
They wished to revive the artistic standards of the time before the Italian
painter Raphael. Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828-1882) and Christina
Georgina Rossetti (1830-1894) wrote in this tradition.
Victorian
Novelists
1.
Charles Dickens (1812-1870)
became a master of local color in The Pickwick Papers. He is
considered as England's best-loved novelist. His works include: Great Expectations, Hard Times, Oliver
Twist, A Christmas Carol, A Tale of Two Cities.
2.
William Makepeace Thackeray
(1811-1863) disliked sham, hypocrisy, stupidity, false optimism, and
self-seeking. The result was satire on manners like Vanity Fair
with its heroine, Becky Sharp.
3.
Charlotte Bronte (1816-1855),
Emily Bronte (1818-1848) and Anne Bronte (1820-1849) wrote novels
romantic novels.
·
Charlotte's Jane Eyre and Emily's Wuthering
Heights, especially, are powerful and intensely personal stories of the
private lives of characters isolated from the rest of the world.
4.
George Eliot (1819-80) was one of
England's greatest women novelists. She is famous for Silas Marner
and Middlemarch.
5.
Thomas Hardy (1840-1928) is a naturalist
writer who brought to fiction a philosophical attitude that resulted from the
new science.
·
Hardy’s Wessex novels from The Return of the Native, Tess
of d’Urbervilles, Mayor of Casterbridge to Jude the
Obscure sought to show the futility and senselessness of human’s
struggle against the forces of natural environment, social convention, and
biological heritage.
6.
Samuel Butler (1835-1902) believed that
evolution is the result of the creative will rather than of chance selection.
His novel The Way of All Flesh explores the relationships between
parents and children where he reveals that the family restrains the free
development of the child.
Romance and
Adventure
1.
Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-94)
wrote stories in a light mood. His novels of adventure are exciting and
delightful: Treasure Island, Kidnapped, and The
Master of Ballantrae.
·
Stevenson also wrote David Balfour and The
Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde which endear him to adult
readers as well.
2.
Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)
satirized the English military and administrative classes in India. He stirred
the emotions of the empire lovers through his delightful children's tales. He
is known for Barrack Room Ballads, Soldiers Three, The Jungle Books, and
Captains Courageous.
3.
Lewis Carroll (Charles
Lutwidge Dodgson) (1832-98) combines fantasy and satire in Alice's
Adventures in Wonderland and Through a Looking Glass.
19th-Century
Drama
1.
Oscar Wilde (1854-1900) is a poet and
novelist who became famous for his Importance of Being Earnest.
2.
George Bernard Shaw
(1856-1950) wrote plays known for their attacks on Victorian prejudices and
attitudes. Shaw began to write drama as a protest against existing conditions
slums, sex hypocrisy, censorship, and war.
Because his plays were not well received, Shaw wrote their now-famous
prefaces.
H. MODERN
ENGLISH LITERATURE
Early 20th-Century Prose
1.
John Galsworthy (1867-1933)
depicted the social life of an upper-class English family in The Forsyte
Saga, a series of novels which records the changing values of such a
family.).
2.
H.G. Wells (1866-1946) wrote science
fiction like The Time Machine, The Island of Dr. Moreau,
and The War of the Worlds. He also wrote social and political
satires criticizing the middle-class life of England. A good example is Tono-Bungay
which attacks commercial advertising.
3.
Joseph Conrad (1857-1924)
wrote remarkable novels as The Nigger of the Narcissus and Lord
Jim where he depicts characters beset by obsessions of cowardice,
egoism, or vanity.
4.
E.M. Forster (1879-1970) is a master of
traditional plot. His characters are ordinary persons out of middle-class life.
They are moved by accident because they do not know how to choose a course of
action. He is famous for A Passage to India, a novel that shows
the lives of Englishmen in India.
Early 20th-Century Poetry
1.
A.E. Housman (1859-1936) was an
anti-Victorian who echoed the pessimism found in Thomas Hardy. In his Shropshire
Lad, nature is unkind; people struggle without hope or purpose;
boys and girls laugh, love, and are untrue.
2.
William Butler Yeats (1865-1939),
John Millington Synge (1871-1909), and Lord Dunsany (1878-1957)
worked vigorously for the Irish cause. All were dramatists and all helped found
the famous Abbey Theatre.
Writers after the World Wars
World War I brought discontent and
disillusionment. Men were plunged into gloom at the knowledge that
"progress" had not saved the world from war. In fiction there
was a shift from novels of the human comedy to novels of characters.
Fiction ceased to be concerned with a plot or a forward-moving narrative.
Instead it followed the twisted, contorted development of a single character
or a group of related characters
1.
William Somerset Maugham
(1874-1965) focused on the alienation and despair of drifters. His Of
Human Bondage portrays Philip Carey struggling against
self-consciousness and embarrassment because of his cub-foot.
2.
D.H. Lawrence (1885-1930)
explored highly psychological themes as human desire, sexuality, and instinct
alongside the dehumanizing effects of modernity and industrialization in such
great novels as Sons and Lovers, Women in Love, The
Plumed Serpent, and Lady Chatterley’s Lover.
3.
James Joyce (1882-1941) was an Irish
expatriate noted for his experimental use of the interior monologue and
the stream of consciousness technique in landmark novels as Ulysses,
Finnegans Wake, and in his semi-autobiographical novel The
Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man’.
·
Stream of consciousness is a
technique pioneered by Dorothy Richardson, Virginia Woolf and James Joyce. It
presents the thoughts and feelings of a character as they occur.
·
Joyce’s A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man is
one of the most notable bildungs-roman in English literature. A
bildungsroman is a novel of formation or development in which the
protagonist transforms from ignorance to knowledge, innocence to maturity.
4.
Virginia Woolf (1882-1941)
also believed that reality, or consciousness, is a stream. Life, for both
reader and characters, is immersion in the flow of that stream. Mrs.
Dalloway and To the Lighthouse are among her best works.
5.
Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)
wrote Point Counter Point, Brave New World, and After
Many a Summer Dies the Swan where he showed his cynicism of the
contemporary world.
6.
William Golding (born 1911)
was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature in 1983. His first novel, Lord
of the Flies tells of a group of schoolboys who revert to savagery when
isolated on an island. In the novel, Golding explores naturalist and
religious themes of original sin.
7.
George Orwell (1903-50) is world-renown,
for the powerful anti-Communist satire Animal Farm. This was
followed in 1949 with an anti-totalitarian novel entitled Nineteen
Eighty-Four.
8.
Graham Greene (1904-91) is known for
novels of highly Catholic themes like Brighton Rock, The
Heart of the Matter, The End of the Affair and The
Power and the Glory. Among his better-known later novels are The
Quiet American, Our Man in Havana, A Burnt-Out
Case, The Human Factor, and Monsignor Quixote.
9.
Kingsley Amis is considered by many to be
the best of the writers to emerge from the 1950s. The social discontent he
expressed made Lucky Jim famous in England. Lucky Jim
is the story of Jim Dixon, who rises from a lower-class background only to find
all the positions at the top of the social ladder filled.
10.
Anthony Burgess (born
1917) was a novelist whose fictional exploration of modern dilemmas combines
wit, moral earnestness, and touches of the bizarre. He is known for A
Clockwork Orange. His other novels include Enderby Outside,
Earthly Powers, The End of the World News, and The
Kingdom of the Wicked.
11.
Doris Lessing (born 1919) is a
Zimbabwean-British writer, famous for novels The Grass is Singing and The
Golden Notebook. She won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2007.
12.
Salman Rushdie is a
British-Indian novelist and essayist noted for his Midnight's Children
and The Satanic Verses which prompted Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini
to issue a fatwa against him, because Muslims considered the book blasphemous.
In July 2008 Midnight's Children won a public vote to be named
the Best of the Booker, the best novel to win the Booker Prize in the award's
40-year history.
AMERICAN LITERATURE
A. THE LITERATURE OF EXPLORATION
1.
Christopher Columbus the famous
Italian explorer, funded by the Spanish rulers Ferdinand and Isabella, wrote
the "Epistola," printed in 1493 which recounts his voyages.
2.
Captain John Smith led the
Jamestown colony and wrote the famous story of the Indian maiden, Pocahontas.
B. COLONIAL PERIOD IN NEW ENGLAND
1.
William Bradford
(1590-1657) wrote Of Plymouth Plantation and the first document
of colonial self-governance in the English New World, the Mayflower
Compact.
2.
Anne Bradstreet (c. 1612-1672) wrote the
first published book of poems by an American which was also the first American
book to be published by a woman.
- She wrote long, religious poems on
conventional subjects, but she is well loved for her witty poems on
subjects from daily life and her warm and loving poems to her husband and
children.
- She was inspired by English
metaphysical poetry, and her book The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up in
America (1650) shows the influence of Edmund Spenser, Philip
Sidney, and other English poets as well.
3.
Edward Taylor (c. 1644-1729) was an
intense, brilliant poet, teacher and minister who sailed to New England in 1668
rather than take an oath of loyalty to the Church of England.
- He
wrote a variety of verses: funeral elegies, lyrics, a medieval "debate,"
and a 500-page Metrical History of Christianity (mainly a history of
martyrs). His best works, according to modern critics, are the series of
short Preparatory Meditations.
4. Jonathan
Edwards (1703-1758) a Puritan minister best known for his frightening, powerful
sermon, Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.
- Puritans
refer
to two distinct groups: "separating" Puritans, such as the
Plymouth colonists, who believed that the Church of England was corrupt
and that true Christians must separate themselves from it; and
non-separating Puritans, such as those in Massachusetts Bay Colony, who
believed in reform but not separation.
- Puritans
believed
in God’s ultimate sovereignty in granting grace and salvation; therefore,
their lives center on three important covenants – covenants of Works,
Grace, and Redemption.
C. THE AMERICAN ENLIGHTENMENT
Enlightenment thinkers and writers
were devoted to the ideals of justice, liberty, and equality as the natural
rights of man. Thus, the18th-century American Enlightenment was a movement
marked by -
§
an emphasis on rationality rather than tradition,
§
scientific inquiry instead of unquestioning religious dogma, and
§
Representative government in place of monarchy.
1.
Benjamin Franklin
(1706-1790) was America's "first great man of letters," who embodied
the Enlightenment ideal of humane rationality.
·
He used the pseudonym Poor
Richard or Richard Saunders in Poor Richard’s Almanack – a
yearly almanac he released from 1732-1758.
The almanac was a repository of Franklin’s proverbs and aphorisms.
2.
Thomas Paine (1737-1809) is America’s
greatest pamphleteer.
·
His pamphlet Common Sense sold over 100,000 copies
in the first three months of its publication.
·
He wrote the famous line, "The cause of America is in a great
measure the cause of all mankind."
3.
Philip Freneau (1752-1832)
was the Poet of the American Revolution
who incorporated the new stirrings of European Romanticism in his lyric The
Wild Honeysuckle.
4.
Washington Irving
(1789-1859) published his Sketch Book (1819-1820) simultaneously in England
and America, obtaining copyrights and payment in both countries.
·
The Sketch Book of Geoffrye Crayon (Irving's
pseudonym) contains his two best-remembered stories, Rip Van Winkle
and The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.
5.
James Fenimore Cooper (1789-1851)
·
Leather Stocking
tales in which he introduced his renowned character Natty Bumppo, who embodies his vision of the frontiersman as a
gentleman, a Jeffersonian "natural aristocrat."
·
Natty
Bumppo is the first famous frontiersman in American literature and the
literary forerunner of countless cowboy and backwoods heroes.
6.
Phillis Wheatley (c.
1753-1784) is the first African-American
author who wrote of religious themes.
·
To S.M., a Young African Painter, on
Seeing His Works and On Being Brought from Africa to America.
These poems boldly confront white racism and assert spiritual equality.
D. THE ROMANTIC PERIOD, 1820-1860
Transcendentalists
·
The Transcendentalist movement was a reaction against
18th century rationalism and a manifestation of the general humanitarian
trend of 19th century thought.
·
The movement was based on the belief in the unity of the world
and God.
·
The doctrine of self- reliance and individualism
developed through the belief in the identification of the individual soul with
God.
1.
Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882) was a leading exponent of the
transcendentalist movement who called for the birth of American individualism
inspired by nature.
·
In his essay Self-Reliance, Emerson remarks: "A
foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds."
·
Most of his major ideas – the need for a new national vision, the
use of personal experience, the notion of the cosmic Over-Soul, and the
doctrine of compensation – are suggested in his first publication, Nature.
2.
Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)
wrote Walden, or Life in the Woods, which was the result of two
years, two months, and two days (from 1845 to 1847) he spent living in a cabin
he built at Walden Pond on property owned by Emerson.
·
In Walden, Thoreau not only tests the theories of
transcendentalism, but he also re-enacts the collective American experience of
the 19th century by living on the frontier.
·
He also wrote Civil Disobedience, with its theory of
passive resistance based on the moral necessity for the just individual to
disobey unjust laws. This was an
inspiration for Mahatma Gandhi's Indian independence movement and Martin Luther
King's struggle for black Americans' civil rights in the 20th century.
3.
Walt Whitman (1819-1892) incorporated
both transcendentalist and realist ideas in his works. He championed the individual and the
country's democratic spirit in his Leaves of Grass.
·
Leaves of Grass, which he
rewrote and revised throughout his life, contains Song of Myself,
the strongest evocation of the transcend list ideals.
From Song of Myself
Walt Whitman
I CELEBRATE myself, and sing
myself,
And what I assume you shall assume,
For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.
And what I assume you shall assume,
For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.
4.
Emily Dickinson
(1830-1886) was a radical individualist who found deep inspiration in the
birds, animals, plants, and changing seasons of the New England countryside.
She wrote 1,775 poems but only one was published in her lifetime.
·
She shows a terrifying existential awareness. Like Poe, she
explores the dark and hidden part of the mind, dramatizing death and the grave.
The Brahmin Poets
Boston Brahmin poets
refer to the patrician, Harvard-educated literati who sought to fuse American
and European traditions in their writings.
1.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882) was
responsible for the misty, ahistorical, legendary sense of the past that merged
American and European traditions.
·
He wrote three long narrative poems popularizing native legends in
European meters Evangeline, The Song of Hiawatha,
and The Courtship of Miles Standish.
·
He also wrote short lyrics like The Jewish Cemetery at
Newport, My Lost Youth, and The Tide Rises, The
Tide Falls.
2.
Oliver Wendell Holmes
(1809-1894) was a physician and professor of anatomy and physiology at Harvard.
Of the Brahmin poets, he is the most versatile. His works include
collections of humorous essays (The Autocrat of the Breakfast-Table),
novels (Elsie Venner), biographies (Ralph Waldo Emerson),
and verses (The Deacon's Masterpiece, or The Wonderful
One-Hoss Shay).
The Romantic Period, 1820-1860:
Fiction
1.
Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864) set his
stories in Puritan New England. His greatest novels, The Scarlet Letter
and The House of the Seven Gables; and his best-known
shorter stories The Minister's Black Veil, Young Goodman Brown, and
My Kinsman, Major Molineux, all highlight the Calvinistic
obsession with morality, sexual repression, guilt and confession, and spiritual
salvation.
2.
Herman Melville (1819-1891) went to sea
when he was just 19 years old. His interest in sailors' lives grew naturally
out of his own experiences, and most of his early novels grew out of his
voyages.
·
Moby-Dick is
Melville's masterpiece. It is the epic story of the whaling ship Pequod
and its "ungodly, god-like man," Captain Ahab, whose obsessive quest
for the white whale Moby-Dick leads the ship and its men to destruction.
3.
Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849) refined the
short story genre and invented detective fiction. Many of his stories prefigure
the genres of science fiction, horror, and fantasy so popular today.
·
His famous works The Cask of Amontillado, Masque
of the Red Death, The Fall of the House of Usher, Purloined
Letter, and the Pit and the Pendulum, all center
on the mysterious and the macabre.
·
He also wrote poetry like Anabel Lee, The Raven, and
The Bell.
4.
Sojourner Truth (c.1797-1883) epitomized
the endurance of the women reformers.
·
Born a slave in New York, she escaped from slavery in 1827,
settling with a son and daughter in the supportive Dutch-American Van Wagener
family, for whom she worked as a servant.
·
She worked with a preacher to convert prostitutes to Christianity
and lived in a progressive communal home. She was christened "Sojourner
Truth" for the mystical voices and visions she began to experience. To
spread the truth of these visionary teachings, she sojourned alone, lecturing,
singing gospel songs, and preaching abolitionism through many states over three
decades
5.
Harriet Beecher Stowe
(1811-1896) wrote Uncle Tom's Cabin; or, Life Among the Lowly which became the
most popular American book of the 19th Century. Its passionate
appeal for an end to slavery in the United States inflamed the debate that,
within a decade, led to the U.S. Civil War (1861-1865).
·
Uncle Tom, the slave and central character, is a true Christian
martyr who labors to convert his kind master, St. Clare, prays for St. Clare's
soul as he dies, and is killed defending slave women.
·
Slavery is depicted as evil not for political or philosophical
reasons but mainly because it divides families, destroys normal parental love,
and is inherently un-Christian.
E. REALIST WRITERS
1.
Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain) (1835-1910)
·
Samuel Clemens, better known by his pen name of Mark Twain, grew
up in the Mississippi River frontier town of Hannibal, Missouri.
·
Ernest Hemingway's famous statement that all of American literature
comes from one great book, Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn,
indicates this author's towering place in the tradition.
·
Twain's style is vigorous, realistic, colloquial American speech,
gave American writers a new appreciation of their national voice.
·
Huckleberry Finn has
inspired countless literary interpretations. Clearly, the novel is a story of
death, rebirth, and initiation. The escaped slave, Jim, becomes a father figure
for Huck; in deciding to save Jim, Huck grows morally beyond the bounds of his
slave-owning society. It is Jim's adventures that initiate Huck into the
complexities of human nature and give him moral courage.
2.
Bret Harte (1836-1902) is remembered
as a local colorist and author of adventurous stories such as The
Luck of Roaring Camp and The Outcasts of Poker Flat set
along the western mining frontier.
3.
Henry James (1843-1916) wrote that
art, especially literary art, "makes life, makes interest, makes
importance."
·
With Twain, James is generally ranked as the greatest American
novelist of the second half of the 19th century.
·
James is noted for his "international theme" -- that is,
the complex relationships between naive Americans and cosmopolitan Europeans,
which he explored in the novels The American, Daisy Miller,
and a masterpiece, The Portrait of a Lady.
4.
Edith Wharton (1862-1937)
descended from a wealthy family in New York society and saw firsthand the
decline of this cultivated group and, in her view, the rise of boorish,
nouveau-riche business families. This social transformation is the background
of many of her novels.
·
Wharton's best novels include The House of Mirth, The Custom
of the Country, Summer, The Age of Innocence, and the novella
Ethan Frome.
5.
Stephen Crane (1871-1900) was a
journalist who also wrote fiction, essays, poetry, and plays.
·
Crane saw life at its rawest, in slums and on battlefields. His
short stories like The Open Boat, The Blue Hotel,
and The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky exemplify such realism.
·
He wrote a haunting Civil War novel, The Red Badge of
Courage which explores the psychological turmoil of a self-confessed
coward.
·
Crane's Maggie: A Girl of the Streets is one of the
best naturalistic American novels. It is the harrowing story of a poor,
sensitive young girl whose alcoholic parents utterly fail her. In love and
eager to escape her violent home life, she allows herself to be seduced into
living with a young man, who soon deserts her. When her self-righteous mother
rejects her, Maggie becomes a prostitute to survive, but soon commits suicide
out of despair.
6.
Jack London (1876-1916) is a naturalist
who set his collection of stories, The Son of the Wolf in the
Klondike region of Alaska and the Canadian Yukon. His best-sellers The
Call of the Wild and The Sea-Wolf made him the highest paid
writer in the United States of his time.
7.
Theodore Dreiser (1871-1945)
explores the dangers of the American dream in his 1925 work An American
Tragedy, The novel relates, in great detail, the life of Clyde
Griffiths, who grows up in great poverty in a family of wandering evangelists,
but dreams of wealth and the love of beautiful women.
·
An American Tragedy is a
reflection of the dissatisfaction, envy, and despair that afflicted many poor
and working people in America's competitive, success-driven society. As American
industrial power soared, the glittering lives of the wealthy in newspapers and
photographs sharply contrasted with the drab lives of ordinary farmers and city
workers.
·
Muckraking novels used
eye-catching journalistic techniques to depict harsh working conditions and
oppression. Populist Frank Norris's The Octopus exposed big
railroad companies, while socialist Upton Sinclair's The Jungle
painted the squalor of the Chicago meat-packing houses. Jack London's dystopia The
Iron Heel anticipates George Orwell's 1984 in predicting a class war
and the takeover of the government.
8.
Willa Cather (1873-1947) grew up on the
Nebraska prairie among pioneering immigrants - later immortalized in O
Pioneers!, My Antonia, and her well-known story Neighbour
Rosicky.
·
During her lifetime she became increasingly alienated from the
materialism of modern life and wrote of alternative visions in the American
Southwest and in the past.
·
Death Comes for the Archbishop evokes the
idealism of two 16th-century priests establishing the Catholic Church in the
New Mexican desert.
9.
Carl Sandburg (1878-1967) was a poet,
historian, biographer, novelist, musician, essayist, but a journalist by
profession. To many, Sandburg was a latter-day Walt Whitman, writing
expansive, evocative urban and patriotic poems and simple, childlike rhymes and
ballads.
Fog
Carl Sandburg
The fog comes
on little cat feet.
on little cat feet.
It sits looking
over harbor and city
on silent haunches
and then moves on.
over harbor and city
on silent haunches
and then moves on.
10.
Edwin Arlington Robinson
(1869-1935) is the best U.S. poet of the late 19th century. Unlike Masters,
Robinson uses traditional metrics.
·
Some of the best known of Robinson's dramatic monologues are Luke
Havergal, about a forsaken lover; Miniver Cheevy, a
portrait of a romantic dreamer; and Richard Cory, a somber portrait
of a wealthy man who commits suicide.
F. MODERNISM AND EXPERIMENTATION
1.
Gertrude Stein termed this age as the "Period of the Lost
Generation." Many young
Americans lost their sense of identity because of the instability of
traditional structure of values brought about by the wars and the growing
industrialization of cities.
2.
The world depression of the 1930s affected most of the population
of the United States. Workers lost their jobs, and factories shut down;
businesses and banks failed; farmers, unable to harvest, transport, or sell
their crops, could not pay their debts and lost their farms.
3.
Freudian psychology and to a lesser extent Marxism (like the
earlier Darwinian theory of evolution) became popular.
4.
Henry James, William Faulkner, and many
other American writers experimented with fictional points of view. James often
restricted the information in the novel to what a single character would have
known. Faulkner's novel The Sound and the Fury (1929) breaks up
the narrative into four sections, each giving the viewpoint of a different
character (including a mentally retarded boy).
5.
To analyze such modernist novels and poetry, New Criticism
arose in the United States.
MODERNIST POETS
1.
Ezra Pound (1885-1972) was one of the most influential American poets
of this century. His poetry is best known for its clear, visual images, fresh
rhythms, and muscular, intelligent, unusual lines, such as the ones inspired by
Japanese haiku - "In a Station of the Metro" (1916):
The
apparition of these faces in the crowd;
Petals on a wet, black bough.
Petals on a wet, black bough.
3.
T.S. Eliot (1888-1965) wrote
influential essays and dramas, and championed the importance of literary and
social traditions for the modern poet. As a critic, Eliot is best remembered
for his formulation of the "objective correlative," as a means
of expressing emotion through "a set of objects, a situation, a chain of
events" that would be the "formula" of that particular emotion.
·
The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock embodies this
approach, when the ineffectual, elderly Prufrock thinks to himself that he has
"measured out his life in coffee spoons," using coffee spoons to
reflect a humdrum existence and a wasted lifetime.
4. Robert
Frost (1874-1963) combines sound and sense in his frequent
use of rhyme and images. Frost's poems are often deceptively simple but suggest
a deeper meaning.
5.
Wallace Stevens (1879-1955) lived a
double life, one as an insurance business executive, another as a renowned
poet.
·
Some of his best known poems are "Sunday Morning,"
"Peter Quince at the Clavier," "The Emperor of Ice-Cream,"
"Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird," and "The Idea of
Order at Key West."
·
Stevens's poetry dwells upon themes of the imagination, the
necessity for aesthetic form, and the belief that the order of art corresponds
with an order in nature. His vocabulary is rich and various: He paints lush
tropical scenes but also manages dry, humorous, and ironic vignettes.
6.
William Carlos Williams (1883-1963) championed
the use of colloquial speech
·
His sympathy for ordinary working people, children, and every day
events in modern urban settings make his poetry attractive and accessible. The
Red Wheelbarrow, like a Dutch still life, finds interest and beauty in
everyday objects.
The Red Wheelbarrow
William Carlos Williams
so much depends
upon
upon
a red wheel
barrow
barrow
glazed with rain
water
water
beside the white
chickens.
chickens.
·
He termed his work "objectivist" to suggest the
importance of concrete, visual objects. His work influenced the
"Beat" writing of the early 1950s.
·
Beat Generation refers to a
group of American writers who became popular in the 1950s and who popularized
the “Beatniks" culture. The
“Beatniks” rejected mainstream American values, experimented with drugs and
alternate forms of sexuality, and focused on Eastern spirituality.
·
The major works of Beat writing are Allen Ginsberg's Howl, William S. Burroughs's Naked
Lunch and Jack Kerouac's On the Road.
6. Edward
Estlin Cummings (1894-1962), commonly known as e.e. cummings, wrote
innovative verse distinguished for its humor, grace, celebration of love and
eroticism, and experimentation with punctuation and visual format on the page.
8. Langston
Hughes (1902-1967) embraced African- American jazz rhythms in his works. He was one
of the leaders of the Harlem Renaissance responsible for the flowering of
African-American culture and writings.
MODERNIST WRITERS
1.
F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940) is known for
novels whose protagonists are disillusioned by the great American dream.
·
The Great Gatsby focuses on
the story of Jay Gatsby who discovers the devastating cost of success in terms
of personal fulfillment and love.
·
Tender Is the Night talks of a
young psychiatrist whose life is doomed by his marriage to an unstable woman.
·
The Beautiful and the Damned explores the self-destructive extravagance of
his times
2.
Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)
received the Nobel Prize in 1954 for his The Old Man and the Sea
– a short poetic novel about a poor, old fisherman who heroically catches a
huge fish devoured by sharks. This also
won for him the Pulitzer Prize in 1953
·
Hemingway wrote of war, death, and the "lost generation" of cynical survivors. His characters
are not dreamers but tough bullfighters, soldiers, and athletes. If
intellectual, they are deeply scarred and disillusioned.
3.
William Faulkner
(1897-1962) experimented with narrative chronology, different points of view
and voices (including those of outcasts, children, and illiterates), and a rich
and demanding baroque style built of extremely long sentences full of
complicated subordinate parts.
·
Created an imaginative landscape, Yoknapatawpha County, mentioned
in numerous novels, along with several families with interconnections extending
back for generations.
·
His best works include The Sound and the Fury and As
I Lay Dying, two modernist works experimenting with viewpoint and voice
to probe southern families under the stress of losing a family member;
·
Faulkner's themes are southern tradition, family, community, the
land, history and the past, race, and the passions of ambition and love.
4.
Sinclair Lewis
(1885-1951) is the first American to win the Nobel Prize for Literature in
1930.
·
Lewis's Main Street satirized the monotonous,
hypocritical small-town life in Gopher Prairie, Minnesota. His incisive
presentation of American life and his criticism of American materialism,
narrowness, and hypocrisy brought him national and international recognition.
·
In 1926, he was offered and declined a Pulitzer Prize for Arrowsmith,
a novel tracing a doctor's efforts to maintain his medical ethics amid greed
and corruption.
5.
John Steinbeck
(1902-1968) received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1963 for his
realist novel The Grapes of Wrath, the story of a poor Oklahoma
family that loses its farm during the Depression and travels to California to
seek work.
6.
Sylvia Plath (1932-1963) was an American
poet, novelist, short story and children’s author. She became famous for her
semi-autobiographical novel The Bell Jar, which pictures a woman
trapped between the dictates of marriage, mother, and wifehood and the demands
of a creative spirit that.
·
Confessional poetry was
popularized by Robert Lowell, Richard Snodgrass, Anne Sexton, and Sylvia Plath.
It is a kind of poetry which reveals the poet’s personal life in poems about
illnesses, sexuality, and despondence.
7.
Richard Wright
(1908-1960) was the first African-American novelist to reach a general
audience, despite his little education. He depicted his harsh childhood as a
colored American in one of his best books, his autobiography, Black Boy.
He later said that his sense of deprivation, due to racism, was so great that
only reading kept him alive.
8.
Zora Neale Hurston
(1903-1960) is known as one of the lights of the Harlem Renaissance. She first
came to New York City at the age of 16 - having arrived as part of a traveling
theatrical troupe.
·
Her most important work, Their Eyes Were Watching God,
is a moving, fresh depiction of a beautiful mulatto woman's maturation and
renewed happiness as she moves through three marriages.
9. Eugene
O'Neill (1888-1953) is the first American playwright to be honored with
the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1936.
·
O'Neill's earliest dramas concern the working class and poor, but
his later works explore subjective realms, such as obsessions, sex and other
Freudian themes.
·
His play Desire Under the Elms recreates the
passions hidden within one family; The Great God Brown uncovers
the unconsciousness of a wealthy businessman; and his Strange Interlude,
a winner of the Pulitzer Prize, traces the tangled loves of one woman.
·
O'Neill continued to explore the Freudian pressures of love and
dominance within families in a trilogy of plays collectively entitled Mourning
Becomes Electra, based on the classical Oedipus trilogy by
Sophocles.
10. Thornton Wilder (1897-1975) is known
for his plays Our Town and The Skin of Our Teeth, and
for his novel The Bridge of San Luis Rey.
·
Our Town has all the elements of sentimentality and nostalgia –
the archetypal traditional small country town, the kindly parents and
mischievous children, the young lovers.
·
It shows Wilder’s innovative elements such as ghosts, voices from
the audience, and daring time shifts.
11. Arthur
Miller (1915- ) is New York-born dramatist-novelist-essayist-biographer.
·
He reached his personal pinnacle in 1949 with Death of a
Salesman, a study of man's search for merit and worth in his life and
the realization that failure invariably looms.
·
Miller also wrote All My Sons and The Crucible
– both political satires.
12. Tennessee
Williams (1911-1983) focused on disturbed emotions and unresolved
sexuality within families - most of them southern.
·
As one of the first American writers to live openly as a
homosexual, Williams explained that the sexuality of his tormented characters
expressed their loneliness. He was known for incantatory repetitions, a poetic
southern diction, weird Gothic settings, and Freudian exploration of sexual
desire. He became famous for his The Glass Menagerie and A
Streetcar Named Desire.
THE 1950s
·
The 1950s saw the delayed impact of modernization and technology
in everyday life left over from the 1920s - before the Great Depression.
·
World War II brought the United States out of the Depression, and
the 1950s provided most Americans with time to enjoy long-awaited material prosperity.
·
Loneliness at the top was a dominant theme. The 1950s actually was a decade of subtle and
pervasive stress. Novels by John O'Hara, John Cheever, and John Updike explore
the stress lurking in the shadows of seeming satisfaction.
·
Some of the best works portray men who fail in the struggle to
succeed, as in Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman and Saul
Bellow's novella Seize the Day.
·
Some writers went further by following those who dropped out, as
did J.D. Salinger in The Catcher in the Rye, Ralph Ellison in Invisible
Man, and Jack Kerouac in On the Road.
·
Philip Roth published a series of short stories reflecting his own
alienation from his Jewish heritage – Goodbye, Columbus.
·
The fiction of American Jewish writers Bellow, Bernard Malamud,
and Isaac Bashevis Singer – are most noted for their humor, ethical concern,
and portraits of Jewish communities in the Old and New Worlds.
1. Ralph
Waldo Ellison (1914-1994) is known for his one highly-acclaimed book the Invisible Man (1952) which is a
story of a black man who lives a subterranean existence in a hole brightly
illuminated by electricity stolen from a utility company. The book recounts his
grotesque, disenchanting experiences.
2.
Katherine Anne Porter (1890-1980) created fiction organized around a
single narrator telling the story from a consistent point of view. Her first
success, the story Flowering Judas, was set in Mexico during the
revolution.
3. Eudora
Welty (1909-2001) modeled after Katherine Ann Porter, but she is more
interested in the comic and grotesque characters like the stubborn daughter in
her short story Why I Work at the P.O., who moves out of her
house to live in a tiny post office.
5. Saul
Bellow (1915-2005) received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1976.
·
Bellow's Seize the Day is a brilliant novella noted
for its brevity. It centers on a failed businessman, Tommy Wilhelm, who tries
to hide his feelings of inadequacy by presenting a good front. Seize the
Day sums up the fear of failure that plagues many Americans.
6. J.D. Salinger (1919- )
achieved huge literary success with the publication of his novel The
Catcher in the Rye (1951).
·
The novel centers on a sensitive 16-year-old, Holden Caulfield,
who flees his elite boarding school for the outside world of adulthood, only to
become disillusioned by its materialism and phoniness. When asked what he would
like to be, Caulfield answers "the catcher in the rye," In his
vision, he is a modern version of a white knight, the sole preserver of
innocence.
·
His other works include Nine Stories, Franny and Zooey, and
Raise High the Roof-Beam, Carpenters, a collection of stories from The
New Yorker.
7. Jack
Kerouac (1922-1969) was the son of an impoverished French-Canadian family;
Jack Kerouac questioned the values of middle-class life.
·
Kerouac's best-known novel, On the Road, describes
"beatniks" wandering through America seeking an idealistic dream of
communal life and beauty.
·
The Dharma Bums focuses on
counterculture intellectuals and their infatuation with Zen Buddhism.
·
Kerouac also penned a book of poetry, Mexico City Blues,
and volumes about his life with such beatniks as experimental novelist William
Burroughs and poet Allen Ginsberg.
8. John
Barth (1930- ) is more interested in how a story is told than in the story
itself. Barth entices his audience into a carnival fun-house full of distorting
mirrors that exaggerate some features while minimizing others. Many of his
earlier works were in fact existential.
·
In Lost in the Funhouse, he collects14 stories that
constantly refer to the processes of writing and reading. Barth's intent is to
alert the reader to the artificial nature of reading and writing, and to
prevent him or her from being drawn into the story as if it were real.
9. Norman
Mailer (1923-2007) was a novelist, essayist, poet, playwright,
screenwriter, and film director. He is considered as an innovator of narrative
nonfiction called New Journalism in Miami and the Siege of
Chicago. He is also famous for The Executioner's Song, Ancient
Evenings, and Harlot's Ghost.
10. Toni
Morrison (1931- ) won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1993 for her
skillful rendition of complex identities of black people in a universal manner.
Some of her novels include: The Bluest Eye, Sula, Song of Solomon, Tar Baby,
and Beloved.
11. Alice
Walker (1944- ) is an African-American who uses lyrical realism in her epistolary
dialect novel The Color Purple where she exposes social problems
and racial issues.
12. Maya
Angelou wrote I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (1970) which celebrates
mother-daughter connection.