fbpx
Wikipedia

English literature

English literature is literature written in the English language from the United Kingdom, its Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories, the Republic of Ireland, the United States, and the countries of the former British Empire.[1][note 1] The English language has developed over the course of more than 1,400 years.[2] The earliest forms of English, a set of Anglo-Frisian dialects brought to Great Britain by Anglo-Saxon invaders in the fifth century, are called Old English. Beowulf is the most famous work in Old English, and has achieved national epic status in England, despite being set in Scandinavia. However, following the Norman conquest of England in 1066, the written form of the Anglo-Saxon language became less common. Under the influence of the new aristocracy, French became the standard language of courts, parliament, and polite society.[3] The English spoken after the Normans came is known as Middle English. This form of English lasted until the 1470s, when the Chancery Standard (late Middle English), a London-based form of English, became widespread. Geoffrey Chaucer (1343–1400), author of The Canterbury Tales, was a significant figure in the development of the legitimacy of vernacular Middle English at a time when the dominant literary languages in England were still French and Latin. The invention of the printing press by Johannes Gutenberg in 1439 also helped to standardise the language, as did the King James Bible (1611),[4] and the Great Vowel Shift.[5]

Poet and playwright William Shakespeare (1564–1616) is widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and one of the world's greatest dramatists.[6][7][8] His plays have been translated into every major living language and are performed more often than those of any other playwright.[9] In the nineteenth century Sir Walter Scott's historical romances inspired a generation of painters, composers, and writers throughout Europe.[10]

The English language spread throughout the world with the development of the British Empire between the late 16th and early 18th centuries. At its height, it was the largest empire in history.[11] By 1913, the British Empire held sway over 412 million people, 23% of the world population at the time,[12] During the nineteenth and twentieth centuries these colonies and the USA started to produce their own significant literary traditions in English. Cumulatively, over the period of 1907 to the present, numerous writers from Great Britain, both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, the US, and former British colonies have received the Nobel Prize for works in the English language, more than in any other language.

Old English literature (c. 450–1066) Edit

 
The first page of Beowulf

Old English literature, or Anglo-Saxon literature, encompasses the surviving literature written in Old English in Anglo-Saxon England, in the period after the settlement of the Saxons and other Germanic tribes in England (Jutes and the Angles) c. 450, after the withdrawal of the Romans, and "ending soon after the Norman Conquest" in 1066.[13] These works include genres such as epic poetry, hagiography, sermons, Bible translations, legal works, chronicles and riddles.[14] In all there are about 400 surviving manuscripts from the period.[14]

Widsith, which appears in the Exeter Book of the late 10th century, gives a list of kings of tribes ordered according to their popularity and impact on history, with Attila King of the Huns coming first, followed by Eormanric of the Ostrogoths.[15]: 187  It may also be the oldest extant work that tells the Battle of the Goths and Huns, which is also told in such later Scandinavian works as Hervarar's saga and Gesta Danorum.[15]: 179  Lotte Hedeager argues that the work is far older, however, and that it likely dates back to the late 6th or early 7th century, citing the author's knowledge of historical details and accuracy as proof of its authenticity.[15]: 184–86  She does note, however, that some authors, such as John Niles, have argued the work was invented in the 10th century.[15]: 181–84 

The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is a collection of annals in Old English, from the 9th century, that chronicles the history of the Anglo-Saxons.[16] The poem Battle of Maldon also deals with history. This is a work of uncertain date, celebrating the Battle of Maldon of 991, at which the Anglo-Saxons failed to prevent a Viking invasion.[17]

Oral tradition was very strong in early English culture and most literary works were written to be performed.[18][19] Epic poems were very popular, and some, including Beowulf, have survived to the present day. Beowulf is the most famous work in Old English, and has achieved national epic status in England, despite being set in Scandinavia. The only surviving manuscript is the Nowell Codex, the precise date of which is debated, but most estimates place it close to the year 1000. Beowulf is the conventional title,[20] and its composition is dated between the 8th[21][22] and the early 11th century.[23]

Nearly all Anglo-Saxon authors are anonymous: twelve are known by name from medieval sources, but only four of those are known by their vernacular works with any certainty: Cædmon, Bede, Alfred the Great, and Cynewulf. Cædmon is the earliest English poet whose name is known,[24][pages needed] and his only known surviving work Cædmon's Hymn probably dates from the late 7th century. The poem is one of the earliest attested examples of Old English and is, with the runic Ruthwell Cross and Franks Casket inscriptions, one of three candidates for the earliest attested example of Old English poetry. It is also one of the earliest recorded examples of sustained poetry in a Germanic language. The poem, The Dream of the Rood, was inscribed upon the Ruthwell Cross.[24][pages needed]

Two Old English poems from the late 10th century are The Wanderer and The Seafarer. [25] Both have a religious theme, and Richard Marsden describes The Seafarer as "an exhortatory and didactic poem, in which the miseries of winter seafaring are used as a metaphor for the challenge faced by the committed Christian [...]".[26]

Classical antiquity was not forgotten in Anglo-Saxon England, and several Old English poems are adaptations of late classical philosophical texts. The longest is King Alfred's (849–899) 9th-century translation of Boethius' Consolation of Philosophy.[27]

Middle English literature (1066–1500) Edit

After the Norman conquest of England in 1066, the written form of the Anglo-Saxon language became less common. Under the influence of the new aristocracy, French became the standard language of courts, parliament, and polite society. As the invaders integrated, their language and literature mingled with that of the natives, and the Norman dialects of the ruling classes became Anglo-Norman. From then until the 12th century, Anglo-Saxon underwent a gradual transition into Middle English. Political power was no longer in English hands, so that the West Saxon literary language had no more influence than any other dialect and Middle English literature was written in many dialects that corresponded to the region, history, culture, and background of individual writers.[3]

In this period religious literature continued to enjoy popularity and Hagiographies were written, adapted and translated: for example, The Life of Saint Audrey, Eadmer's (c. 1060 – c. 1126).[28] At the end of the 12th century, Layamon in Brut adapted the Norman-French of Wace to produce the first English-language work to present the legends of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table.[29] It was also the first historiography written in English since the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.

 
Piers Ploughman from a 14th-century manuscript

Middle English Bible translations, notably Wycliffe's Bible, helped to establish English as a literary language. Wycliffe's Bible is the name now given to a group of Bible translations into Middle English that were made under the direction of, or at the instigation of, John Wycliffe. They appeared between about 1382 and 1395.[30] These Bible translations were the chief inspiration and cause of the Lollard movement, a pre-Reformation movement that rejected many of the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church.

Another literary genre, that of Romances, appears in English from the 13th century, with King Horn and Havelock the Dane, based on Anglo-Norman originals such as the Romance of Horn (c. 1170),[31] but it was in the 14th century that major writers in English first appeared. These were William Langland, Geoffrey Chaucer and the so-called Pearl Poet, whose most famous work is Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.[32]

Langland's Piers Plowman (written c. 1360–87) or Visio Willelmi de Petro Plowman (William's Vision of Piers Plowman) is a Middle English allegorical narrative poem, written in unrhymed alliterative verse.[33]

Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is a late 14th-century Middle English alliterative romance. It is one of the better-known Arthurian stories of an established type known as the "beheading game". Developing from Welsh, Irish and English tradition, Sir Gawain highlights the importance of honour and chivalry. Preserved in the same manuscript with Sir Gawayne were three other poems, now generally accepted as the work of the same author, including an intricate elegiac poem, Pearl.[34] The English dialect of these poems from the Midlands is markedly different from that of the London-based Chaucer and, though influenced by French in the scenes at court in Sir Gawain, there are in the poems also many dialect words, often of Scandinavian origin, that belonged to northwest England.[34]

 
Geoffrey Chaucer

Middle English lasted until the 1470s, when the Chancery Standard, a London-based form of English, became widespread and the printing press started to standardise the language. Chaucer is best known today for The Canterbury Tales. This is a collection of stories written in Middle English (mostly in verse although some are in prose), that are presented as part of a story-telling contest by a group of pilgrims as they travel together from Southwark to the shrine of St Thomas Becket at Canterbury Cathedral. Chaucer is a significant figure in the development of the legitimacy of the vernacular, Middle English, at a time when the dominant literary languages in England were still French and Latin.

At this time, literature in England was being written in various languages, including Latin, Norman-French, and English: the multilingual nature of the audience for literature in the 14th century is illustrated by the example of John Gower (c. 1330–1408). A contemporary of William Langland and a personal friend of Chaucer, Gower is remembered primarily for three major works: the Mirroir de l'Omme, Vox Clamantis, and Confessio Amantis, three long poems written in Anglo-Norman, Latin and Middle English respectively, which are united by common moral and political themes.[35]

Significant religious works were also created in the 14th century, including those of Julian of Norwich (c. 1342 – c. 1416) and Richard Rolle. Julian's Revelations of Divine Love (about 1393) is believed to be the first published book written by a woman in the English language.[36]

A major work from the 15th century is Le Morte d'Arthur by Sir Thomas Malory, which was printed by Caxton in 1485.[37] This is a compilation of some French and English Arthurian romances, and was among the earliest books printed in England. It was popular and influential in the later revival of interest in the Arthurian legends.[38]

Medieval theatre Edit

In the Middle Ages, drama in the vernacular languages of Europe may have emerged from enactments of the liturgy. Mystery plays were presented in the porches of cathedrals or by strolling players on feast days. Miracle and mystery plays, along with morality plays (or "interludes"), later evolved into more elaborate forms of drama, such as was seen on the Elizabethan stages. Another form of medieval theatre was the mummers' plays, a form of early street theatre associated with the Morris dance, concentrating on themes such as Saint George and the Dragon and Robin Hood. These were folk tales re-telling old stories, and the actors travelled from town to town performing these for their audiences in return for money and hospitality.[39]

Mystery plays and miracle plays are among the earliest formally developed plays in medieval Europe. Medieval mystery plays focused on the representation of Bible stories in churches as tableaux with accompanying antiphonal song. They developed from the 10th to the 16th century, reaching the height of their popularity in the 15th century before being rendered obsolete by the rise of professional theatre.[40]

 
19th century engraving of a performance from the Chester mystery play cycle.

There are four complete or nearly complete extant English biblical collections of plays from the late medieval period. The most complete is the York cycle of 48 pageants. They were performed in the city of York, from the middle of the 14th century until 1569.[41] Besides the Middle English drama, there are three surviving plays in Cornish known as the Ordinalia.[42][43]

Having grown out of the religiously based mystery plays of the Middle Ages, the morality play is a genre of medieval and early Tudor theatrical entertainment, which represented a shift towards a more secular base for European theatre.[44] Morality plays are a type of allegory in which the protagonist is met by personifications of various moral attributes who try to prompt him to choose a godly life over one of evil. The plays were most popular in Europe during the 15th and 16th centuries.[45]

The Somonyng of Everyman (The Summoning of Everyman) (c. 1509–1519), usually referred to simply as Everyman, is a late 15th-century English morality play. Like John Bunyan's allegory Pilgrim's Progress (1678), Everyman examines the question of Christian salvation through the use of allegorical characters.[46]

English Renaissance (1500–1660) Edit

The English Renaissance as a part of the Northern Renaissance was a cultural and artistic movement in England dating from the late 15th to the 17th century.[47] It is associated with the pan-European Renaissance that is usually regarded as beginning in Italy in the late 14th century. Like most of northern Europe, England saw little of these developments until more than a century later — Renaissance style and ideas were slow in penetrating England. Many scholars see the beginnings of the English Renaissance during the reign of Henry VIII[48] and the Elizabethan era in the second half of the 16th century is usually regarded as the height of the English Renaissance.[47][49]

The influence of the Italian Renaissance can also be found in the poetry of Thomas Wyatt (1503–1542), one of the earliest English Renaissance poets. He was responsible for many innovations in English poetry, and alongside Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey (1516/1517–1547) introduced the sonnet from Italy into England in the early 16th century.[50][51][52] After William Caxton introduced the printing press in England in 1476, vernacular literature flourished.[37] The Reformation inspired the production of vernacular liturgy which led to the Book of Common Prayer (1549), a lasting influence on literary language.

Elizabethan period (1558–1603) Edit

Poetry Edit

Edmund Spenser (c. 1552–1599) was one of the most important poets of the Elizabethan period, author of The Faerie Queene (1590 and 1596), an epic poem and fantastical allegory celebrating the Tudor dynasty and Elizabeth I. Another major figure, Sir Philip Sidney (1554–1586), was an English poet, whose works include Astrophel and Stella, The Defence of Poetry, and The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia. Poems intended to be set to music as songs, such as those by Thomas Campion (1567–1620), became popular as printed literature was disseminated more widely in households. John Donne was another important figure in Elizabethan poetry (see Jacobean poetry below).

Drama Edit

Among the earliest Elizabethan plays are Gorboduc (1561) by Sackville and Norton, and Thomas Kyd's (1558–1594) The Spanish Tragedy (1592). Gorboduc is notable especially as the first verse drama in English to employ blank verse, and for the way it developed elements, from the earlier morality plays and Senecan tragedy, in the direction which would be followed by later playwrights.[53] The Spanish Tragedy[54] is an Elizabethan tragedy written by Thomas Kyd between 1582 and 1592, which was popular and influential in its time, and established a new genre in English literature theatre, the revenge play.[55]

 
William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare (1564–1616) stands out in this period as a poet and playwright as yet unsurpassed. Shakespeare wrote plays in a variety of genres, including histories (such as Richard III and Henry IV), tragedies (such as Hamlet, Othello, and Macbeth) comedies (such as Midsummer Night's Dream, As You Like It, and Twelfth Night) and the late romances, or tragicomedies. Shakespeare's career continues in the Jacobean period.

Other important figures in Elizabethan theatre include Christopher Marlowe, and Ben Jonson, Thomas Dekker, John Fletcher and Francis Beaumont.

Jacobean period (1603–1625) Edit

Drama Edit

In the early 17th century Shakespeare wrote the so-called "problem plays", as well as a number of his best known tragedies, including Macbeth and King Lear.[56] In his final period, Shakespeare turned to romance or tragicomedy and completed three more major plays, including The Tempest. Less bleak than the tragedies, these four plays are graver in tone than the comedies of the 1590s, but they end with reconciliation and the forgiveness of potentially tragic errors.[57]

After Shakespeare's death, the poet and dramatist Ben Jonson (1572–1637) was the leading literary figure of the Jacobean era. Jonson's aesthetics hark back to the Middle Ages and his characters embody the theory of humours, which was based on contemporary medical theory.[58] Jonson's comedies include Volpone (1605 or 1606) and Bartholomew Fair (1614). Others who followed Jonson's style include Beaumont and Fletcher, who wrote the popular comedy, The Knight of the Burning Pestle (probably 1607–08), a satire of the rising middle class.[59]

Another popular style of theatre during Jacobean times was the revenge play, which was popularized in the Elizabethan era by Thomas Kyd (1558–1594), and then further developed later by John Webster (?1578–?1632), The White Devil (1612) and The Duchess of Malfi (1613). Other revenge tragedies include The Changeling written by Thomas Middleton and William Rowley.[60]

Poetry Edit

George Chapman (c. 1559 – c. 1634) is remembered chiefly for his famous translation in 1616 of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey into English verse.[61] This was the first ever complete translations of either poem into the English language. The translation had a profound influence on English literature and inspired John Keats's famous sonnet "On First Looking into Chapman's Homer" (1816).

Shakespeare popularized the English sonnet, which made significant changes to Petrarch's model. A collection of 154 by sonnets, dealing with themes such as the passage of time, love, beauty and mortality, were first published in a 1609 quarto.

Besides Shakespeare and Ben Jonson, the major poets of the early 17th century included the Metaphysical poets: John Donne (1572–1631), George Herbert (1593–1633), Henry Vaughan, Andrew Marvell, and Richard Crashaw.[62] Their style was characterized by wit and metaphysical conceits, that is far-fetched or unusual similes or metaphors.[63]

Prose Edit

The most important prose work of the early 17th century was the King James Bible. This, one of the most massive translation projects in the history of English up to this time, was started in 1604 and completed in 1611. This represents the culmination of a tradition of Bible translation into English that began with the work of William Tyndale, and it became the standard Bible of the Church of England.[64]

Late Renaissance (1625–1660) Edit

Poetry Edit

The Metaphysical poets John Donne (1572–1631) and George Herbert (1593–1633) were still alive after 1625, and later in the 17th century a second generation of metaphysical poets were writing, including Richard Crashaw (1613–1649), Andrew Marvell (1621–1678), Thomas Traherne (1636 or 1637–1674) and Henry Vaughan (1622–1695). The Cavalier poets were another important group of 17th-century poets, who came from the classes that supported King Charles I during the English Civil War (1642–51). (King Charles reigned from 1625 and was executed in 1649). The best known of the Cavalier poets are Robert Herrick, Richard Lovelace, Thomas Carew and Sir John Suckling. They "were not a formal group, but all were influenced by" Ben Jonson. Most of the Cavalier poets were courtiers, with notable exceptions. For example, Robert Herrick was not a courtier, but his style marks him as a Cavalier poet. Cavalier works make use of allegory and classical allusions, and are influenced by Roman authors Horace, Cicero and Ovid. John Milton (1608–1674) "was the last great poet of the English Renaissance"[65] and published a number of works before 1660, including L'Allegro,1631; Il Penseroso, 1634; Comus (a masque), 1638; and Lycidas, (1638). However, his major epic works, including Paradise Lost (1667) were published in the Restoration period.

Restoration Age (1660–1700) Edit

Restoration literature includes both Paradise Lost and the Earl of Rochester's Sodom, the sexual comedy of The Country Wife and the moral wisdom of Pilgrim's Progress. It saw Locke's Two Treatises on Government, the founding of the Royal Society, the experiments and the holy meditations of Robert Boyle, the hysterical attacks on theatres from Jeremy Collier, the pioneering of literary criticism from Dryden, and the first newspapers. The official break in literary culture caused by censorship and radically moralist standards under Cromwell's Puritan regime created a gap in literary tradition, allowing a seemingly fresh start for all forms of literature after the Restoration. During the Interregnum, the royalist forces attached to the court of Charles I went into exile with the twenty-year-old Charles II. The nobility who travelled with Charles II were therefore lodged for over a decade in the midst of the continent's literary scene.

Poetry Edit

 
John Milton, religious epic poem Paradise Lost published in 1667.

John Milton, one of the greatest English poets, wrote at this time of religious flux and political upheaval. Milton is best known for his epic poem Paradise Lost (1667). Among other important poems include L'Allegro, 1631, Il Penseroso 1634, Comus (a masque), 1638 and Lycidas. Milton's poetry and prose reflect deep personal convictions, a passion for freedom and self-determination, and the urgent issues and political turbulence of his day. His celebrated Areopagitica, written in condemnation of pre-publication censorship, is among history's most influential and impassioned defenses of free speech and freedom of the press.[66] The largest and most important poetic form of the era was satire. In general, publication of satire was done anonymously, as there were great dangers in being associated with a satire.

John Dryden (1631–1700) was an influential English poet, literary critic, translator, and playwright who dominated the literary life of Restoration England to such a point that the period came to be known in literary circles as the Age of Dryden. He established the heroic couplet as a standard form of English poetry. Dryden's greatest achievements were in satiric verse in works like the mock-heroic MacFlecknoe (1682).[67] Alexander Pope (1688–1744) was heavily influenced by Dryden, and often borrowed from him; other writers in the 18th century were equally influenced by both Dryden and Pope.

Prose Edit

Prose in the Restoration period is dominated by Christian religious writing, but the Restoration also saw the beginnings of two genres that would dominate later periods, fiction and journalism. Religious writing often strayed into political and economic writing, just as political and economic writing implied or directly addressed religion. The Restoration was also the time when John Locke wrote many of his philosophical works. His two Treatises on Government, which later inspired the thinkers in the American Revolution. The Restoration moderated most of the more strident sectarian writing, but radicalism persisted after the Restoration. Puritan authors such as John Milton were forced to retire from public life or adapt, and those authors who had preached against monarchy and who had participated directly in the regicide of Charles I were partially suppressed. Consequently, violent writings were forced underground, and many of those who had served in the Interregnum attenuated their positions in the Restoration. John Bunyan stands out beyond other religious authors of the period. Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress is an allegory of personal salvation and a guide to the Christian life.

 
John Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress (1678)

During the Restoration period, the most common manner of getting news would have been a broadsheet publication. A single, large sheet of paper might have a written, usually partisan, account of an event.

It is impossible to satisfactorily date the beginning of the novel in English. However, long fiction and fictional biographies began to distinguish themselves from other forms in England during the Restoration period. An existing tradition of Romance fiction in France and Spain was popular in England. One of the most significant figures in the rise of the novel in the Restoration period is Aphra Behn, author of Oroonoko (1688), who was not only the first professional female novelist, but she may be among the first professional novelists of either sex in England.

Drama Edit

As soon as the previous Puritan regime's ban on public stage representations was lifted, drama recreated itself quickly and abundantly.[68] The most famous plays of the early Restoration period are the unsentimental or "hard" comedies of John Dryden, William Wycherley, and George Etherege, which reflect the atmosphere at Court, and celebrate an aristocratic macho lifestyle of unremitting sexual intrigue and conquest. After a sharp drop in both quality and quantity in the 1680s, the mid-1690s saw a brief second flowering of the drama, especially comedy. Comedies like William Congreve's The Way of the World (1700), and John Vanbrugh's The Relapse (1696) and The Provoked Wife (1697) were "softer" and more middle-class in ethos, very different from the aristocratic extravaganza twenty years earlier, and aimed at a wider audience.

18th century Edit

Augustan literature (1700–1745) Edit

During the 18th century literature reflected the worldview of the Age of Enlightenment (or Age of Reason): a rational and scientific approach to religious, social, political, and economic issues that promoted a secular view of the world and a general sense of progress and perfectibility. Led by the philosophers who were inspired by the discoveries of the previous century by people like Isaac Newton and the writings of Descartes, John Locke and Francis Bacon. They sought to discover and to act upon universally valid principles governing humanity, nature, and society. They variously attacked spiritual and scientific authority, dogmatism, intolerance, censorship, and economic and social restraints. They considered the state the proper and rational instrument of progress. The extreme rationalism and skepticism of the age led naturally to deism and also played a part in bringing the later reaction of romanticism. The Encyclopédie of Denis Diderot epitomized the spirit of the age.

The term Augustan literature derives from authors of the 1720s and 1730s themselves, who responded to a term that George I of Great Britain preferred for himself. While George I meant the title to reflect his might, they instead saw in it a reflection of Ancient Rome's transition from rough and ready literature to highly political and highly polished literature. It is an age of exuberance and scandal, of enormous energy and inventiveness and outrage, that reflected an era when English, Welsh, Scottish, and Irish people found themselves in the midst of an expanding economy, lowering barriers to education, and the beginnings of the Industrial Revolution.

Poetry Edit

It was during this time that poet James Thomson (1700–1748) produced his melancholy The Seasons (1728–30) and Edward Young (1681–1765) wrote his poem Night Thoughts (1742), though the most outstanding poet of the age is Alexander Pope (1688–1744). It is also the era that saw a serious competition over the proper model for the pastoral. In criticism, poets struggled with a doctrine of decorum, of matching proper words with proper sense and of achieving a diction that matched the gravity of a subject. At the same time, the mock-heroic was at its zenith and Pope's Rape of the Lock (1712–17) and The Dunciad (1728–43) are still considered to be the greatest mock-heroic poems ever written.[69] Pope also translated the Iliad (1715–20) and the Odyssey (1725–26). Since his death, Pope has been in a constant state of re-evaluation.[70]

Drama Edit

Drama in the early part of the period featured the last plays of John Vanbrugh and William Congreve, both of whom carried on the Restoration comedy with some alterations. However, the majority of stagings were of lower farces and much more serious and domestic tragedies. George Lillo and Richard Steele both produced highly moral forms of tragedy, where the characters and the concerns of the characters were wholly middle class or working class. This reflected a marked change in the audience for plays, as royal patronage was no longer the important part of theatrical success. Additionally, Colley Cibber and John Rich began to battle each other for greater and greater spectacles to present on stage. The figure of Harlequin was introduced, and pantomime theatre began to be staged. This "low" comedy was quite popular, and the plays became tertiary to the staging. Opera also began to be popular in London, and there was significant literary resistance to this Italian incursion. In 1728 John Gay returned to the playhouse with The Beggar's Opera. The Licensing Act 1737 brought an abrupt halt to much of the period's drama, as the theatres were once again brought under state control.

Prose, including the novel Edit

In prose, the earlier part of the period was overshadowed by the development of the English essay. Joseph Addison and Richard Steele's The Spectator established the form of the British periodical essay. However, this was also the time when the English novel was first emerging. Daniel Defoe turned from journalism and writing criminal lives for the press to writing fictional criminal lives with Roxana and Moll Flanders. He also wrote Robinson Crusoe (1719).

 
Jonathan Swift

If Addison and Steele were dominant in one type of prose, then Jonathan Swift author of the satire Gulliver's Travels was in another. In A Modest Proposal and the Drapier Letters, Swift reluctantly defended the Irish people from the predations of colonialism. This provoked riots and arrests, but Swift, who had no love of Irish Roman Catholics, was outraged by the abuses he saw.

An effect of the Licensing Act of 1737 was to cause more than one aspiring playwright to switch over to writing novels. Henry Fielding (1707–1754) began to write prose satire and novels after his plays could not pass the censors. In the interim, Samuel Richardson (1689–1761) had produced Pamela, or Virtue Rewarded (1740), and Henry Fielding attacked, what he saw, as the absurdity of this novel in, Joseph Andrews (1742) and Shamela. Subsequently, Fielding satirised Richardson's Clarissa (1748) with Tom Jones (1749). Tobias Smollett (1721–1771) elevated the picaresque novel with works such as Roderick Random (1748) and Peregrine Pickle (1751).

Age of Sensibility (1745–1798) Edit

 
Samuel Johnson

This period is known as the Age of Sensibility, but it is also sometimes described as the "Age of Johnson".[71] Samuel Johnson (1709–1784), often referred to as Dr Johnson, was an English author who made lasting contributions to English literature as a poet, essayist, moralist, literary critic, biographer, editor and lexicographer. Johnson has been described as "arguably the most distinguished man of letters in English history".[72] After nine years of work, Johnson's A Dictionary of the English Language was published in 1755, and it had a far-reaching effect on Modern English and has been described as "one of the greatest single achievements of scholarship."[73]

The second half of the 18th century saw the emergence of three major Irish authors: Oliver Goldsmith (1728–1774), Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751–1816) and Laurence Sterne (1713–1768). Goldsmith is the author of The Vicar of Wakefield (1766), a pastoral poem The Deserted Village (1770) and two plays, The Good-Natur'd Man (1768) and She Stoops to Conquer (1773). Sheridan's first play, The Rivals (1775), was performed at Covent Garden and was an instant success. He went on to become the most significant London playwright of the late 18th century with a play like The School for Scandal. Both Goldsmith and Sheridan reacted against the sentimental comedy of the 18th-century theatre, writing plays closer to the style of Restoration comedy.[74]

Sterne published his famous novel Tristram Shandy in parts between 1759 and 1767.[75] In 1778, Frances Burney (1752–1840) wrote Evelina, one of the first novels of manners.[76] Fanny Burney's novels "were enjoyed and admired by Jane Austen".[77]

Precursors of Romanticism Edit

The Romantic movement in English literature of the early 19th century has its roots in 18th-century poetry, the Gothic novel and the novel of sensibility.[78][79] This includes the graveyard poets, from the 1740s and later, whose works are characterised by gloomy meditations on mortality. To this was added, by later practitioners, a feeling for the 'sublime' and uncanny, and an interest in ancient English poetic forms and folk poetry.[80] The poets include Thomas Gray (1716–1771), Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard (1751) in[81] and Edward Young (1683–1765), The Complaint, or Night Thoughts on Life, Death and Immortality (1742–45).[82] Other precursors are James Thomson (1700–1748) and James Macpherson (1736–1796).[79] James Macpherson was the first Scottish poet to gain an international reputation, with his claim to have found poetry written by the ancient bard Ossian.[83]

The sentimental novel or "novel of sensibility" is a genre which developed during the second half of the 18th century. It celebrates the emotional and intellectual concepts of sentiment, sentimentalism, and sensibility. Sentimentalism, which is to be distinguished from sensibility, was a fashion in both poetry and prose fiction which began in the 18th century in reaction to the rationalism of the Augustan Age.[84] Among the most famous sentimental novels in English are Samuel Richardson's Pamela, or Virtue Rewarded (1740), Oliver Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield (1766), Laurence Sterne's Tristram Shandy (1759–67), and Henry Mackenzie's The Man of Feeling (1771).[85]

Significant foreign influences were the Germans Goethe, Schiller and August Wilhelm Schlegel and French philosopher and writer Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712–1778).[86] Edmund Burke's A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful (1757) is another important influence.[87] The changing landscape, brought about by the industrial and agricultural revolutions, was another influence on the growth of the Romantic movement in Britain.

In the late 18th century, Horace Walpole's 1764 novel The Castle of Otranto created the Gothic fiction genre, that combines elements of horror and romance.[88] Ann Radcliffe introduced the brooding figure of the gothic villain which developed into the Byronic hero. Her The Mysteries of Udolpho (1795) is frequently cited as the archetypal Gothic novel.[89]

Rise of American Literature Edit

The successful War of Independence led by colonists in British North America from 1775 to 1783, resulted in the formation of the United States. This consequently led to the divergence of English letters in what became the United States from the mainstream of English literature, resulting in the development of a new American literature that sought to distinguish itself as part of the formation of a new American social and cultural identity. This was the first English-language literature to develop outside of the British Isles. The late colonial period already saw the publication of important prose tracts reflecting the political debates that culminated in the American revolution, written by important luminaries such as Samuel Adams, Josiah Quincy, John Dickinson, and Joseph Galloway, the last being a loyalist to the crown. Two key figures were Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Paine. Franklin's Poor Richard's Almanack and The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin are esteemed works with their wit and influence toward the formation of a budding American identity. Paine's pamphlet Common Sense and The American Crisis writings are seen as playing a key role in influencing the political tone of the time.

During the Revolutionary War, poems and songs such as "Nathan Hale" were popular. Major satirists included John Trumbull and Francis Hopkinson. Philip Morin Freneau also wrote poems about the War.

In the post-war period, Thomas Jefferson established his place in American literature through his authorship of the Declaration of Independence, his influence on the U.S. Constitution, his autobiography, his Notes on the State of Virginia, and his many letters. The Federalist essays by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay presented a significant historical discussion of American government organization and republican values. Fisher Ames, James Otis, and Patrick Henry are also valued for their political writings and orations.

Early American literature struggled to find a unique voice in existing literary genre, and this tendency was reflected in novels. European styles were frequently imitated, but critics usually considered the imitations inferior. In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, the first American novels were published. These fictions were too lengthy to be printed for public reading. Publishers took a chance on these works in hopes they would become steady sellers and need to be reprinted. This scheme was ultimately successful because male and female literacy rates were increasing at the time. Among the first American novels are Thomas Attwood Digges's Adventures of Alonso, published in London in 1775 and William Hill Brown's The Power of Sympathy published in 1789. Brown's novel depicts a tragic love story between siblings who fell in love without knowing they were related. Also of note were important women writers such as Susanna Rowson who wrote Charlotte: A Tale of Truth(later re-issued as Charlotte Temple). Charlotte Temple is a seduction tale influenced by the novels of English writer Samuel Richardson, written in the third person, which warns against listening to the voice of love and counsels resistance. She also wrote nine novels, six theatrical works, two collections of poetry, six textbooks, and countless songs.[90] Reaching more than a million and a half readers over a century and a half, Charlotte Temple was the biggest seller of the 19th century before Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin. Another important writer was Hannah Webster Forster, who wrote the popular The Coquette: Or, the History of Eliza Wharton, published in 1797.[91] The story about a woman who is seduced and later abandoned, The Coquette has been praised for its demonstration of the era's contradictory ideas of womanhood.[92] even as it has been criticized for delegitimizing protest against women's subordination.[93] Other important early American writers include Charles Brockden Brown, William Gilmore Simms, Lydia Maria Child, and John Neal.

Romanticism (1798–1837) Edit

Romanticism was an artistic, literary, and intellectual movement that originated in Europe toward the end of the 18th century.[94] Romanticism arrived later in other parts of the English-speaking world.

 
William Blake

The Romantic period was one of major social change in England and Wales, because of the depopulation of the countryside and the rapid development of overcrowded industrial cities, that took place in the period roughly between 1750 and 1850. The movement of so many people in England was the result of two forces: the Agricultural Revolution, that involved the Enclosure of the land, drove workers off the land, and the Industrial Revolution which provided them employment.[95] Romanticism may be seen in part as a reaction to the Industrial Revolution,[96] though it was also a revolt against aristocratic social and political norms of the Age of Enlightenment, as well a reaction against the scientific rationalization of nature.[97] The French Revolution was an especially important influence on the political thinking of many of the Romantic poets.[98]

The landscape is often prominent in the poetry of this period, so much so that the Romantics, especially perhaps Wordsworth, are often described as 'nature poets'. However, the longer Romantic 'nature poems' have a wider concern because they are usually meditations on "an emotional problem or personal crisis".[99]

Romantic poetry Edit

Robert Burns (1759–1796) was a pioneer of the Romantic movement, and after his death he became a cultural icon in Scotland. The poet, painter, and printmaker William Blake (1757–1827) was another of the early Romantic poets. Though Blake was generally unrecognised during his lifetime, he is now considered a seminal figure in the history of both the poetry and visual arts of the Romantic Age. Among his most important works are Songs of Innocence (1789) and Songs of Experience (1794) "and profound and difficult 'prophecies' ", such as "Jerusalem: the Emanation of the Giant Albion" (1804–c.1820).[100]

After Blake, among the earliest Romantics were the Lake Poets, including William Wordsworth (1770–1850), Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772–1834), Robert Southey (1774–1843) and journalist Thomas de Quincey (1785–1859). However, at the time Walter Scott (1771–1832) was the most famous poet.[101]

In 1784, with Elegiac Sonnets, Charlotte Smith (1749–1806) reintroduced the sonnet to English literature.[citation needed]

The early Romantic Poets brought a new emotionalism and introspection, and their emergence is marked by the first romantic manifesto in English literature, the "Preface" to Lyrical Ballads (1798). The poems in Lyrical Ballads were mostly by Wordsworth, though Coleridge contributed "Rime of the Ancient Mariner".[102] Among Wordsworth's most important poems are "Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey", "Resolution and Independence", "Ode: Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood" and the autobiographical epic The Prelude.[103]

Robert Southey (1774–1843) was another of the so-called "Lake Poets", and Poet Laureate for 30 years, although his fame has been long eclipsed by William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Thomas De Quincey (1785–1859) is best known for his Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (1821).[104] Essayist William Hazlitt (1778–1830), friend of both Coleridge and Wordsworth, is best known today for his literary criticism, especially Characters of Shakespeare's Plays (1817–18).[105]

Second generation Edit

 
Lord Byron

The second generation of Romantic poets includes Lord Byron (1788–1824), Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792–1822), Felicia Hemans (1793–1835) and John Keats (1795–1821). Byron, however, was still influenced by 18th-century satirists and was, perhaps the least 'romantic' of the three, preferring "the brilliant wit of Pope to what he called the 'wrong poetical system' of his Romantic contemporaries".[106] Byron achieved enormous fame and influence throughout Europe and Goethe called Byron "undoubtedly the greatest genius of our century".[107]

Shelley is perhaps best known for Ode to the West Wind, To a Skylark, and Adonais, an elegy written on the death of Keats. His close circle of admirers included the most progressive thinkers of the day. A work like Queen Mab (1813) reveals Shelley "as the direct heir to the French and British revolutionary intellectuals of the 1790s".[108] Shelley became an idol of the next three or four generations of poets, including important Victorian and Pre-Raphaelite poets such as Robert Browning, and Dante Gabriel Rossetti, as well as later W. B. Yeats.[109]

Though John Keats shared Byron and Shelley's radical politics, "his best poetry is not political",[110] but is especially noted for its sensuous music and imagery, along with a concern with material beauty and the transience of life.[111] Among his most famous works are "Ode to a Nightingale", "Ode on a Grecian Urn", and "To Autumn". Keats has always been regarded as a major Romantic, "and his stature as a poet has grown steadily through all changes of fashion".[112]

Although sticking to its forms, Felicia Hemans began a process of undermining the Romantic tradition, a deconstruction that was continued by Letitia Elizabeth Landon, as "an urban poet deeply attentive to themes of decay and decomposition".[113] Landon's novel forms of metrical romance and dramatic monologue were much copied and contributed to her long-lasting influence on Victorian poetry.[113]

Other poets Edit

Another important poet in this period was John Clare (1793–1864), the son of a farm labourer, who came to be known for his celebratory representations of the English countryside and his lamentation for the changes taking place in rural England.[114] His poetry has undergone a major re-evaluation and he is often now considered to be among the most important 19th-century poets.[115]

George Crabbe (1754–1832) was an English poet who, during the Romantic period, wrote "closely observed, realistic portraits of rural life [...] in the heroic couplets of the Augustan age".[116] Modern critic Frank Whitehead has said that "Crabbe, in his verse tales in particular, is an important—indeed, a major—poet whose work has been and still is seriously undervalued."[117]

Romantic novel Edit

One of the most popular novelists of the era was Sir Walter Scott, whose historical romances inspired a generation of painters, composers, and writers throughout Europe. Scott's novel-writing career was launched in 1814 with Waverley, often called the first historical novel.[10]

 
The Last of the Mohicans
Illustration from 1896 edition,
by J.T. Merrill

The works of Jane Austen (1775–1817) critique the novels of sensibility of the second half of the 18th century and are part of the transition to 19th-century realism.[118] Her plots in novels such as Pride and Prejudice (1813) and Emma (1815), though fundamentally comic, highlight the dependence of women on marriage to secure social standing and economic security.[119]

Mary Shelley (1797–1851) is remembered as the author of Frankenstein (1818).

Romanticism in America Edit

The European Romantic movement reached America in the early 19th century. American Romanticism was just as multifaceted and individualistic as it was in Europe. Like the Europeans, the American Romantics demonstrated a high level of moral enthusiasm, commitment to individualism and the unfolding of the self, an emphasis on intuitive perception, and the assumption that the natural world was inherently good, while human society was corrupt.[120]

Romantic Gothic literature made an early appearance with Washington Irving's The Legend of Sleepy Hollow (1820) and Rip Van Winkle (1819), There are picturesque "local color" elements in Washington Irving's essays and especially his travel books. From 1823 the prolific and popular novelist James Fenimore Cooper (1789–1851) began publishing his historical romances of frontier and Indian life. However, Edgar Allan Poe's tales of the macabre that first appeared in the early 1830s, and his poetry were more influential in France than at home.[121][122]

Victorian literature (1837–1901) Edit

Sage writing Edit

 
Thomas Carlyle by Julia Margaret Cameron, 1867

During these years, sage writing developed as a new literary genre in which the author sought "to express notions about the world, man's situation in it, and how he should live."[123] John Holloway identified Benjamin Disraeli (1804–1881), George Eliot (1819–1880), John Henry Newman (1801–1890), and Thomas Hardy (1840–1928) as writers of this type. Foremost among them was Thomas Carlyle (1795–1881), a Scottish essayist, historian and philosopher who became "the undoubted head of English letters" in the 19th century.[124][125] Known as the Sage of Chelsea, the highly prolific author criticized the Industrial Revolution,[126] preached Hero-worship,[127] and rebuked political economy[128] in a series of works written in Carlylese, the name given to his unique style.[129] His influence on Victorian literature was nearly universal; in 1855, Eliot wrote that "there is hardly a superior or active mind of this generation that has not been modified by Carlyle's writings;" with the effect that if his books "were all burnt as the grandest of Suttees on his funeral pile, it would be only like cutting down an oak after its acorns have sown a forest."[130]

John Ruskin (1819–1900) was an Anglo-Scottish art critic and philosopher who wrote in a similar vein, regarding Carlyle as his master.[131] The early part of his career was devoted to aesthetics, championing Turner and the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood.[132] He later turned to ethics, expounding his ideas on educational reform and political economy, which were to have great influence on practices in England and throughout the world.[133][134] Matthew Arnold (1822–1888) was an English poet and critic who is also regarded as a sage writer, famous for his criticism of philistinism.

The Victorian novel Edit

It was in the Victorian era (1837–1901) that the novel became the leading literary genre in English.[135] Women played an important part in this rising popularity both as authors and as readers,[136] and monthly serialising of fiction also encouraged this surge in popularity, further upheavals which followed the Reform Act of 1832".[137] This was in many ways a reaction to rapid industrialization, and the social, political, and economic issues associated with it, and was a means of commenting on abuses of government and industry and the suffering of the poor, who were not profiting from England's economic prosperity.[138] Significant early examples of this genre include Sybil, or The Two Nations (1845) by Benjamin Disraeli, and Charles Kingsley's Alton Locke (1849).

 
Charles Dickens

Charles Dickens (1812–1870) emerged on the literary scene in the late 1830s and soon became probably the most famous novelist in the history of English literature. Dickens fiercely satirised various aspects of society, including the workhouse in Oliver Twist, and the failures of the legal system in Bleak House.[139] An early rival to Dickens was William Makepeace Thackeray (1811–1863), who during the Victorian period ranked second only to him, but he is now known almost exclusively for Vanity Fair (1847). The Brontë sisters, Emily, Charlotte and Anne, were other significant novelists in the 1840s and 1850s.[140] Jane Eyre (1847), Charlotte Brontë's most famous work, was the first of the sisters' novels to achieve success. Emily Brontë's (1818–1848) novel was Wuthering Heights and, according to Juliet Gardiner, "the vivid sexual passion and power of its language and imagery impressed, bewildered and appalled reviewers,"[141] and led the Victorian public and many early reviewers to think that it had been written by a man.[142] The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1848) by Anne Brontë is now considered to be one of the first feminist novels.[143]

Elizabeth Gaskell (1810–1865) was also a successful writer and her North and South contrasts the lifestyle in the industrial north of England with the wealthier south.[144] Anthony Trollope's (1815–1882) was one of the most successful, prolific and respected English novelists of the Victorian era. Trollope's novels portray the lives of the landowning and professional classes of early Victorian England.[145] George Eliot, pen name of Mary Ann Evans, was a major novelist of the mid-Victorian period. Her works, especially Middlemarch (1871–72), are important examples of literary realism, and are admired for their combination of high Victorian literary detail, with an intellectual breadth that removes them from the narrow geographic confines they often depict.[146]

George Meredith (1828–1909) is best remembered for his novels The Ordeal of Richard Feverel (1859), and The Egoist (1879). "His reputation stood very high well into" the 20th century but then seriously declined.[147] An interest in rural matters and the changing social and economic situation of the countryside is seen in the novels of Thomas Hardy (1840–1928), including The Mayor of Casterbridge (1886), and Tess of the d'Urbervilles (1891). Hardy is a Victorian realist, in the tradition of George Eliot,[148] and like Charles Dickens he was also highly critical of much in Victorian society. Another significant late-19th-century novelist is George Gissing (1857–1903), who published 23 novels between 1880 and 1903. His best known novel is New Grub Street (1891).

Although pre-dated by John Ruskin's The King of the Golden River in 1841, the history of the modern fantasy genre is generally said to begin with George MacDonald (1824–1905), the influential author of The Princess and the Goblin and Phantastes (1858).[149] William Morris (1834–1896) wrote a series of romances in the 1880s and 1890s which are regarded as the first works of high fantasy.[150]

Wilkie Collins' epistolary novel The Moonstone (1868), is generally considered the first detective novel in the English language.[151] Robert Louis Stevenson (1850–1894) was an important Scottish writer at the end of the nineteenth century, author of Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886), and the historical novel Kidnapped (1886). H.G. Wells's (1866–1946) writing career began in the 1890s with science fiction novels like The Time Machine (1895), and The War of the Worlds (1898) which describes an invasion of late Victorian England by Martians, and Wells is seen, along with Frenchman Jules Verne (1828–1905), as a major figure in the development of the science fiction genre. He also wrote realistic fiction about the lower middle class in novels like Kipps (1905).

American novel (From Romanticism to realism) Edit

(See also the discussion of American literature under Romanticism above).

By the mid-19th century, the pre-eminence of literature from the British Isles began to be challenged by writers from the former American colonies. A major influence on American writers at this time was Romanticism, which gave rise to New England Transcendentalism, and the publication of Ralph Waldo Emerson's 1836 essay Nature is usually considered the watershed moment at which transcendentalism became a major cultural movement.[120][152] Thomas Carlyle had a strong influence on Emerson, transcendentalism,[153] and American writers generally, particularly his novel Sartor Resartus, of which the impact upon American literature has been described as "so vast, so pervasive, that it is difficult to overstate."[154]

 
Nathaniel Hawthorne.

The romantic American novel developed fully with Nathaniel Hawthorne's (1804–1864) The Scarlet Letter (1850), a stark drama of a woman cast out of her community for committing adultery. Hawthorne's fiction had a profound impact on his friend Herman Melville (1819–1891). In Moby-Dick (1851), an adventurous whaling voyage becomes the vehicle for examining such themes as obsession, the nature of evil, and human struggle against the elements. By the 1880s, however, psychological and social realism were competing with Romanticism in the novel.

American realist fiction has its beginnings in the 1870s with the works of Mark Twain, William Dean Howells, and Henry James.

Mark Twain (the pen name used by Samuel Langhorne Clemens, 1835–1910) was the first major American writer to be born away from the East Coast—in the border state of Missouri. His regional masterpieces were the novels Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876) and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884). Twain's style changed the way Americans write their language. His characters speak like real people and sound distinctively American, using local dialects, newly invented words, and regional accents.

Henry James (1843–1916) was a major American novelist of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Although born in New York City, he spent most of his adult years in England. Many of his novels center on Americans who live in or travel to Europe. James confronted the Old World-New World dilemma by writing directly about it. His works include The Portrait of a Lady, The Bostonians (1886), The Princess Casamassima (1886).[155]

Genre fiction Edit

 
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle wrote 56 short stories and four novels featuring Sherlock Holmes

The premier ghost story writer of the 19th century was Sheridan Le Fanu. His works include the macabre mystery novel Uncle Silas (1865), and his Gothic novella Carmilla (1872) tells the story of a young woman's susceptibility to the attentions of a female vampire. Bram Stoker's horror story Dracula (1897) belongs to a number of literary genres, including vampire literature, horror fiction, gothic novel and invasion literature.[156]

Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes is a brilliant London-based "consulting detective", famous for his intellectual prowess. Conan Doyle wrote four novels and 56 short stories featuring Holmes, which were published between 1887 and 1927. All but four Holmes stories are narrated by Holmes' friend, assistant, and biographer, Dr. Watson. The Lost World literary genre was inspired by real stories of archaeological discoveries by imperial adventurers. H. Rider Haggard wrote one of the earliest examples, King Solomon's Mines, in 1885. Contemporary European politics and diplomatic maneuverings informed Anthony Hope's Ruritanian adventure novel The Prisoner of Zenda (1894).

Children's literature Edit

Literature for children developed as a separate genre. Some works become internationally known, such as those of Lewis Carroll, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and its sequel Through the Looking-Glass. Robert Louis Stevenson's (1850–1894) Treasure Island (1883), is the classic pirate adventure. At the end of the Victorian era and leading into the Edwardian era, Beatrix Potter was an author and illustrator, best known for her children's books, which featured animal characters. In her thirties, Potter published the highly successful children's book The Tale of Peter Rabbit in 1902. Potter eventually went on to publish 23 children's books and became a wealthy woman.

Victorian poetry Edit

 
Alfred, Lord Tennyson, ca 1863

The leading poets during the Victorian period were Alfred, Lord Tennyson (1809–1892), Robert Browning (1812–1889), Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806–61), and Matthew Arnold (1822–1888). The poetry of this period was heavily influenced by the Romantics, but also went off in its own directions.[157] Particularly notable was the development of the dramatic monologue, a form used by many poets in this period, but perfected by Robert Browning. Literary criticism in the 20th century gradually drew attention to the links between Victorian poetry and modernism.[158]

Tennyson was Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom during much of Queen Victoria's reign. He was described by T.S. Eliot, as "the greatest master of metrics as well as melancholia", and as having "the finest ear of any English poet since Milton".[159] Matthew Arnold's reputation as a poet has "within the past few decades [...] plunged drastically."[160]

Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828–1882) was a poet, illustrator, painter and translator. He founded the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood in 1848 with William Holman Hunt and John Everett Millais.[161] Rossetti's art was characterised by its sensuality and its medieval revivalism.[162] Arthur Clough (1819–1861) and George Meredith (1828–1909) are two other important minor poets of this era.[147][163]

Towards the end of the 19th century, English poets began to take an interest in French Symbolism and Victorian poetry entered a decadent fin-de-siècle phase.[164] Two groups of poets emerged in the 1890s, the Yellow Book poets who adhered to the tenets of Aestheticism, including Algernon Charles Swinburne, Oscar Wilde and Arthur Symons and the Rhymers' Club group, that included Ernest Dowson, Lionel Johnson and Irishman William Butler Yeats. Yeats went on to become an important modernist in the 20th century.[165] Also in 1896 A.E. Housman published at his own expense A Shropshire Lad.[166]

Writers of comic verse included the dramatist, librettist, poet and illustrator W.S. Gilbert (1836–1911), who is best known for his fourteen comic operas, produced in collaboration with the composer Sir Arthur Sullivan, of which the most famous include H.M.S. Pinafore, and The Pirates of Penzance.[167]

Novelist Thomas Hardy (1840–1928) wrote poetry throughout his career, but he did not publish his first collection until 1898, so that he tends to be treated as a 20th-century poet. Now regarded as a major poet, Gerard Manley Hopkins's (1844–1889) Poems were published posthumously by Robert Bridges in 1918.[168]

American poetry Edit

America also produced major poets in the 19th century, such as Emily Dickinson (1830–1886) and Walt Whitman (1819–1892). America's two greatest 19th-century poets could hardly have been more different in temperament and style. Walt Whitman (1819–92) was a working man, a traveler, a self-appointed nurse during the American Civil War (1861–65), and a poetic innovator. His major work was Leaves of Grass, in which he uses a free-flowing verse and lines of irregular length to depict the all-inclusiveness of American democracy. Emily Dickinson (1830–1886), on the other hand, lived the sheltered life of a genteel, unmarried woman in small-town Amherst, Massachusetts. Within its formal structure, her poetry is ingenious, witty, exquisitely wrought, and psychologically penetrating. Her work was unconventional for its day, and little of it was published during her lifetime.

Victorian drama Edit

 
Gilbert and Sullivan's H.M.S. Pinafore

A change came in the Victorian era with a profusion on the London stage of farces, musical burlesques, extravaganzas and comic operas that competed with productions of Shakespeare's plays and serious drama by dramatists like James Planché and Thomas William Robertson. In 1855, the German Reed Entertainments began a process of elevating the level of (formerly risqué) musical theatre in Britain that culminated in the famous series of comic operas by Gilbert and Sullivan and was followed by the 1890s with the first Edwardian musical comedies. The length of runs in the theatre changed rapidly during the Victorian period. As transport improved, poverty in London diminished, and street lighting made for safer travel at night, the number of potential patrons for the growing number of theatres increased enormously. Plays could run longer and still draw in the audiences, leading to better profits and improved production values. The first play to achieve 500 consecutive performances was the London comedy Our Boys, opening in 1875. Its record of 1,362 performances was bested in 1892 by Charley's Aunt.[169]

Several of Gilbert and Sullivan's comic operas broke the 500-performance barrier, beginning with H.M.S. Pinafore in 1878, and Alfred Cellier and B.C. Stephenson's 1886 hit, Dorothy, ran for 931 performances. After W.S. Gilbert, Oscar Wilde became the leading poet and dramatist of the late Victorian period. Wilde's plays, in particular, stand apart from the many now forgotten plays of Victorian times and have a much closer relationship to those of the Edwardian dramatists such as Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950), whose career began in the last decade of the 19th century, Wilde's 1895 comic masterpiece, The Importance of Being Earnest, holds an ironic mirror to the aristocracy and displays a mastery of wit and paradoxical wisdom.

20th century Edit

Modernism (1901–1939) Edit

 
Rudyard Kipling

English literary modernism developed in the early twentieth century out of a general sense of disillusionment with Victorian era attitudes of certainty, conservatism, and belief in the idea of objective truth.[170] The movement was influenced by the ideas of Charles Darwin (1809–1882), Ernst Mach (1838–1916), Henri Bergson (1859–1941), Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900), James G. Frazer (1854–1941), Karl Marx (1818–1883) (Das Kapital, 1867), and the psychoanalytic theories of Sigmund Freud (1856–1939), among others.[171] The continental art movements of Impressionism, and later Cubism, were also important.[172] Important literary precursors of modernism, were: Fyodor Dostoevsky (1821–1881); Walt Whitman (1819–1892); Charles Baudelaire (1821–1867); Rimbaud (1854–1891); August Strindberg (1849–1912).[173]

A major British lyric poet of the first decades of the twentieth century was Thomas Hardy (1840–1928). Though not a modernist, Hardy was an important transitional figure between the Victorian era and the twentieth century. A major novelist of the late nineteenth century, Hardy lived well into the third decade of the twentieth century, though he only published poetry in this period. Another significant transitional figure between Victorians and modernists, the late nineteenth-century novelist, Henry James (1843–1916), continued to publish major novels into the twentieth century, including The Golden Bowl (1904). Polish-born modernist novelist Joseph Conrad (1857–1924) published his first important works, Heart of Darkness, in 1899 and Lord Jim in 1900. However, the Victorian Gerard Manley Hopkins's (1844–1889) highly original poetry was not published until 1918, long after his death, while the career of another major modernist poet, Irishman W.B. Yeats (1865–1939), began late in the Victorian era. Yeats was one of the foremost figures of twentieth-century English literature.

But while modernism was to become an important literary movement in the early decades of the new century, there were also many fine writers who, like Thomas Hardy, were not modernists. During the early decades of the twentieth century the Georgian poets like Rupert Brooke (1887–1915), and Walter de la Mare (1873–1956), maintained a conservative approach to poetry by combining romanticism, sentimentality and hedonism. Another Georgian poet, Edward Thomas (1878–1917)[174] is one of the First World War poets along with Wilfred Owen (1893–1918), Rupert Brooke (1887–1915), Isaac Rosenberg (1890–1917), and Siegfried Sassoon (1886–1967). Irish playwrights George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950), J.M. Synge (1871–1909) and Seán O'Casey were influential in British drama. Shaw's career began in the last decade of the nineteenth century, while Synge's plays belong to the first decade of the twentieth century. Synge's most famous play, The Playboy of the Western World, "caused outrage and riots when it was first performed" in Dublin in 1907.[175] George Bernard Shaw turned the Edwardian theatre into an arena for debate about important political and social issues.[176]

Novelists who are not considered modernists include H. G. Wells (1866–1946), John Galsworthy (1867–1933), (Nobel Prize in Literature, 1932) whose works include The Forsyte Saga (1906–21), and E.M. Forster's (1879–1970), though Forster's work is "frequently regarded as containing both modernist and Victorian elements".[177] Forster's most famous work, A Passage to India 1924, reflected challenges to imperialism, while his earlier novels examined the restrictions and hypocrisy of Edwardian society in England. The most popular British writer of the early years of the twentieth century was arguably Rudyard Kipling (1865–1936), a highly versatile writer of novels, short stories and poems.

In addition to W.B. Yeats, other important early modernist poets were the American-born poet T.S. Eliot (1888–1965) Eliot became a British citizen in 1927 but was born and educated in America. His most famous works are: "Prufrock" (1915), The Waste Land (1922) and Four Quartets (1935–42).

Amongst the novelists, after Joseph Conrad, other important early modernists include Dorothy Richardson (1873–1957), whose novel Pointed Roof (1915), is one of the earliest examples of the stream of consciousness technique, and D.H. Lawrence (1885–1930), who published The Rainbow in 1915—though it was immediately seized by the police—and Women in Love in 1920.[178] Then in 1922 Irishman James Joyce's important modernist novel Ulysses appeared. Ulysses has been called "a demonstration and summation of the entire movement".[179]

 
James Joyce, 1918

Modernism (1923–1939) Edit

The modernist movement continued through the 1920s, 1930s, and beyond.

 
Virginia Woolf, 1927

Important British writers between the World Wars, include the Scottish poet Hugh MacDiarmid (1892–1978), who began publishing in the 1920s, and novelist Virginia Woolf (1882–1941), who was an influential feminist, and a major stylistic innovator associated with the stream-of-consciousness technique in novels like Mrs Dalloway (1925) and To the Lighthouse (1927). T.S. Eliot had begun this attempt to revive poetic drama with Sweeney Agonistes in 1932, and this was followed by others including three further plays after the war. In Parenthesis, a modernist epic poem based on author David Jones's (1895–1974) experience of World War I, was published in 1937.

An important development, beginning in the 1930s and 1940s was a tradition of working class novels actually written by working-class background writers. Among these were coal miner Jack Jones, James Hanley, whose father was a stoker and who also went to sea as a young man, and coal miners Lewis Jones from South Wales and Harold Heslop from County Durham.[180]

Aldous Huxley (1894–1963) published his famous dystopia Brave New World in 1932, the same year as John Cowper Powys's A Glastonbury Romance.[181] Samuel Beckett (1906–1989) published his first major work, the novel Murphy in 1938. This same year Graham Greene's (1904–1991) first major novel Brighton Rock was published. Then in 1939 James Joyce's published Finnegans Wake, in which he creates a special language to express the consciousness of a dreaming character.[182] It was also in 1939 that another Irish modernist poet, W.B. Yeats, died. British poet W.H. Auden (1907–1973) was another significant modernist in the 1930s.

Post–modernism (1940–2000) Edit

Though some have seen modernism ending by around 1939,[183] with regard to English literature, "When (if) modernism petered out and postmodernism began has been contested almost as hotly as when the transition from Victorianism to modernism occurred".[184] In fact a number of modernists were still living and publishing in the 1950s and 1960, including T.S. Eliot, Dorothy Richardson, and Ezra Pound. Furthermore, Basil Bunting, born in 1901, published little until Briggflatts in 1965 and Samuel Beckett, born in Ireland in 1906, continued to produce significant works until the 1980s, though some view him as a post-modernist.[185]

Among British writers in the 1940s and 1950s were poet Dylan Thomas and novelist Graham Greene whose works span the 1930s to the 1980s, while Evelyn Waugh, W.H. Auden continued publishing into the 1960s.

Postmodern literature is both a continuation of the experimentation championed by writers of the modernist period (relying heavily, for example, on fragmentation, paradox, questionable narrators, etc.) and a reaction against Enlightenment ideas implicit in Modernist literature. Postmodern literature, like postmodernism as a whole, is difficult to define and there is little agreement on the exact characteristics, scope, and importance of postmodern literature. Among postmodern writers are the Americans Henry Miller, William S. Burroughs, Joseph Heller, Kurt Vonnegut, William Gaddis, Hunter S. Thompson, Truman Capote and Thomas Pynchon.

The novel Edit

 
 
George Orwell (left) and Aldous Huxley (right).

In 1947 Malcolm Lowry published Under the Volcano, while George Orwell's satire of totalitarianism, Nineteen Eighty-Four, was published in 1949. Other novelists writing in the 1950s and later were: Anthony Powell whose twelve-volume cycle of novels A Dance to the Music of Time, is a comic examination of movements and manners, power and passivity in English political, cultural and military life in the mid-20th century; Nobel Prize laureate William Golding's allegorical novel Lord of the Flies 1954, explores how culture created by man fails, using as an example a group of British schoolboys marooned on a deserted island. Philosopher Iris Murdoch was a prolific writer of novels throughout the second half of the 20th century, that deal especially with sexual relationships, morality, and the power of the unconscious.

Scottish writer Muriel Spark pushed the boundaries of realism in her novels. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1961), at times takes the reader briefly into the distant future, to see the various fates that befall its characters. Anthony Burgess is especially remembered for his dystopian novel A Clockwork Orange (1962), set in the not-too-distant future. During the 1960s and 1970s, Paul Scott wrote his monumental series on the last decade of British rule in India, The Raj Quartet (1966–1975). Scotland has in the late 20th century produced several important novelists, including the writer of How Late it Was, How Late, James Kelman, who like Samuel Beckett can create humour out of the most grim situations and Alasdair Gray whose Lanark: A Life in Four Books (1981) is a dystopian fantasy set in a surreal version of Glasgow called Unthank.[186]

Two significant Irish novelists are John Banville (born 1945) and Colm Tóibín (born 1955). Martin Amis (1949), Pat Barker (born 1943), Ian McEwan (born 1948) and Julian Barnes (born 1946) are other prominent late twentieth-century British novelists.

Drama Edit

An important cultural movement in the British theatre which developed in the late 1950s and early 1960s was Kitchen sink realism (or "kitchen sink drama"), a term coined to describe art, novels, film and television plays. The term angry young men was often applied to members of this artistic movement. It used a style of social realism which depicts the domestic lives of the working class, to explore social issues and political issues. The drawing room plays of the post war period, typical of dramatists like Terence Rattigan and Noël Coward were challenged in the 1950s by these Angry Young Men, in plays like John Osborne's Look Back in Anger (1956).

Again in the 1950s, the absurdist play Waiting for Godot (1955), by Irish writer Samuel Beckett profoundly affected British drama. The Theatre of the Absurd influenced Harold Pinter (born 1930), (The Birthday Party, 1958), whose works are often characterised by menace or claustrophobia. Beckett also influenced Tom Stoppard (born 1937) (Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, 1966). Stoppard's works are however also notable for their high-spirited wit and the great range of intellectual issues which he tackles in different plays.

An important new element in the world of British drama, from the beginnings of radio in the 1920s, was the commissioning of plays, or the adaption of existing plays, by BBC radio. This was especially important in the 1950s and 1960s (and from the 1960s for television). Many major British playwrights in fact, either effectively began their careers with the BBC, or had works adapted for radio, including Caryl Churchill and Tom Stoppard whose "first professional production was in the fifteen-minute Just Before Midnight programme on BBC Radio, which showcased new dramatists".[187] John Mortimer made his radio debut as a dramatist in 1955, with his adaptation of his own novel Like Men Betrayed for the BBC Light Programme. Other notable radio dramatists included Brendan Behan and novelist Angela Carter.

Among the most famous works created for radio are Dylan Thomas's Under Milk Wood (1954), Samuel Beckett's All That Fall (1957), Harold Pinter's A Slight Ache (1959) and Robert Bolt's A Man for All Seasons (1954).[188]

Poetry Edit

Major poets like T.S. Eliot, W.H. Auden and Dylan Thomas were still publishing in this period. Though W.H. Auden's (1907–1973) career began in the 1930s and 1940s he published several volumes in the 1950s and 1960s. His stature in modern literature has been contested, but probably the most common critical view from the 1930s onward ranked him as one of the three major twentieth-century British poets, and heir to Yeats and Eliot.[189]

New poets starting their careers in the 1950s and 1960s include Philip Larkin (1922–1985) (The Whitsun Weddings, 1964), Ted Hughes (1930–1998) (The Hawk in the Rain, 1957), Sylvia Plath (1932–1962) (The Colossus, 1960) and Irishman (born Northern Ireland) Seamus Heaney (1939–2013) (Death of a Naturalist, 1966). Northern Ireland has also produced a number of other significant poets, including Derek Mahon and Paul Muldoon. In the 1960s and 1970s Martian poetry aimed to break the grip of 'the familiar', by describing ordinary things in unfamiliar ways, as though, for example, through the eyes of a Martian. Poets most closely associated with it are Craig Raine and Christopher Reid.

Another literary movement in this period was the British Poetry Revival was a wide-reaching collection of groupings and subgroupings that embraces performance, sound and concrete poetry.[190] The Mersey Beat poets were Adrian Henri, Brian Patten and Roger McGough. Their work was a self-conscious attempt at creating an English equivalent to the American Beats. Other noteworthy later twentieth-century poets are Welshman R.S. Thomas, Geoffrey Hill, Charles Tomlinson and Carol Ann Duffy. Geoffrey Hill (born 1932) is considered one of the most distinguished English poets of his generation,[191] Charles Tomlinson (born 1927) is another important English poet of an older generation, though "since his first publication in 1951, has built a career that has seen more notice in the international scene than in his native England.[192]

Literature from the Commonwealth of Nations Edit

See also: Postcolonial, Australian, Canadian, Caribbean, Indian, New Zealand, Pakistani, African.[note 2] and Migrant literature.

 
Doris Lessing, Cologne, 2006.

From 1950 on a significant number of major writers came from countries that had over the centuries been settled by the British, other than America which had been producing significant writers from at least the Victorian period. There had of course been a few important works in English prior to 1950 from the then British Empire. The South African writer Olive Schreiner's famous novel The Story of an African Farm was published in 1883 and New Zealander Katherine Mansfield published her first collection of short stories, In a German Pension, in 1911. The first major novelist, writing in English, from the Indian sub-continent, R. K. Narayan, began publishing in England in the 1930s, thanks to the encouragement of English novelist Graham Greene.[193] Caribbean writer Jean Rhys's writing career began as early as 1928, though her most famous work, Wide Sargasso Sea, was not published until 1966. South Africa's Alan Paton's famous Cry, the Beloved Country dates from 1948. Doris Lessing from Southern Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe, was a dominant presence in the English literary scene, frequently publishing from 1950 on throughout the 20th century, and she won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2007.

 
Sir Salman Rushdie at the 2016 Hay Festival, the UK's largest annual literary festival

Salman Rushdie is another post Second World War writers from the former British colonies who permanently settled in Britain. Rushdie achieved fame with Midnight's Children 1981. His most controversial novel The Satanic Verses 1989, was inspired in part by the life of Muhammad. V. S. Naipaul (born 1932), born in Trinidad, was another immigrant, who wrote among other things A Bend in the River (1979). Naipaul won the Nobel Prize in Literature.[194]

From Nigeria a number of writers have achieved an international reputation for works in English, including novelist Chinua Achebe, as well as playwright Wole Soyinka. Soyinka won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1986, as did South African novelist Nadine Gordimer in 1995. Other South African writers in English are novelist J.M. Coetzee (Nobel Prize 2003) and playwright Athol Fugard. Kenya's most internationally renowned author is Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o who has written novels, plays and short stories in English. Poet Derek Walcott, from St Lucia in the Caribbean, was another Nobel Prize winner in 1992. An Australian Patrick White, a major novelist in this period, whose first work was published in 1939, won in (1973). Other noteworthy Australian writers at the end of this period are poet Les Murray (1938–2019), and novelist Peter Carey (born 1943), who is one of only four writers to have won the Booker Prize twice.[195]

Major Canadian novelists include Carol Shields, Lawrence Hill, Margaret Atwood and Alice Munro. Carol Shields novel The Stone Diaries won the 1995 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, and another novel, Larry's Party, won the Orange Prize in 1998. Lawrence Hill's Book of Negroes won the 2008 Commonwealth Writers' Prize Overall Best Book Award, while Alice Munro became the first Canadian to win the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2013.[196] Munro also received the Man Booker International Prize in 2009. Amongst internationally known poets are Leonard Cohen and Anne Carson. Carson in 1996 won the Lannan Literary Award for poetry. The foundation's awards in 2006 for poetry, fiction and nonfiction each came with $US 150,000.

American writers Edit

From 1940 into the 21st century, American playwrights, poets and novelists have continued to be internationally prominent.

Genre fiction in the twentieth century Edit

Many works published in the twentieth century were examples of genre fiction. This designation includes the crime novels, spy novel, historical romance, fantasy, graphic novel, and science fiction.

 
J.R.R. Tolkien, 1940s

Agatha Christie (1890–1976) was an important, and hugely successful, crime fiction writer who is best remembered for her 66 detective novels as well as her many short stories and successful plays for the West End theatre. Along with Dorothy L. Sayers (1893–1957), Ngaio Marsh (1895–1982), and Margery Allingham (1904–1966), Christie dominated the mystery novel in the 1920s and 1930s, often called "The Golden Age of Detective Fiction." Together, these four women writers were honored as "The Queens of Crime."[197] Other recent noteworthy writers in this genre are Ruth Rendell, P.D. James and the Scot, Ian Rankin.

Erskine Childers' The Riddle of the Sands (1903), is an early example of spy fiction. John Buchan (1875–1940), a Scottish diplomat, and later the Governor General of Canada, is sometimes considered the inventor of the thriller genre. His five novels featuring the heroic, Richard Hannay, are among the earliest in the genre. The first Hannay novel, The Thirty-Nine Steps, was made into a famous thriller movie by Alfred Hitchcock. Hannay was the prototype for the even more famous fictional character, James Bond 007, created by Ian Fleming, and the protagonist in a long line of films. Another noted writer in the spy novel genre was John le Carré.

 
J.K. Rowling, 2006

The novelist Georgette Heyer created the historical romance genre. Emma Orczy's original play, The Scarlet Pimpernel (1905), a "hero with a secret identity", became a favourite of London audiences, playing more than 2,000 performances and becoming one of the most popular shows staged in England to that date.[198]

Among significant writers in the fantasy genre were J.R.R. Tolkien, author of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. C.S. Lewis author of The Chronicles of Narnia, and J.K. Rowling who wrote the highly successful Harry Potter series. Lloyd Alexander winner of the Newbery Honor as well as the Newbery Medal for his The Chronicles of Prydain pentalogy is another significant author of fantasy novels for younger readers. Like fantasy in the later decades of the 20th century, the genre of science fiction began to be taken more seriously, and this was because of the work of writers such as Arthur C. Clarke (2001: A Space Odyssey) and Michael Moorcock. Another prominent writer in this genre, Douglas Adams, is particularly associated with the comic science fiction work, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Mainstream novelists such Doris Lessing and Margaret Atwood also wrote works in this genre.

Known for his macabre, darkly comic fantasy works for children, Roald Dahl became one of the best selling authors of the 20th century, and his best-loved children's novels include Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Matilda, James and the Giant Peach, The Witches, Fantastic Mr Fox and The BFG.[199] Noted writers in the field of comic books are Neil Gaiman, and Alan Moore, while Gaiman also produces graphic novels.

Literary criticism in the twentieth century Edit

Literary criticism gathered momentum in the twentieth century. In this era prominent academic journals were established to address specific aspects of English literature. Most of these academic journals gained widespread credibility because of being published by university presses. The growth of universities thus contributed to a stronger connection between English literature and literary criticism in the twentieth century.

Nobel Prizes in English literature Edit

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ The Encyclopaedia Britannica defines English literature more narrowly as, "the body of written works produced in the English language by inhabitants of the British Isles (including Ireland) from the 7th century to the present day. The major literatures written in English outside the British Isles are treated separately under American literature, Australian literature, Canadian literature, and New Zealand literature." However, despite this, it includes literature from the Republic of Ireland, "Anglo-American modernism", and discusses postcolonial literature. .([1] 1 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine); See also full articles on American literature and other literatures in the English language.
  2. ^ And see former British colonies, Nigeria, Kenya, South African literature, etc

References Edit

  1. ^ "English Literature refers to the study of texts from around the world, written in the English language." (International Student.com [2] 3 November 2022 at the Wayback Machine); "like so many other collective enterprises in our century, has ceased to be principally about the identity of a single nation; it is a global phenomenon." (["Preface" to The Norton Anthology of English Literature, vol. 1, 8th edition [3] 16 November 2022 at the Wayback Machine).
  2. ^ "How the English Language has evolved through history". childrensuniversity.manchester.ac.uk/. Manchester University. from the original on 10 October 2017. Retrieved 15 December 2016.
  3. ^ a b Baugh, Albert and Cable, Thomas. 2002. The History of the English Language. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall. pp. 79–81.
  4. ^ "And now at last, ... it being brought unto such a conclusion, as that we have great hope that the Church of England (sic) shall reape good fruit thereby ..." Bible (King James Version, 1611)/Epistle Dedicatorie Archived 31 January 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ "How English evolved into a global language". BBC News. BBC. 20 December 2010. from the original on 25 September 2015. Retrieved 9 August 2015.
  6. ^ Greenblatt 2005, p. 11.
  7. ^ Bevington 2002, pp. 1–3.
  8. ^ Wells 1997, p. 399.
  9. ^ Craig 2003, p. 3.
  10. ^ a b The Oxford Companion to English Literature, p. 890.
  11. ^ Ferguson 2004b.
  12. ^ Maddison 2001, p. 97: "The total population of the Empire was 412 million [in 1913]"; Maddison 2001, pp. 241: "[World population in 1913 (in thousands):] 1 791 020".
  13. ^ Drabble 1996, p. 323.
  14. ^ a b Angus Cameron (1983). "Anglo-Saxon literature" in Dictionary of the Middle Ages, vol. 1, pp. 274–88.
  15. ^ a b c d Lotte., Hedeager (2011). "Knowledge Production Reconsidered". Iron Age myth and materiality : an archaeology of Scandinavia, AD 400–1000. Abindon, Oxfordshire; New York: Routledge. pp. 177–90. ISBN 978-0-415-60602-8. OCLC 666403125.
  16. ^ Stanley Brian Greenfield, A New Critical History of Old English Literature (New York: New York University Press, Abels, Richard (2005). Alfred the Great: War, Kingship and Culture in Anglo-Saxon England. Longman. p. 15. ISBN 0-582-04047-7.
  17. ^ Drabble 1996, p. 369.
  18. ^ Magoun, Francis P jr (1953), "The Oral-Formulaic Character of Anglo-Saxon Narrative Poetry", Speculum, 28 (3): 446–67, doi:10.2307/2847021, JSTOR 2847021, S2CID 162903356.
  19. ^ Fry, Donald K jr (1968), The Beowulf Poet: A Collection of Critical Essays, Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, pp. 83–113.
  20. ^ Robinson 2001: 'Like most Old English poems, Beowulf has no title in the unique manuscript in which it survives (British Library, Cotton Vitellius A.xv, which was copied round the year 1000 AD), but modern scholars agree in naming it after the hero whose life is its subject.'
  21. ^ Tolkien 1958, p. 127.
  22. ^ Hieatt, A Kent (1983). Beowulf and Other Old English Poems. New York: Bantam Books. pp. xi–xiii.
  23. ^ Kiernan 1996, pp. xix–xx, 3–4, 23–34, 60, 62, 90, 162, 171, 258, 257, 277–78, footnote 69.
  24. ^ a b Fulk & Cain 2003.
  25. ^ Drabble 1996, p. 1052.
  26. ^ Marsden, Richard (2004). The Cambridge Old English Reader. Cambridge: Cambridge UP. p. 221. ISBN 978-0-521-45612-8.
  27. ^ Walter John Sedgefield (ed.), King Alfred's Old English Version of Boethius: De consolatione philosophiae, 1968 (1899)
  28. ^ Rubenstein, JC (2004). "Eadmer of Canterbury (c. 1060 – c. 1126)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/8383. Retrieved 8 February 2011. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.).
  29. ^ Drabble 1996, p. 44.
  30. ^ "Versions of the Bible", Catholic Encyclopedia, New advent, from the original on 18 May 2013, retrieved 26 March 2013
  31. ^ Drabble 1996, p. 852.
  32. ^ Long, William J. (1909), English Literature, Its History and Its Significance for the Life of the English Speaking World, Public domain, p. 57
  33. ^ Long, William J. (1909), English Literature, Its History and Its Significance for the Life of the English Speaking World, Public domain, p. 82
  34. ^ a b "Sir Gawayne and the Grene Knight", Encyclopædia Britannica (online academic ed.), 24 March 2013, from the original on 30 May 2015, retrieved 21 June 2022.
  35. ^ "Gower, John" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  36. ^ Colledge, Edmund; Walsh, James (1978). Julian of Norwich. ISBN 978-0-8091-2091-8. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  37. ^ a b The Oxford Companion to English Literature (1996), p. 182.
  38. ^ "Malory's Morte d'Arthur: Exhibition Guide". University of Rochester | Robbins Library Digital Projects. from the original on 21 August 2021. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  39. ^ Cuddon, J.A. (1999). Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory. London: Penguin Books. p. 523.
  40. ^ Gassner, John; Quinn, Edward (1969). "England: middle ages". The Reader's Encyclopedia of World Drama. London: Methuen. pp. 203–04. OCLC 249158675.
  41. ^ A Glossary of Literary Terms, M.H. Abrams. (Fort Worth, Texas: Harcourt Brace, 1999, pp. 165–66.
  42. ^ Jenner, Henry. A Handbook of the Cornish Language. from the original on 26 August 2013. Retrieved 7 April 2013 – via Project Gutenberg.
  43. ^ . Maga Cornish Language Partnership. Archived from the original on 25 December 2008.
  44. ^ Richardson and Johnston (1991, 97–98).
  45. ^ Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory, p. 523.
  46. ^ The Norton Anthology of English Literature, Vol. 1 (2000), p. 445 and The Oxford Companion to English Literature (1996), p. 775.
  47. ^ a b Ward & Waller 1907–1916, Vol. 3: Renascence and Reformation.
  48. ^ ""English Renaissance", Poetry Foundation online". from the original on 11 January 2021. Retrieved 9 January 2021.
  49. ^ A Companion to English Renaissance Literature and Culture, ed. Michael Hattaway (2000)
  50. ^ Tillyard 1929.
  51. ^ Burrow 2004.
  52. ^ Ward et al. 1907–21, 3.
  53. ^ "Gorboduc and Titus Andronicus"; James D. Carroll, Notes and Queries, 2004, pp. 51, 267–69.
  54. ^ The Spanish tragedy, a play. London: J.M. Dent and co. 1898.
  55. ^ The Oxford Companion to English Literature, ed. Margaret Drabble. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996), pp. 832, 935.
  56. ^ Bradley 1991, 85; Muir 2005, 12–16.
  57. ^ Dowden 1881, 57.
  58. ^ "Ben Jonson." Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online Academic Edition. Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 2012. Web. 20 September 2012. <https://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/127459/Ben Jonson.
  59. ^ The Oxford Companion to English Literature (1996). p. 546.
  60. ^ "Revenge Tragedy" in A Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory, ed. JA Cuddon (London: Penguin Books, 1999), pp. 744–46.
  61. ^ Chapman's Homer: The Iliad. Ed. Allardyce Nicoll. Bollingen Series 41. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1998; Chapman's Homer: The Odyssey. Ed. Allardyce Nicoll. Bollingen Series 41. Princeton: Princeton UP, 2000.
  62. ^ Burrow, Colin, "Metaphysical poets (act. c. 1600 – c. 1690)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, from the original on 24 September 2015, retrieved 7 May 2012.
  63. ^ Gardner, Helen The Metaphysical Poets Penguin Books, 1957 ISBN 0-14-042038-X
  64. ^ Drabble 1996, pp. 100–01.
  65. ^ John Milton." Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 2013. Web. 8 April 2013. <https://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/383113/John-Milton 8 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine>.
  66. ^ Sanders, Karen (2003). Ethics & Journalism. Sage. p. 66. ISBN 978-0-7619-6967-9. from the original on 26 March 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  67. ^ John Dryden, Major Works, ed. by Keith Walker, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987), p. 37.
  68. ^ Hatch, Mary Jo (2009). The Three Faces of Leadership: Manager, Artist, Priest. John Wiley & Sons. p. 47.
  69. ^ J. A. Cuddon, A Dictionary of Literary Terms. (London: Penguin, 1999), p. 514.
  70. ^ . Poets.org. 25 January 2007. Archived from the original on 28 January 2014. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  71. ^ A Handbook to English Literature (7th edition), ed. Harmon & Holman. (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall), 1996), p. 575.
  72. ^ Rogers, Pat (2006). "Johnson, Samuel (1709–1784)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/14918. Retrieved 25 August 2008. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  73. ^ Bate 1977, p. 240
  74. ^ The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature (1990), pp. 564, 698, 906.
  75. ^ The Oxford Companion to English Literature, p. 947.
  76. ^ "Fanny Burney". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Inc. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  77. ^ The Oxford Companion to English Literature, ed Margaret Drabble. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996), p. 151.
  78. ^ J.A. Cuddon, A Dictionary of Literary Terms, p. 588
  79. ^ a b "Pre-Romanticism". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Inc. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  80. ^ William Harmon and C. Hugh Holman, A Handbook to Literature. (Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 1986), pp. 452–53, 502.
  81. ^ The Oxford Companion to English Literature (1996), p. 418.
  82. ^ The Oxford Companion to English Literature, p. 1106.
  83. ^ J. Buchan, Crowded with Genius (London: Harper Collins, 2003), ISBN 0-06-055888-1, p. 163.
  84. ^ Richard Maxwell and Katie Trumpener, eds., The Cambridge Companion to Fiction in the Romantic Period (2008).
  85. ^ J.A. Cuddon, A Dictionary of Literary Terms (1999), p. 809.
  86. ^ J.A. Cuddon, pp. 588–89.
  87. ^ The Oxford Companion to English Literature, pp. 957–58.
  88. ^ "The Castle of Otranto: The creepy tale that launched gothic fiction" 3 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine. BBC. Retrieved 14 October 2017
  89. ^ Oxford Book of Gothic Tales. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001
  90. ^ Parker, Patricia L. "Charlotte Temple by Susanna Rowson". The English Journal. 65.1: (1976) 59-60. JSTOR. Web. 1 March 2010.
  91. ^ Schweitzer, Ivy. "Review". Early American Literature. 23.2: (1988) 221–225. JSTOR. Web. 1 March 2010.
  92. ^ Hamilton, Kristie. "An Assault on the Will: Republican Virtue and the City in Hannah Webster Foster's 'The Coquette'". Early American Literature. 24.2: (1989) 135–151. JSTOR. Web. 1 March 2010
  93. ^ Joudrey, Thomas J. (2013). "Maintaining Stability: Fancy and Passion in the Coquette". The New England Quarterly. 86: 60–88. doi:10.1162/TNEQ_a_00257. S2CID 57567236. from the original on 5 February 2023. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
  94. ^ The Norton Anthology of English Literature, 7th edition, vol. 2, p. 5.
  95. ^ The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature, p. 21.
  96. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica. "Romanticism". Retrieved 30 January 2008, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Britannica.com. Retrieved 2010-08-24.
  97. ^ Christopher Casey, (30 October 2008). ""Grecian Grandeurs and the Rude Wasting of Old Time": Britain, the Elgin Marbles, and Post-Revolutionary Hellenism". Foundations. Volume III, Number 1. Retrieved 2009-06-25.
  98. ^ The Norton Anthology of English Literature, vol. 2 (2000), p. 2.
  99. ^ The Norton Anthology of English Literature, vol.2 (2000), p. 9
  100. ^ "William Blake." Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online Academic Edition. Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 2012. Web. 2 October 2012. <https://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/68793/William-Blake 3 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine>.
  101. ^ The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature, p. 885.
  102. ^ "Samuel Taylor Coleridge." Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online Academic Edition. Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 2013. Web. 13 May. 2013. <https://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/125261/Samuel-Taylor-Coleridge 26 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine>.
  103. ^ The Norton Anthology of English Literature, vol. 2 (2000), p. 11.
  104. ^ Horace Ainsworth Eaton, Thomas De Quincey: A Biography, New York: Oxford University Press, 1936; reprinted New York: Octagon Books, 1972; Grevel Lindop, The Opium-Eater: A Life of Thomas De Quincey, London: J.M. Dent & Sons, 1981.
  105. ^ The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature, p. 587.
  106. ^ The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature, p. 379.
  107. ^ Rupert Christiansen. Romantic Affinities: Portraits From an Age, 1780–1830. (London: Bodley Head, 1988), p. 215
  108. ^ The Oxford Companion to English Literature (1996), p. 905.
  109. ^ [4] 5 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine viewed 12 May 2013.
  110. ^ The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature, p. 248,
  111. ^ "John Keats." Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online Academic Edition. Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 2013. Web. 12 May. 2013.<https://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/314020/John-Keats 26 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine>; The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature, pp. 649–50.
  112. ^ The Oxford Companion to English Literature (1996), p. 534.
  113. ^ a b The Encyclopaedia of Romantic Literature, edited by Frederick Burwick, Nancy Goslee and Diane Hoeveler
  114. ^ Geoffrey Summerfield, in introduction to John Clare: Selected Poems, Penguin Books 1990, pp. 13–22. ISBN 0-14-043724-X
  115. ^ Sales, Roger (2002) John Clare: A Literary Life; Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0-333-65270-3
  116. ^ The Oxford Companion to English Literature (1996), p. 239.
  117. ^ Frank Whitehead. George Crabbe: A Reappraisal. (Susquehanna University Press, 1995) ISBN 0-945636-70-9.
  118. ^ Litz, pp. 3–14; Grundy, "Jane Austen and Literary Traditions", The Cambridge Companion to Jane Austen, pp. 192–93; Waldron, "Critical Responses, Early", Jane Austen in Context, pp. 83, 89–90; Duffy, "Criticism, 1814–1870", The Jane Austen Companion, pp. 93–94.
  119. ^ A. Walton Litz, Jane Austen: A Study of Her Development. New York: Oxford University Press, 1965. p. 142; Oliver MacDonagh, Jane Austen: Real and Imagined Worlds. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1991. pp. 66–75; Collins, 160–61.
  120. ^ a b George L. McMichael and Frederick C. Crews, eds. Anthology of American Literature: Colonial through romantic (6th ed. 1997) p 613
  121. ^ Harner, Gary Wayne (1990). "Edgar Allan Poe in France: Baudelaire's Labor of Love". In Fisher, Benjamin Franklin IV. Poe and His Times: The Artist and His Milieu. Baltimore: The Edgar Allan Poe Society. ISBN 978-0-9616449-2-5.
  122. ^ Ann Woodlief, "American Romanticism (or the American Renaissance): Introduction" 22 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  123. ^ Holloway, John (1913). The Victorian Sage: Studies in Argument. London: Macmillan & Co Ltd. p. 1.
  124. ^ Emerson, Ralph Waldo (1881). "The Literary Work of Thomas Carlyle" 8 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine. Scribner's Monthly. No. 22. p. 92. Mr. Carlyle... has yet for many years been accepted by competent critics of all shades of opinion as the undoubted head of English letters.
  125. ^ Stephen, Leslie, ed. (1887). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 9. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 124. Carlyle during these years had become the acknowledged head of English literature.
  126. ^ Carlyle, Thomas (1843). Past and Present. The Works of Thomas Carlyle in Thirty Volumes. Vol. 10. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons (published 1903).
  127. ^ Carlyle, Thomas (1841). On Heroes, Hero-Worship and the Heroic in History. The Works of Thomas Carlyle in Thirty Volumes. Vol. 5. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons (published 1903).
  128. ^ Carlyle, Thomas (1904). Critical and Miscellaneous Essays: Volume IV. The Works of Thomas Carlyle in Thirty Volumes. Vol. 29. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
  129. ^ "Carlylese." Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Carlylese .
  130. ^ George Eliot, "Thomas Carlyle," George Eliot Archive, accessed March 12, 2022, https://georgeeliotarchive.org/items/show/96.
  131. ^ Ruskin, John (1905). Cook, E. T.; Wedderburn, Alexander (eds.). Unto This Last. Munera Pulveris. Time and Tide. With Other Writings on Political Economy 1860–1873 29 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine. The Works of John Ruskin. Vol. XVII. London: George Allen, 156, Charing Cross Road. New York: Longmans, Green, and Co. p. xxxix.
  132. ^ Ruskin, John (1903–1905). Cook, E. T.; Wedderburn, Alexander (eds.). Modern Painters 15 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine. The Works of John Ruskin. Vols. III–VII. London: George Allen, 156, Charing Cross Road. New York: Longmans, Green, and Co.
  133. ^ Purton, Valerie, ed. (2018). John Ruskin and Nineteenth-Century Education. Anthem Nineteenth-Century Series. Anthem. ISBN 9781783088058.
  134. ^ Henderson, William (2014). John Ruskin's Political Economy. Routledge. ISBN 9780415757683.
  135. ^ The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature (1990), p. 93.
  136. ^ Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature, p. 95.
  137. ^ Bloomsbury Guide, p. 101.
  138. ^ "James, Louis (2006)"
  139. ^ The Norton Anthology of English Literature, (7th edition) vol. 2, p. 1335.
  140. ^ Lucasta Miller, The Bronte Myth. (New York: Anchor, 2005), pp. 12–13
  141. ^ Juliet Gardiner, The History today who's who in British history (2000), p. 109
  142. ^ Carter, McRae, The Routledge History of Literature in English: Britain and Ireland (2001), p. 240
  143. ^ Davies, Stevie (1996). "Introduction and Notes". The Tenant of Wildfell Hall. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-043474-3.
  144. ^ Abrams, M.H., et al. (Eds.) "Elizabeth Gaskell, 1810–1865". The Norton Anthology of English Literature, The Major Authors: The Romantic Period through the Twentieth Century, 7th ed., Vol. B. New York & London: W.W. Norton & Company, 2001.
  145. ^ The Oxford Companion to English Literature (1996), p. 1013.
  146. ^ The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature (1990), p. 490.
  147. ^ a b The Oxford Companion to English Literature (1996), pp. 650–51.
  148. ^ Dennis Taylor, "Hardy and Wordsworth". Victorian Poetry, vol.24, no.4, Winter, 1986.
  149. ^ "George MacDonald, BBC". from the original on 12 March 2022. Retrieved 12 March 2022.
  150. ^ Dozois, Gardner (1997). "Preface". Modern Classics of Fantasy. New York: St. Martin's Press. pp. xvi–xvii. ISBN 031215173X.
  151. ^ David, Deirdre The Cambridge Companion to the Victorian Novel p. 179. Cambridge University Press, 2001.
  152. ^ "Romanticism, American," in The Oxford Dictionary of American Art and Artists ed by Ann Lee Morgan (Oxford University Press, 2007) online 28 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  153. ^ Gravett, Sharon L. (1995). "Carlyle's Demanding Companion: Henry David Thoreau". Carlyle Studies Annual. 15: 21–31. JSTOR < 44946086<.
  154. ^ Carlyle, Thomas (2003). Tarr, Rodger L. (ed.). Sartor Resartus: The Life and Opinions of Herr Teufelsdröckh in Three Books. University of California Press. pp. xxxiii.
  155. ^ "Henry James." Encyclopedia of World Biography, Gale, 1998. Biography in Context, Accessed 4 October 2017.
  156. ^ Cain, Jimmie E. Jr. (4 April 2006). Bram Stoker and Russophobia: Evidence of the British Fear of Russia in Dracula and The Lady of the Shroud. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-2407-8.
  157. ^ The Norton Anthology of English Literature, 7th ed, vol. 2. (New York: Norton, 2000), p. 1060.
  158. ^ Carol T. Christ, Victorian and Modern Poetics. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1986); "Robert Browning", The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature. (New York: Prentice-Hall, 1990), p. 373.
  159. ^ The Oxford Companion to English Literature, p. 981.
  160. ^ Landow, George P, The Literary Canon, Victorian Web, from the original on 19 February 2015, retrieved 3 May 2013.
  161. ^ Ward et al. 1907–21, p. [page needed].
  162. ^ A handbook to Literature, ed William Harmon & C. Hugh Holman (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1996), 407.
  163. ^ Everett, Glenn, Arthur Hugh Clough – A Brief Biography, Victorian Web, from the original on 17 November 2012, retrieved 16 September 2012.
  164. ^ The Norton Anthology of English Literature, 7th edition, vol.2, ed. M.H. Abrams, p. 1741.
  165. ^ The Norton Anthology of English Literature, 7th edition, vol. 2, p. 1740.
  166. ^ The Norton Anthology of English Literature, 7th edition, vol. 2, p. 2041.
  167. ^ Kenrick, John. G&S Story: Part III 1 June 2022 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 13 October 2006; and Powell, Jim. William S. Gilbert's Wicked Wit for Liberty 29 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine accessed 13 October 2006.
  168. ^ , U Toronto, archived from the original on 12 February 2012.
  169. ^ "Article on long-runs in the theatre before 1920". from the original on 13 June 2020. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
  170. ^ M.H. Abrams,A Glossary of literary Terms (7th edition). (New York: Harcourt Brace), 1999), p. 167.
  171. ^ M.H. Abrams, p. 167.
  172. ^ M.H. Abrams, p. 168.
  173. ^ Marshall Berman, All that is Solid Melts into Air. (Harmsworth: Penguin, 1988), p. 23.
  174. ^ Drabble 1996, pp. 377, 988.
  175. ^ The Oxford Companion to English Literature. (1996), p. 781.
  176. ^ "English literature." Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online Academic Edition. Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 2012. Web. 15 November 2012. <https://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/188217/English-literature 2 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine>.
  177. ^ The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature, ed. Marion Wynne Davies (New York: Prentice Hall, 1990), p. 118.
  178. ^ The Oxford Companion to English Literature, ed. Margaret Drabble, p. 562.
  179. ^ Beebe, Maurice (Fall 1972). "Ulysses and the Age of Modernism". James Joyce Quarterly (University of Tulsa) 10 (1): p. 176.
  180. ^ Chris Gostick, "Extra Material on James Hanley's Boy", in the OneWorld Classics edition of Boy (2007), pp. 182–83.
  181. ^ Drabble 1996, p. 660.
  182. ^ Davies 1990, p. 644.
  183. ^ Dettmar, Kevin JH (2005), "Modernism", in Kastan, David Scott (ed.), The Oxford Encyclopedia of British Literature, Oxford University Press, from the original on 2 June 2013, retrieved 21 October 2013.
  184. ^ Birch, Dinah, ed. (2011), "modernism", The Oxford Companion to English Literature, Oxford Reference Online, Oxford University Press, from the original on 2 June 2013, retrieved 21 August 2012.
  185. ^ The Cambridge Companion to Irish Literature, ed. John Wilson Foster. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006.
  186. ^ Janice Galloway "Rereading Lanark by Alasdair Gray". The Guardian. Saturday 12 October 2002
  187. ^ Crook, Tim, International radio drama, UK: IRDP, from the original on 5 October 2016, retrieved 29 January 2013.
  188. ^ J. C. Trewin, "Critic on the Hearth." Listener. London. 5 August 1954: 224.
  189. ^ Smith, Stan (2004). "Introduction". In Stan Smith. The Cambridge Companion to W.H. Auden. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 1–14. ISBN 0-521-82962-3.
  190. ^ Greene 2012, p. 426.
  191. ^ Bloom, Harold, ed. (1986), Geoffrey Hill, Modern Critical Views, Infobase.
  192. ^ Charles Tomlinson, UK: Carcanet Press, from the original on 23 March 2012, retrieved 15 November 2012.
  193. ^ Drabble 1996, p. 697.
  194. ^ "2001 Laureates". Literature. The Nobel Prize. from the original on 15 September 2012. Retrieved 6 September 2012.
  195. ^ Man Booker official site: J.G. Farrell [5] 29 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine; Hilary Mantel . Archived from the original on 13 March 2016. Retrieved 22 March 2016.; J.M. Coetzee: . Archived from the original on 17 March 2016. Retrieved 22 March 2016..
  196. ^ "Nobel-winner Alice Munro hailed as 'master' of short stories | CBC News". from the original on 26 April 2017. Retrieved 25 April 2017.
  197. ^ Kaplan, C. (2013). 'Queens of Crime': The 'Golden Age' of Crime Fiction. In: Joannou, M. (eds) The History of British Women's Writing, 1920–1945. The History of British Women's Writing. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137292179_9
  198. ^ Kabatchnik, Amnon (2008). Blood on the Stage: Milestone Plays of Crime, Mystery, and Detection: an Annotated Repertoire, 1900–1925. Scarecrow Press. p. 28. The novel The Scarlet Pimpernel was published soon after the play opened and was an immediate success.
  199. ^ "Once upon a time, there was a man who liked to make up stories ..." The Independent. from the original on 30 January 2012. Retrieved 14 October 2017.

Bibliography Edit

External links Edit

  • The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: an Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes (Online Version of 1907–1921 print) – via Bartleby.com.
  • The English Literary Canon
  • British literature – Books tagged British literature LibraryThing
  • at the British Library
  • Discovering Literature: Romantics and Victorians at the British Library
  • Discovering Literature: 20th century at the British Library
  • Luminarium: Anthology of Middle English Literature (1350–1485)
  • Luminarium: 16th Century Renaissance English Literature (1485–1603)
  • Luminarium: Seventeenth Century English Literature (1603–1660)
  • Luminarium: Eighteenth Century English Literature (1660–1785)
  • Eighteenth-Century Poetry Archive (ECPA)
  • Ed. José Ángel García Landa, (University of Zaragoza, Spain)

english, literature, confused, with, british, literature, literature, written, english, language, from, united, kingdom, crown, dependencies, overseas, territories, republic, ireland, united, states, countries, former, british, empire, note, english, language,. Not to be confused with British literature English literature is literature written in the English language from the United Kingdom its Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories the Republic of Ireland the United States and the countries of the former British Empire 1 note 1 The English language has developed over the course of more than 1 400 years 2 The earliest forms of English a set of Anglo Frisian dialects brought to Great Britain by Anglo Saxon invaders in the fifth century are called Old English Beowulf is the most famous work in Old English and has achieved national epic status in England despite being set in Scandinavia However following the Norman conquest of England in 1066 the written form of the Anglo Saxon language became less common Under the influence of the new aristocracy French became the standard language of courts parliament and polite society 3 The English spoken after the Normans came is known as Middle English This form of English lasted until the 1470s when the Chancery Standard late Middle English a London based form of English became widespread Geoffrey Chaucer 1343 1400 author of The Canterbury Tales was a significant figure in the development of the legitimacy of vernacular Middle English at a time when the dominant literary languages in England were still French and Latin The invention of the printing press by Johannes Gutenberg in 1439 also helped to standardise the language as did the King James Bible 1611 4 and the Great Vowel Shift 5 Poet and playwright William Shakespeare 1564 1616 is widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and one of the world s greatest dramatists 6 7 8 His plays have been translated into every major living language and are performed more often than those of any other playwright 9 In the nineteenth century Sir Walter Scott s historical romances inspired a generation of painters composers and writers throughout Europe 10 The English language spread throughout the world with the development of the British Empire between the late 16th and early 18th centuries At its height it was the largest empire in history 11 By 1913 the British Empire held sway over 412 million people 23 of the world population at the time 12 During the nineteenth and twentieth centuries these colonies and the USA started to produce their own significant literary traditions in English Cumulatively over the period of 1907 to the present numerous writers from Great Britain both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland the US and former British colonies have received the Nobel Prize for works in the English language more than in any other language Contents 1 Old English literature c 450 1066 2 Middle English literature 1066 1500 2 1 Medieval theatre 3 English Renaissance 1500 1660 3 1 Elizabethan period 1558 1603 3 1 1 Poetry 3 1 2 Drama 3 2 Jacobean period 1603 1625 3 2 1 Drama 3 2 2 Poetry 3 2 3 Prose 3 3 Late Renaissance 1625 1660 3 3 1 Poetry 4 Restoration Age 1660 1700 4 1 Poetry 4 2 Prose 4 3 Drama 5 18th century 5 1 Augustan literature 1700 1745 5 1 1 Poetry 5 1 2 Drama 5 1 3 Prose including the novel 5 2 Age of Sensibility 1745 1798 5 2 1 Precursors of Romanticism 5 2 2 Rise of American Literature 6 Romanticism 1798 1837 6 1 Romantic poetry 6 1 1 Second generation 6 1 2 Other poets 6 2 Romantic novel 6 3 Romanticism in America 7 Victorian literature 1837 1901 7 1 Sage writing 7 2 The Victorian novel 7 2 1 American novel From Romanticism to realism 7 2 2 Genre fiction 7 2 3 Children s literature 7 3 Victorian poetry 7 3 1 American poetry 7 4 Victorian drama 8 20th century 8 1 Modernism 1901 1939 8 2 Modernism 1923 1939 8 3 Post modernism 1940 2000 8 3 1 The novel 8 3 2 Drama 8 3 3 Poetry 8 3 4 Literature from the Commonwealth of Nations 8 3 5 American writers 8 4 Genre fiction in the twentieth century 8 5 Literary criticism in the twentieth century 9 Nobel Prizes in English literature 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External linksOld English literature c 450 1066 EditMain article Old English literature nbsp The first page of BeowulfOld English literature or Anglo Saxon literature encompasses the surviving literature written in Old English in Anglo Saxon England in the period after the settlement of the Saxons and other Germanic tribes in England Jutes and the Angles c 450 after the withdrawal of the Romans and ending soon after the Norman Conquest in 1066 13 These works include genres such as epic poetry hagiography sermons Bible translations legal works chronicles and riddles 14 In all there are about 400 surviving manuscripts from the period 14 Widsith which appears in the Exeter Book of the late 10th century gives a list of kings of tribes ordered according to their popularity and impact on history with Attila King of the Huns coming first followed by Eormanric of the Ostrogoths 15 187 It may also be the oldest extant work that tells the Battle of the Goths and Huns which is also told in such later Scandinavian works as Hervarar s saga and Gesta Danorum 15 179 Lotte Hedeager argues that the work is far older however and that it likely dates back to the late 6th or early 7th century citing the author s knowledge of historical details and accuracy as proof of its authenticity 15 184 86 She does note however that some authors such as John Niles have argued the work was invented in the 10th century 15 181 84 The Anglo Saxon Chronicle is a collection of annals in Old English from the 9th century that chronicles the history of the Anglo Saxons 16 The poem Battle of Maldon also deals with history This is a work of uncertain date celebrating the Battle of Maldon of 991 at which the Anglo Saxons failed to prevent a Viking invasion 17 Oral tradition was very strong in early English culture and most literary works were written to be performed 18 19 Epic poems were very popular and some including Beowulf have survived to the present day Beowulf is the most famous work in Old English and has achieved national epic status in England despite being set in Scandinavia The only surviving manuscript is the Nowell Codex the precise date of which is debated but most estimates place it close to the year 1000 Beowulf is the conventional title 20 and its composition is dated between the 8th 21 22 and the early 11th century 23 Nearly all Anglo Saxon authors are anonymous twelve are known by name from medieval sources but only four of those are known by their vernacular works with any certainty Caedmon Bede Alfred the Great and Cynewulf Caedmon is the earliest English poet whose name is known 24 pages needed and his only known surviving work Caedmon s Hymn probably dates from the late 7th century The poem is one of the earliest attested examples of Old English and is with the runic Ruthwell Cross and Franks Casket inscriptions one of three candidates for the earliest attested example of Old English poetry It is also one of the earliest recorded examples of sustained poetry in a Germanic language The poem The Dream of the Rood was inscribed upon the Ruthwell Cross 24 pages needed Two Old English poems from the late 10th century are The Wanderer and The Seafarer 25 Both have a religious theme and Richard Marsden describes The Seafarer as an exhortatory and didactic poem in which the miseries of winter seafaring are used as a metaphor for the challenge faced by the committed Christian 26 Classical antiquity was not forgotten in Anglo Saxon England and several Old English poems are adaptations of late classical philosophical texts The longest is King Alfred s 849 899 9th century translation of Boethius Consolation of Philosophy 27 Middle English literature 1066 1500 EditMain article Middle English literature After the Norman conquest of England in 1066 the written form of the Anglo Saxon language became less common Under the influence of the new aristocracy French became the standard language of courts parliament and polite society As the invaders integrated their language and literature mingled with that of the natives and the Norman dialects of the ruling classes became Anglo Norman From then until the 12th century Anglo Saxon underwent a gradual transition into Middle English Political power was no longer in English hands so that the West Saxon literary language had no more influence than any other dialect and Middle English literature was written in many dialects that corresponded to the region history culture and background of individual writers 3 In this period religious literature continued to enjoy popularity and Hagiographies were written adapted and translated for example The Life of Saint Audrey Eadmer s c 1060 c 1126 28 At the end of the 12th century Layamon in Brut adapted the Norman French of Wace to produce the first English language work to present the legends of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table 29 It was also the first historiography written in English since the Anglo Saxon Chronicle nbsp Piers Ploughman from a 14th century manuscriptMiddle English Bible translations notably Wycliffe s Bible helped to establish English as a literary language Wycliffe s Bible is the name now given to a group of Bible translations into Middle English that were made under the direction of or at the instigation of John Wycliffe They appeared between about 1382 and 1395 30 These Bible translations were the chief inspiration and cause of the Lollard movement a pre Reformation movement that rejected many of the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church Another literary genre that of Romances appears in English from the 13th century with King Horn and Havelock the Dane based on Anglo Norman originals such as the Romance of Horn c 1170 31 but it was in the 14th century that major writers in English first appeared These were William Langland Geoffrey Chaucer and the so called Pearl Poet whose most famous work is Sir Gawain and the Green Knight 32 Langland s Piers Plowman written c 1360 87 or Visio Willelmi de Petro Plowman William s Vision of Piers Plowman is a Middle English allegorical narrative poem written in unrhymed alliterative verse 33 Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is a late 14th century Middle English alliterative romance It is one of the better known Arthurian stories of an established type known as the beheading game Developing from Welsh Irish and English tradition Sir Gawain highlights the importance of honour and chivalry Preserved in the same manuscript with Sir Gawayne were three other poems now generally accepted as the work of the same author including an intricate elegiac poem Pearl 34 The English dialect of these poems from the Midlands is markedly different from that of the London based Chaucer and though influenced by French in the scenes at court in Sir Gawain there are in the poems also many dialect words often of Scandinavian origin that belonged to northwest England 34 nbsp Geoffrey ChaucerMiddle English lasted until the 1470s when the Chancery Standard a London based form of English became widespread and the printing press started to standardise the language Chaucer is best known today for The Canterbury Tales This is a collection of stories written in Middle English mostly in verse although some are in prose that are presented as part of a story telling contest by a group of pilgrims as they travel together from Southwark to the shrine of St Thomas Becket at Canterbury Cathedral Chaucer is a significant figure in the development of the legitimacy of the vernacular Middle English at a time when the dominant literary languages in England were still French and Latin At this time literature in England was being written in various languages including Latin Norman French and English the multilingual nature of the audience for literature in the 14th century is illustrated by the example of John Gower c 1330 1408 A contemporary of William Langland and a personal friend of Chaucer Gower is remembered primarily for three major works the Mirroir de l Omme Vox Clamantis and Confessio Amantis three long poems written in Anglo Norman Latin and Middle English respectively which are united by common moral and political themes 35 Significant religious works were also created in the 14th century including those of Julian of Norwich c 1342 c 1416 and Richard Rolle Julian s Revelations of Divine Love about 1393 is believed to be the first published book written by a woman in the English language 36 A major work from the 15th century is Le Morte d Arthur by Sir Thomas Malory which was printed by Caxton in 1485 37 This is a compilation of some French and English Arthurian romances and was among the earliest books printed in England It was popular and influential in the later revival of interest in the Arthurian legends 38 Medieval theatre Edit Main article Medieval theatre In the Middle Ages drama in the vernacular languages of Europe may have emerged from enactments of the liturgy Mystery plays were presented in the porches of cathedrals or by strolling players on feast days Miracle and mystery plays along with morality plays or interludes later evolved into more elaborate forms of drama such as was seen on the Elizabethan stages Another form of medieval theatre was the mummers plays a form of early street theatre associated with the Morris dance concentrating on themes such as Saint George and the Dragon and Robin Hood These were folk tales re telling old stories and the actors travelled from town to town performing these for their audiences in return for money and hospitality 39 Mystery plays and miracle plays are among the earliest formally developed plays in medieval Europe Medieval mystery plays focused on the representation of Bible stories in churches as tableaux with accompanying antiphonal song They developed from the 10th to the 16th century reaching the height of their popularity in the 15th century before being rendered obsolete by the rise of professional theatre 40 nbsp 19th century engraving of a performance from the Chester mystery play cycle There are four complete or nearly complete extant English biblical collections of plays from the late medieval period The most complete is the York cycle of 48 pageants They were performed in the city of York from the middle of the 14th century until 1569 41 Besides the Middle English drama there are three surviving plays in Cornish known as the Ordinalia 42 43 Having grown out of the religiously based mystery plays of the Middle Ages the morality play is a genre of medieval and early Tudor theatrical entertainment which represented a shift towards a more secular base for European theatre 44 Morality plays are a type of allegory in which the protagonist is met by personifications of various moral attributes who try to prompt him to choose a godly life over one of evil The plays were most popular in Europe during the 15th and 16th centuries 45 The Somonyng of Everyman The Summoning of Everyman c 1509 1519 usually referred to simply as Everyman is a late 15th century English morality play Like John Bunyan s allegory Pilgrim s Progress 1678 Everyman examines the question of Christian salvation through the use of allegorical characters 46 English Renaissance 1500 1660 EditMain articles Early Modern English Early Modern Britain Elizabethan literature and English Renaissance theatre The English Renaissance as a part of the Northern Renaissance was a cultural and artistic movement in England dating from the late 15th to the 17th century 47 It is associated with the pan European Renaissance that is usually regarded as beginning in Italy in the late 14th century Like most of northern Europe England saw little of these developments until more than a century later Renaissance style and ideas were slow in penetrating England Many scholars see the beginnings of the English Renaissance during the reign of Henry VIII 48 and the Elizabethan era in the second half of the 16th century is usually regarded as the height of the English Renaissance 47 49 The influence of the Italian Renaissance can also be found in the poetry of Thomas Wyatt 1503 1542 one of the earliest English Renaissance poets He was responsible for many innovations in English poetry and alongside Henry Howard Earl of Surrey 1516 1517 1547 introduced the sonnet from Italy into England in the early 16th century 50 51 52 After William Caxton introduced the printing press in England in 1476 vernacular literature flourished 37 The Reformation inspired the production of vernacular liturgy which led to the Book of Common Prayer 1549 a lasting influence on literary language Elizabethan period 1558 1603 Edit See also Elizabethan literature English Renaissance theatre and Elizabethan theatre Poetry Edit Edmund Spenser c 1552 1599 was one of the most important poets of the Elizabethan period author of The Faerie Queene 1590 and 1596 an epic poem and fantastical allegory celebrating the Tudor dynasty and Elizabeth I Another major figure Sir Philip Sidney 1554 1586 was an English poet whose works include Astrophel and Stella The Defence of Poetry and The Countess of Pembroke s Arcadia Poems intended to be set to music as songs such as those by Thomas Campion 1567 1620 became popular as printed literature was disseminated more widely in households John Donne was another important figure in Elizabethan poetry see Jacobean poetry below Drama Edit Among the earliest Elizabethan plays are Gorboduc 1561 by Sackville and Norton and Thomas Kyd s 1558 1594 The Spanish Tragedy 1592 Gorboduc is notable especially as the first verse drama in English to employ blank verse and for the way it developed elements from the earlier morality plays and Senecan tragedy in the direction which would be followed by later playwrights 53 The Spanish Tragedy 54 is an Elizabethan tragedy written by Thomas Kyd between 1582 and 1592 which was popular and influential in its time and established a new genre in English literature theatre the revenge play 55 nbsp William ShakespeareWilliam Shakespeare 1564 1616 stands out in this period as a poet and playwright as yet unsurpassed Shakespeare wrote plays in a variety of genres including histories such as Richard III and Henry IV tragedies such as Hamlet Othello and Macbeth comedies such as Midsummer Night s Dream As You Like It and Twelfth Night and the late romances or tragicomedies Shakespeare s career continues in the Jacobean period Other important figures in Elizabethan theatre include Christopher Marlowe and Ben Jonson Thomas Dekker John Fletcher and Francis Beaumont Jacobean period 1603 1625 Edit Drama Edit In the early 17th century Shakespeare wrote the so called problem plays as well as a number of his best known tragedies including Macbeth and King Lear 56 In his final period Shakespeare turned to romance or tragicomedy and completed three more major plays including The Tempest Less bleak than the tragedies these four plays are graver in tone than the comedies of the 1590s but they end with reconciliation and the forgiveness of potentially tragic errors 57 After Shakespeare s death the poet and dramatist Ben Jonson 1572 1637 was the leading literary figure of the Jacobean era Jonson s aesthetics hark back to the Middle Ages and his characters embody the theory of humours which was based on contemporary medical theory 58 Jonson s comedies include Volpone 1605 or 1606 and Bartholomew Fair 1614 Others who followed Jonson s style include Beaumont and Fletcher who wrote the popular comedy The Knight of the Burning Pestle probably 1607 08 a satire of the rising middle class 59 Another popular style of theatre during Jacobean times was the revenge play which was popularized in the Elizabethan era by Thomas Kyd 1558 1594 and then further developed later by John Webster 1578 1632 The White Devil 1612 and The Duchess of Malfi 1613 Other revenge tragedies include The Changeling written by Thomas Middleton and William Rowley 60 Poetry Edit George Chapman c 1559 c 1634 is remembered chiefly for his famous translation in 1616 of Homer s Iliad and Odyssey into English verse 61 This was the first ever complete translations of either poem into the English language The translation had a profound influence on English literature and inspired John Keats s famous sonnet On First Looking into Chapman s Homer 1816 Shakespeare popularized the English sonnet which made significant changes to Petrarch s model A collection of 154 by sonnets dealing with themes such as the passage of time love beauty and mortality were first published in a 1609 quarto Besides Shakespeare and Ben Jonson the major poets of the early 17th century included the Metaphysical poets John Donne 1572 1631 George Herbert 1593 1633 Henry Vaughan Andrew Marvell and Richard Crashaw 62 Their style was characterized by wit and metaphysical conceits that is far fetched or unusual similes or metaphors 63 Prose Edit The most important prose work of the early 17th century was the King James Bible This one of the most massive translation projects in the history of English up to this time was started in 1604 and completed in 1611 This represents the culmination of a tradition of Bible translation into English that began with the work of William Tyndale and it became the standard Bible of the Church of England 64 Late Renaissance 1625 1660 Edit Poetry Edit The Metaphysical poets John Donne 1572 1631 and George Herbert 1593 1633 were still alive after 1625 and later in the 17th century a second generation of metaphysical poets were writing including Richard Crashaw 1613 1649 Andrew Marvell 1621 1678 Thomas Traherne 1636 or 1637 1674 and Henry Vaughan 1622 1695 The Cavalier poets were another important group of 17th century poets who came from the classes that supported King Charles I during the English Civil War 1642 51 King Charles reigned from 1625 and was executed in 1649 The best known of the Cavalier poets are Robert Herrick Richard Lovelace Thomas Carew and Sir John Suckling They were not a formal group but all were influenced by Ben Jonson Most of the Cavalier poets were courtiers with notable exceptions For example Robert Herrick was not a courtier but his style marks him as a Cavalier poet Cavalier works make use of allegory and classical allusions and are influenced by Roman authors Horace Cicero and Ovid John Milton 1608 1674 was the last great poet of the English Renaissance 65 and published a number of works before 1660 including L Allegro 1631 Il Penseroso 1634 Comus a masque 1638 and Lycidas 1638 However his major epic works including Paradise Lost 1667 were published in the Restoration period Restoration Age 1660 1700 EditMain articles Restoration literature and Restoration Comedy This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Restoration literature includes both Paradise Lost and the Earl of Rochester s Sodom the sexual comedy of The Country Wife and the moral wisdom of Pilgrim s Progress It saw Locke s Two Treatises on Government the founding of the Royal Society the experiments and the holy meditations of Robert Boyle the hysterical attacks on theatres from Jeremy Collier the pioneering of literary criticism from Dryden and the first newspapers The official break in literary culture caused by censorship and radically moralist standards under Cromwell s Puritan regime created a gap in literary tradition allowing a seemingly fresh start for all forms of literature after the Restoration During the Interregnum the royalist forces attached to the court of Charles I went into exile with the twenty year old Charles II The nobility who travelled with Charles II were therefore lodged for over a decade in the midst of the continent s literary scene Poetry Edit nbsp John Milton religious epic poem Paradise Lost published in 1667 John Milton one of the greatest English poets wrote at this time of religious flux and political upheaval Milton is best known for his epic poem Paradise Lost 1667 Among other important poems include L Allegro 1631 Il Penseroso 1634 Comus a masque 1638 and Lycidas Milton s poetry and prose reflect deep personal convictions a passion for freedom and self determination and the urgent issues and political turbulence of his day His celebrated Areopagitica written in condemnation of pre publication censorship is among history s most influential and impassioned defenses of free speech and freedom of the press 66 The largest and most important poetic form of the era was satire In general publication of satire was done anonymously as there were great dangers in being associated with a satire John Dryden 1631 1700 was an influential English poet literary critic translator and playwright who dominated the literary life of Restoration England to such a point that the period came to be known in literary circles as the Age of Dryden He established the heroic couplet as a standard form of English poetry Dryden s greatest achievements were in satiric verse in works like the mock heroic MacFlecknoe 1682 67 Alexander Pope 1688 1744 was heavily influenced by Dryden and often borrowed from him other writers in the 18th century were equally influenced by both Dryden and Pope Prose Edit Prose in the Restoration period is dominated by Christian religious writing but the Restoration also saw the beginnings of two genres that would dominate later periods fiction and journalism Religious writing often strayed into political and economic writing just as political and economic writing implied or directly addressed religion The Restoration was also the time when John Locke wrote many of his philosophical works His two Treatises on Government which later inspired the thinkers in the American Revolution The Restoration moderated most of the more strident sectarian writing but radicalism persisted after the Restoration Puritan authors such as John Milton were forced to retire from public life or adapt and those authors who had preached against monarchy and who had participated directly in the regicide of Charles I were partially suppressed Consequently violent writings were forced underground and many of those who had served in the Interregnum attenuated their positions in the Restoration John Bunyan stands out beyond other religious authors of the period Bunyan s The Pilgrim s Progress is an allegory of personal salvation and a guide to the Christian life nbsp John Bunyan s The Pilgrim s Progress 1678 During the Restoration period the most common manner of getting news would have been a broadsheet publication A single large sheet of paper might have a written usually partisan account of an event It is impossible to satisfactorily date the beginning of the novel in English However long fiction and fictional biographies began to distinguish themselves from other forms in England during the Restoration period An existing tradition of Romance fiction in France and Spain was popular in England One of the most significant figures in the rise of the novel in the Restoration period is Aphra Behn author of Oroonoko 1688 who was not only the first professional female novelist but she may be among the first professional novelists of either sex in England Drama Edit As soon as the previous Puritan regime s ban on public stage representations was lifted drama recreated itself quickly and abundantly 68 The most famous plays of the early Restoration period are the unsentimental or hard comedies of John Dryden William Wycherley and George Etherege which reflect the atmosphere at Court and celebrate an aristocratic macho lifestyle of unremitting sexual intrigue and conquest After a sharp drop in both quality and quantity in the 1680s the mid 1690s saw a brief second flowering of the drama especially comedy Comedies like William Congreve s The Way of the World 1700 and John Vanbrugh s The Relapse 1696 and The Provoked Wife 1697 were softer and more middle class in ethos very different from the aristocratic extravaganza twenty years earlier and aimed at a wider audience 18th century EditAugustan literature 1700 1745 Edit Main articles 18th century literature and Augustan literature This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message During the 18th century literature reflected the worldview of the Age of Enlightenment or Age of Reason a rational and scientific approach to religious social political and economic issues that promoted a secular view of the world and a general sense of progress and perfectibility Led by the philosophers who were inspired by the discoveries of the previous century by people like Isaac Newton and the writings of Descartes John Locke and Francis Bacon They sought to discover and to act upon universally valid principles governing humanity nature and society They variously attacked spiritual and scientific authority dogmatism intolerance censorship and economic and social restraints They considered the state the proper and rational instrument of progress The extreme rationalism and skepticism of the age led naturally to deism and also played a part in bringing the later reaction of romanticism The Encyclopedie of Denis Diderot epitomized the spirit of the age The term Augustan literature derives from authors of the 1720s and 1730s themselves who responded to a term that George I of Great Britain preferred for himself While George I meant the title to reflect his might they instead saw in it a reflection of Ancient Rome s transition from rough and ready literature to highly political and highly polished literature It is an age of exuberance and scandal of enormous energy and inventiveness and outrage that reflected an era when English Welsh Scottish and Irish people found themselves in the midst of an expanding economy lowering barriers to education and the beginnings of the Industrial Revolution Poetry Edit It was during this time that poet James Thomson 1700 1748 produced his melancholy The Seasons 1728 30 and Edward Young 1681 1765 wrote his poem Night Thoughts 1742 though the most outstanding poet of the age is Alexander Pope 1688 1744 It is also the era that saw a serious competition over the proper model for the pastoral In criticism poets struggled with a doctrine of decorum of matching proper words with proper sense and of achieving a diction that matched the gravity of a subject At the same time the mock heroic was at its zenith and Pope s Rape of the Lock 1712 17 and The Dunciad 1728 43 are still considered to be the greatest mock heroic poems ever written 69 Pope also translated the Iliad 1715 20 and the Odyssey 1725 26 Since his death Pope has been in a constant state of re evaluation 70 Drama Edit Drama in the early part of the period featured the last plays of John Vanbrugh and William Congreve both of whom carried on the Restoration comedy with some alterations However the majority of stagings were of lower farces and much more serious and domestic tragedies George Lillo and Richard Steele both produced highly moral forms of tragedy where the characters and the concerns of the characters were wholly middle class or working class This reflected a marked change in the audience for plays as royal patronage was no longer the important part of theatrical success Additionally Colley Cibber and John Rich began to battle each other for greater and greater spectacles to present on stage The figure of Harlequin was introduced and pantomime theatre began to be staged This low comedy was quite popular and the plays became tertiary to the staging Opera also began to be popular in London and there was significant literary resistance to this Italian incursion In 1728 John Gay returned to the playhouse with The Beggar s Opera The Licensing Act 1737 brought an abrupt halt to much of the period s drama as the theatres were once again brought under state control Prose including the novel Edit In prose the earlier part of the period was overshadowed by the development of the English essay Joseph Addison and Richard Steele s The Spectator established the form of the British periodical essay However this was also the time when the English novel was first emerging Daniel Defoe turned from journalism and writing criminal lives for the press to writing fictional criminal lives with Roxana and Moll Flanders He also wrote Robinson Crusoe 1719 nbsp Jonathan SwiftIf Addison and Steele were dominant in one type of prose then Jonathan Swift author of the satire Gulliver s Travels was in another In A Modest Proposal and the Drapier Letters Swift reluctantly defended the Irish people from the predations of colonialism This provoked riots and arrests but Swift who had no love of Irish Roman Catholics was outraged by the abuses he saw An effect of the Licensing Act of 1737 was to cause more than one aspiring playwright to switch over to writing novels Henry Fielding 1707 1754 began to write prose satire and novels after his plays could not pass the censors In the interim Samuel Richardson 1689 1761 had produced Pamela or Virtue Rewarded 1740 and Henry Fielding attacked what he saw as the absurdity of this novel in Joseph Andrews 1742 and Shamela Subsequently Fielding satirised Richardson s Clarissa 1748 with Tom Jones 1749 Tobias Smollett 1721 1771 elevated the picaresque novel with works such as Roderick Random 1748 and Peregrine Pickle 1751 Age of Sensibility 1745 1798 Edit nbsp Samuel JohnsonMain article Sentimental novel This period is known as the Age of Sensibility but it is also sometimes described as the Age of Johnson 71 Samuel Johnson 1709 1784 often referred to as Dr Johnson was an English author who made lasting contributions to English literature as a poet essayist moralist literary critic biographer editor and lexicographer Johnson has been described as arguably the most distinguished man of letters in English history 72 After nine years of work Johnson s A Dictionary of the English Language was published in 1755 and it had a far reaching effect on Modern English and has been described as one of the greatest single achievements of scholarship 73 The second half of the 18th century saw the emergence of three major Irish authors Oliver Goldsmith 1728 1774 Richard Brinsley Sheridan 1751 1816 and Laurence Sterne 1713 1768 Goldsmith is the author of The Vicar of Wakefield 1766 a pastoral poem The Deserted Village 1770 and two plays The Good Natur d Man 1768 and She Stoops to Conquer 1773 Sheridan s first play The Rivals 1775 was performed at Covent Garden and was an instant success He went on to become the most significant London playwright of the late 18th century with a play like The School for Scandal Both Goldsmith and Sheridan reacted against the sentimental comedy of the 18th century theatre writing plays closer to the style of Restoration comedy 74 Sterne published his famous novel Tristram Shandy in parts between 1759 and 1767 75 In 1778 Frances Burney 1752 1840 wrote Evelina one of the first novels of manners 76 Fanny Burney s novels were enjoyed and admired by Jane Austen 77 Precursors of Romanticism Edit The Romantic movement in English literature of the early 19th century has its roots in 18th century poetry the Gothic novel and the novel of sensibility 78 79 This includes the graveyard poets from the 1740s and later whose works are characterised by gloomy meditations on mortality To this was added by later practitioners a feeling for the sublime and uncanny and an interest in ancient English poetic forms and folk poetry 80 The poets include Thomas Gray 1716 1771 Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard 1751 in 81 and Edward Young 1683 1765 The Complaint or Night Thoughts on Life Death and Immortality 1742 45 82 Other precursors are James Thomson 1700 1748 and James Macpherson 1736 1796 79 James Macpherson was the first Scottish poet to gain an international reputation with his claim to have found poetry written by the ancient bard Ossian 83 The sentimental novel or novel of sensibility is a genre which developed during the second half of the 18th century It celebrates the emotional and intellectual concepts of sentiment sentimentalism and sensibility Sentimentalism which is to be distinguished from sensibility was a fashion in both poetry and prose fiction which began in the 18th century in reaction to the rationalism of the Augustan Age 84 Among the most famous sentimental novels in English are Samuel Richardson s Pamela or Virtue Rewarded 1740 Oliver Goldsmith s Vicar of Wakefield 1766 Laurence Sterne s Tristram Shandy 1759 67 and Henry Mackenzie s The Man of Feeling 1771 85 Significant foreign influences were the Germans Goethe Schiller and August Wilhelm Schlegel and French philosopher and writer Jean Jacques Rousseau 1712 1778 86 Edmund Burke s A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful 1757 is another important influence 87 The changing landscape brought about by the industrial and agricultural revolutions was another influence on the growth of the Romantic movement in Britain In the late 18th century Horace Walpole s 1764 novel The Castle of Otranto created the Gothic fiction genre that combines elements of horror and romance 88 Ann Radcliffe introduced the brooding figure of the gothic villain which developed into the Byronic hero Her The Mysteries of Udolpho 1795 is frequently cited as the archetypal Gothic novel 89 Rise of American Literature Edit The successful War of Independence led by colonists in British North America from 1775 to 1783 resulted in the formation of the United States This consequently led to the divergence of English letters in what became the United States from the mainstream of English literature resulting in the development of a new American literature that sought to distinguish itself as part of the formation of a new American social and cultural identity This was the first English language literature to develop outside of the British Isles The late colonial period already saw the publication of important prose tracts reflecting the political debates that culminated in the American revolution written by important luminaries such as Samuel Adams Josiah Quincy John Dickinson and Joseph Galloway the last being a loyalist to the crown Two key figures were Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Paine Franklin s Poor Richard s Almanack and The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin are esteemed works with their wit and influence toward the formation of a budding American identity Paine s pamphlet Common Sense and The American Crisis writings are seen as playing a key role in influencing the political tone of the time During the Revolutionary War poems and songs such as Nathan Hale were popular Major satirists included John Trumbull and Francis Hopkinson Philip Morin Freneau also wrote poems about the War In the post war period Thomas Jefferson established his place in American literature through his authorship of the Declaration of Independence his influence on the U S Constitution his autobiography his Notes on the State of Virginia and his many letters The Federalist essays by Alexander Hamilton James Madison and John Jay presented a significant historical discussion of American government organization and republican values Fisher Ames James Otis and Patrick Henry are also valued for their political writings and orations Early American literature struggled to find a unique voice in existing literary genre and this tendency was reflected in novels European styles were frequently imitated but critics usually considered the imitations inferior In the late 18th and early 19th centuries the first American novels were published These fictions were too lengthy to be printed for public reading Publishers took a chance on these works in hopes they would become steady sellers and need to be reprinted This scheme was ultimately successful because male and female literacy rates were increasing at the time Among the first American novels are Thomas Attwood Digges s Adventures of Alonso published in London in 1775 and William Hill Brown s The Power of Sympathy published in 1789 Brown s novel depicts a tragic love story between siblings who fell in love without knowing they were related Also of note were important women writers such as Susanna Rowson who wrote Charlotte A Tale of Truth later re issued as Charlotte Temple Charlotte Temple is a seduction tale influenced by the novels of English writer Samuel Richardson written in the third person which warns against listening to the voice of love and counsels resistance She also wrote nine novels six theatrical works two collections of poetry six textbooks and countless songs 90 Reaching more than a million and a half readers over a century and a half Charlotte Temple was the biggest seller of the 19th century before Stowe s Uncle Tom s Cabin Another important writer was Hannah Webster Forster who wrote the popular The Coquette Or the History of Eliza Wharton published in 1797 91 The story about a woman who is seduced and later abandoned The Coquette has been praised for its demonstration of the era s contradictory ideas of womanhood 92 even as it has been criticized for delegitimizing protest against women s subordination 93 Other important early American writers include Charles Brockden Brown William Gilmore Simms Lydia Maria Child and John Neal Romanticism 1798 1837 EditMain articles Romanticism Romantic literature in English and Romanticism in Scotland Romanticism was an artistic literary and intellectual movement that originated in Europe toward the end of the 18th century 94 Romanticism arrived later in other parts of the English speaking world nbsp William BlakeThe Romantic period was one of major social change in England and Wales because of the depopulation of the countryside and the rapid development of overcrowded industrial cities that took place in the period roughly between 1750 and 1850 The movement of so many people in England was the result of two forces the Agricultural Revolution that involved the Enclosure of the land drove workers off the land and the Industrial Revolution which provided them employment 95 Romanticism may be seen in part as a reaction to the Industrial Revolution 96 though it was also a revolt against aristocratic social and political norms of the Age of Enlightenment as well a reaction against the scientific rationalization of nature 97 The French Revolution was an especially important influence on the political thinking of many of the Romantic poets 98 The landscape is often prominent in the poetry of this period so much so that the Romantics especially perhaps Wordsworth are often described as nature poets However the longer Romantic nature poems have a wider concern because they are usually meditations on an emotional problem or personal crisis 99 Romantic poetry Edit Robert Burns 1759 1796 was a pioneer of the Romantic movement and after his death he became a cultural icon in Scotland The poet painter and printmaker William Blake 1757 1827 was another of the early Romantic poets Though Blake was generally unrecognised during his lifetime he is now considered a seminal figure in the history of both the poetry and visual arts of the Romantic Age Among his most important works are Songs of Innocence 1789 and Songs of Experience 1794 and profound and difficult prophecies such as Jerusalem the Emanation of the Giant Albion 1804 c 1820 100 After Blake among the earliest Romantics were the Lake Poets including William Wordsworth 1770 1850 Samuel Taylor Coleridge 1772 1834 Robert Southey 1774 1843 and journalist Thomas de Quincey 1785 1859 However at the time Walter Scott 1771 1832 was the most famous poet 101 In 1784 with Elegiac Sonnets Charlotte Smith 1749 1806 reintroduced the sonnet to English literature citation needed The early Romantic Poets brought a new emotionalism and introspection and their emergence is marked by the first romantic manifesto in English literature the Preface to Lyrical Ballads 1798 The poems in Lyrical Ballads were mostly by Wordsworth though Coleridge contributed Rime of the Ancient Mariner 102 Among Wordsworth s most important poems are Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey Resolution and Independence Ode Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood and the autobiographical epic The Prelude 103 Robert Southey 1774 1843 was another of the so called Lake Poets and Poet Laureate for 30 years although his fame has been long eclipsed by William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge Thomas De Quincey 1785 1859 is best known for his Confessions of an English Opium Eater 1821 104 Essayist William Hazlitt 1778 1830 friend of both Coleridge and Wordsworth is best known today for his literary criticism especially Characters of Shakespeare s Plays 1817 18 105 Second generation Edit nbsp Lord ByronThe second generation of Romantic poets includes Lord Byron 1788 1824 Percy Bysshe Shelley 1792 1822 Felicia Hemans 1793 1835 and John Keats 1795 1821 Byron however was still influenced by 18th century satirists and was perhaps the least romantic of the three preferring the brilliant wit of Pope to what he called the wrong poetical system of his Romantic contemporaries 106 Byron achieved enormous fame and influence throughout Europe and Goethe called Byron undoubtedly the greatest genius of our century 107 Shelley is perhaps best known for Ode to the West Wind To a Skylark and Adonais an elegy written on the death of Keats His close circle of admirers included the most progressive thinkers of the day A work like Queen Mab 1813 reveals Shelley as the direct heir to the French and British revolutionary intellectuals of the 1790s 108 Shelley became an idol of the next three or four generations of poets including important Victorian and Pre Raphaelite poets such as Robert Browning and Dante Gabriel Rossetti as well as later W B Yeats 109 Though John Keats shared Byron and Shelley s radical politics his best poetry is not political 110 but is especially noted for its sensuous music and imagery along with a concern with material beauty and the transience of life 111 Among his most famous works are Ode to a Nightingale Ode on a Grecian Urn and To Autumn Keats has always been regarded as a major Romantic and his stature as a poet has grown steadily through all changes of fashion 112 Although sticking to its forms Felicia Hemans began a process of undermining the Romantic tradition a deconstruction that was continued by Letitia Elizabeth Landon as an urban poet deeply attentive to themes of decay and decomposition 113 Landon s novel forms of metrical romance and dramatic monologue were much copied and contributed to her long lasting influence on Victorian poetry 113 Other poets Edit Another important poet in this period was John Clare 1793 1864 the son of a farm labourer who came to be known for his celebratory representations of the English countryside and his lamentation for the changes taking place in rural England 114 His poetry has undergone a major re evaluation and he is often now considered to be among the most important 19th century poets 115 George Crabbe 1754 1832 was an English poet who during the Romantic period wrote closely observed realistic portraits of rural life in the heroic couplets of the Augustan age 116 Modern critic Frank Whitehead has said that Crabbe in his verse tales in particular is an important indeed a major poet whose work has been and still is seriously undervalued 117 Romantic novel Edit One of the most popular novelists of the era was Sir Walter Scott whose historical romances inspired a generation of painters composers and writers throughout Europe Scott s novel writing career was launched in 1814 with Waverley often called the first historical novel 10 nbsp The Last of the MohicansIllustration from 1896 edition by J T MerrillThe works of Jane Austen 1775 1817 critique the novels of sensibility of the second half of the 18th century and are part of the transition to 19th century realism 118 Her plots in novels such as Pride and Prejudice 1813 and Emma 1815 though fundamentally comic highlight the dependence of women on marriage to secure social standing and economic security 119 Mary Shelley 1797 1851 is remembered as the author of Frankenstein 1818 Romanticism in America Edit Main articles American literature and Romantic literature in English The European Romantic movement reached America in the early 19th century American Romanticism was just as multifaceted and individualistic as it was in Europe Like the Europeans the American Romantics demonstrated a high level of moral enthusiasm commitment to individualism and the unfolding of the self an emphasis on intuitive perception and the assumption that the natural world was inherently good while human society was corrupt 120 Romantic Gothic literature made an early appearance with Washington Irving s The Legend of Sleepy Hollow 1820 and Rip Van Winkle 1819 There are picturesque local color elements in Washington Irving s essays and especially his travel books From 1823 the prolific and popular novelist James Fenimore Cooper 1789 1851 began publishing his historical romances of frontier and Indian life However Edgar Allan Poe s tales of the macabre that first appeared in the early 1830s and his poetry were more influential in France than at home 121 122 Victorian literature 1837 1901 EditMain article Victorian literature Sage writing Edit Main article Sage writing nbsp Thomas Carlyle by Julia Margaret Cameron 1867During these years sage writing developed as a new literary genre in which the author sought to express notions about the world man s situation in it and how he should live 123 John Holloway identified Benjamin Disraeli 1804 1881 George Eliot 1819 1880 John Henry Newman 1801 1890 and Thomas Hardy 1840 1928 as writers of this type Foremost among them was Thomas Carlyle 1795 1881 a Scottish essayist historian and philosopher who became the undoubted head of English letters in the 19th century 124 125 Known as the Sage of Chelsea the highly prolific author criticized the Industrial Revolution 126 preached Hero worship 127 and rebuked political economy 128 in a series of works written in Carlylese the name given to his unique style 129 His influence on Victorian literature was nearly universal in 1855 Eliot wrote that there is hardly a superior or active mind of this generation that has not been modified by Carlyle s writings with the effect that if his books were all burnt as the grandest of Suttees on his funeral pile it would be only like cutting down an oak after its acorns have sown a forest 130 John Ruskin 1819 1900 was an Anglo Scottish art critic and philosopher who wrote in a similar vein regarding Carlyle as his master 131 The early part of his career was devoted to aesthetics championing Turner and the Pre Raphaelite Brotherhood 132 He later turned to ethics expounding his ideas on educational reform and political economy which were to have great influence on practices in England and throughout the world 133 134 Matthew Arnold 1822 1888 was an English poet and critic who is also regarded as a sage writer famous for his criticism of philistinism The Victorian novel Edit Main articles English novel and NovelIt was in the Victorian era 1837 1901 that the novel became the leading literary genre in English 135 Women played an important part in this rising popularity both as authors and as readers 136 and monthly serialising of fiction also encouraged this surge in popularity further upheavals which followed the Reform Act of 1832 137 This was in many ways a reaction to rapid industrialization and the social political and economic issues associated with it and was a means of commenting on abuses of government and industry and the suffering of the poor who were not profiting from England s economic prosperity 138 Significant early examples of this genre include Sybil or The Two Nations 1845 by Benjamin Disraeli and Charles Kingsley s Alton Locke 1849 nbsp Charles DickensCharles Dickens 1812 1870 emerged on the literary scene in the late 1830s and soon became probably the most famous novelist in the history of English literature Dickens fiercely satirised various aspects of society including the workhouse in Oliver Twist and the failures of the legal system in Bleak House 139 An early rival to Dickens was William Makepeace Thackeray 1811 1863 who during the Victorian period ranked second only to him but he is now known almost exclusively for Vanity Fair 1847 The Bronte sisters Emily Charlotte and Anne were other significant novelists in the 1840s and 1850s 140 Jane Eyre 1847 Charlotte Bronte s most famous work was the first of the sisters novels to achieve success Emily Bronte s 1818 1848 novel was Wuthering Heights and according to Juliet Gardiner the vivid sexual passion and power of its language and imagery impressed bewildered and appalled reviewers 141 and led the Victorian public and many early reviewers to think that it had been written by a man 142 The Tenant of Wildfell Hall 1848 by Anne Bronte is now considered to be one of the first feminist novels 143 Elizabeth Gaskell 1810 1865 was also a successful writer and her North and South contrasts the lifestyle in the industrial north of England with the wealthier south 144 Anthony Trollope s 1815 1882 was one of the most successful prolific and respected English novelists of the Victorian era Trollope s novels portray the lives of the landowning and professional classes of early Victorian England 145 George Eliot pen name of Mary Ann Evans was a major novelist of the mid Victorian period Her works especially Middlemarch 1871 72 are important examples of literary realism and are admired for their combination of high Victorian literary detail with an intellectual breadth that removes them from the narrow geographic confines they often depict 146 George Meredith 1828 1909 is best remembered for his novels The Ordeal of Richard Feverel 1859 and The Egoist 1879 His reputation stood very high well into the 20th century but then seriously declined 147 An interest in rural matters and the changing social and economic situation of the countryside is seen in the novels of Thomas Hardy 1840 1928 including The Mayor of Casterbridge 1886 and Tess of the d Urbervilles 1891 Hardy is a Victorian realist in the tradition of George Eliot 148 and like Charles Dickens he was also highly critical of much in Victorian society Another significant late 19th century novelist is George Gissing 1857 1903 who published 23 novels between 1880 and 1903 His best known novel is New Grub Street 1891 Although pre dated by John Ruskin s The King of the Golden River in 1841 the history of the modern fantasy genre is generally said to begin with George MacDonald 1824 1905 the influential author of The Princess and the Goblin and Phantastes 1858 149 William Morris 1834 1896 wrote a series of romances in the 1880s and 1890s which are regarded as the first works of high fantasy 150 Wilkie Collins epistolary novel The Moonstone 1868 is generally considered the first detective novel in the English language 151 Robert Louis Stevenson 1850 1894 was an important Scottish writer at the end of the nineteenth century author of Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1886 and the historical novel Kidnapped 1886 H G Wells s 1866 1946 writing career began in the 1890s with science fiction novels like The Time Machine 1895 and The War of the Worlds 1898 which describes an invasion of late Victorian England by Martians and Wells is seen along with Frenchman Jules Verne 1828 1905 as a major figure in the development of the science fiction genre He also wrote realistic fiction about the lower middle class in novels like Kipps 1905 American novel From Romanticism to realism Edit Main article American literature See also the discussion of American literature under Romanticism above By the mid 19th century the pre eminence of literature from the British Isles began to be challenged by writers from the former American colonies A major influence on American writers at this time was Romanticism which gave rise to New England Transcendentalism and the publication of Ralph Waldo Emerson s 1836 essay Nature is usually considered the watershed moment at which transcendentalism became a major cultural movement 120 152 Thomas Carlyle had a strong influence on Emerson transcendentalism 153 and American writers generally particularly his novel Sartor Resartus of which the impact upon American literature has been described as so vast so pervasive that it is difficult to overstate 154 nbsp Nathaniel Hawthorne The romantic American novel developed fully with Nathaniel Hawthorne s 1804 1864 The Scarlet Letter 1850 a stark drama of a woman cast out of her community for committing adultery Hawthorne s fiction had a profound impact on his friend Herman Melville 1819 1891 In Moby Dick 1851 an adventurous whaling voyage becomes the vehicle for examining such themes as obsession the nature of evil and human struggle against the elements By the 1880s however psychological and social realism were competing with Romanticism in the novel American realist fiction has its beginnings in the 1870s with the works of Mark Twain William Dean Howells and Henry James Mark Twain the pen name used by Samuel Langhorne Clemens 1835 1910 was the first major American writer to be born away from the East Coast in the border state of Missouri His regional masterpieces were the novels Adventures of Tom Sawyer 1876 and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn 1884 Twain s style changed the way Americans write their language His characters speak like real people and sound distinctively American using local dialects newly invented words and regional accents Henry James 1843 1916 was a major American novelist of the late 19th and early 20th centuries Although born in New York City he spent most of his adult years in England Many of his novels center on Americans who live in or travel to Europe James confronted the Old World New World dilemma by writing directly about it His works include The Portrait of a Lady The Bostonians 1886 The Princess Casamassima 1886 155 Genre fiction Edit nbsp Sir Arthur Conan Doyle wrote 56 short stories and four novels featuring Sherlock HolmesThe premier ghost story writer of the 19th century was Sheridan Le Fanu His works include the macabre mystery novel Uncle Silas 1865 and his Gothic novella Carmilla 1872 tells the story of a young woman s susceptibility to the attentions of a female vampire Bram Stoker s horror story Dracula 1897 belongs to a number of literary genres including vampire literature horror fiction gothic novel and invasion literature 156 Arthur Conan Doyle s Sherlock Holmes is a brilliant London based consulting detective famous for his intellectual prowess Conan Doyle wrote four novels and 56 short stories featuring Holmes which were published between 1887 and 1927 All but four Holmes stories are narrated by Holmes friend assistant and biographer Dr Watson The Lost World literary genre was inspired by real stories of archaeological discoveries by imperial adventurers H Rider Haggard wrote one of the earliest examples King Solomon s Mines in 1885 Contemporary European politics and diplomatic maneuverings informed Anthony Hope s Ruritanian adventure novel The Prisoner of Zenda 1894 Children s literature Edit Literature for children developed as a separate genre Some works become internationally known such as those of Lewis Carroll Alice s Adventures in Wonderland 1865 and its sequel Through the Looking Glass Robert Louis Stevenson s 1850 1894 Treasure Island 1883 is the classic pirate adventure At the end of the Victorian era and leading into the Edwardian era Beatrix Potter was an author and illustrator best known for her children s books which featured animal characters In her thirties Potter published the highly successful children s book The Tale of Peter Rabbit in 1902 Potter eventually went on to publish 23 children s books and became a wealthy woman Victorian poetry Edit See also English poetry Victorian poetry nbsp Alfred Lord Tennyson ca 1863The leading poets during the Victorian period were Alfred Lord Tennyson 1809 1892 Robert Browning 1812 1889 Elizabeth Barrett Browning 1806 61 and Matthew Arnold 1822 1888 The poetry of this period was heavily influenced by the Romantics but also went off in its own directions 157 Particularly notable was the development of the dramatic monologue a form used by many poets in this period but perfected by Robert Browning Literary criticism in the 20th century gradually drew attention to the links between Victorian poetry and modernism 158 Tennyson was Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom during much of Queen Victoria s reign He was described by T S Eliot as the greatest master of metrics as well as melancholia and as having the finest ear of any English poet since Milton 159 Matthew Arnold s reputation as a poet has within the past few decades plunged drastically 160 Dante Gabriel Rossetti 1828 1882 was a poet illustrator painter and translator He founded the Pre Raphaelite Brotherhood in 1848 with William Holman Hunt and John Everett Millais 161 Rossetti s art was characterised by its sensuality and its medieval revivalism 162 Arthur Clough 1819 1861 and George Meredith 1828 1909 are two other important minor poets of this era 147 163 Towards the end of the 19th century English poets began to take an interest in French Symbolism and Victorian poetry entered a decadent fin de siecle phase 164 Two groups of poets emerged in the 1890s the Yellow Book poets who adhered to the tenets of Aestheticism including Algernon Charles Swinburne Oscar Wilde and Arthur Symons and the Rhymers Club group that included Ernest Dowson Lionel Johnson and Irishman William Butler Yeats Yeats went on to become an important modernist in the 20th century 165 Also in 1896 A E Housman published at his own expense A Shropshire Lad 166 Writers of comic verse included the dramatist librettist poet and illustrator W S Gilbert 1836 1911 who is best known for his fourteen comic operas produced in collaboration with the composer Sir Arthur Sullivan of which the most famous include H M S Pinafore and The Pirates of Penzance 167 Novelist Thomas Hardy 1840 1928 wrote poetry throughout his career but he did not publish his first collection until 1898 so that he tends to be treated as a 20th century poet Now regarded as a major poet Gerard Manley Hopkins s 1844 1889 Poems were published posthumously by Robert Bridges in 1918 168 American poetry Edit Main article American poetry America also produced major poets in the 19th century such as Emily Dickinson 1830 1886 and Walt Whitman 1819 1892 America s two greatest 19th century poets could hardly have been more different in temperament and style Walt Whitman 1819 92 was a working man a traveler a self appointed nurse during the American Civil War 1861 65 and a poetic innovator His major work was Leaves of Grass in which he uses a free flowing verse and lines of irregular length to depict the all inclusiveness of American democracy Emily Dickinson 1830 1886 on the other hand lived the sheltered life of a genteel unmarried woman in small town Amherst Massachusetts Within its formal structure her poetry is ingenious witty exquisitely wrought and psychologically penetrating Her work was unconventional for its day and little of it was published during her lifetime Victorian drama Edit nbsp Gilbert and Sullivan s H M S PinaforeA change came in the Victorian era with a profusion on the London stage of farces musical burlesques extravaganzas and comic operas that competed with productions of Shakespeare s plays and serious drama by dramatists like James Planche and Thomas William Robertson In 1855 the German Reed Entertainments began a process of elevating the level of formerly risque musical theatre in Britain that culminated in the famous series of comic operas by Gilbert and Sullivan and was followed by the 1890s with the first Edwardian musical comedies The length of runs in the theatre changed rapidly during the Victorian period As transport improved poverty in London diminished and street lighting made for safer travel at night the number of potential patrons for the growing number of theatres increased enormously Plays could run longer and still draw in the audiences leading to better profits and improved production values The first play to achieve 500 consecutive performances was the London comedy Our Boys opening in 1875 Its record of 1 362 performances was bested in 1892 by Charley s Aunt 169 Several of Gilbert and Sullivan s comic operas broke the 500 performance barrier beginning with H M S Pinafore in 1878 and Alfred Cellier and B C Stephenson s 1886 hit Dorothy ran for 931 performances After W S Gilbert Oscar Wilde became the leading poet and dramatist of the late Victorian period Wilde s plays in particular stand apart from the many now forgotten plays of Victorian times and have a much closer relationship to those of the Edwardian dramatists such as Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw 1856 1950 whose career began in the last decade of the 19th century Wilde s 1895 comic masterpiece The Importance of Being Earnest holds an ironic mirror to the aristocracy and displays a mastery of wit and paradoxical wisdom 20th century EditMain articles Twentieth Century English literature American literature Scottish literature Irish literature and Welsh literature in English Modernism 1901 1939 Edit Main articles Literary modernism Modernist poetry and Modernist poetry in English nbsp Rudyard KiplingEnglish literary modernism developed in the early twentieth century out of a general sense of disillusionment with Victorian era attitudes of certainty conservatism and belief in the idea of objective truth 170 The movement was influenced by the ideas of Charles Darwin 1809 1882 Ernst Mach 1838 1916 Henri Bergson 1859 1941 Friedrich Nietzsche 1844 1900 James G Frazer 1854 1941 Karl Marx 1818 1883 Das Kapital 1867 and the psychoanalytic theories of Sigmund Freud 1856 1939 among others 171 The continental art movements of Impressionism and later Cubism were also important 172 Important literary precursors of modernism were Fyodor Dostoevsky 1821 1881 Walt Whitman 1819 1892 Charles Baudelaire 1821 1867 Rimbaud 1854 1891 August Strindberg 1849 1912 173 A major British lyric poet of the first decades of the twentieth century was Thomas Hardy 1840 1928 Though not a modernist Hardy was an important transitional figure between the Victorian era and the twentieth century A major novelist of the late nineteenth century Hardy lived well into the third decade of the twentieth century though he only published poetry in this period Another significant transitional figure between Victorians and modernists the late nineteenth century novelist Henry James 1843 1916 continued to publish major novels into the twentieth century including The Golden Bowl 1904 Polish born modernist novelist Joseph Conrad 1857 1924 published his first important works Heart of Darkness in 1899 and Lord Jim in 1900 However the Victorian Gerard Manley Hopkins s 1844 1889 highly original poetry was not published until 1918 long after his death while the career of another major modernist poet Irishman W B Yeats 1865 1939 began late in the Victorian era Yeats was one of the foremost figures of twentieth century English literature But while modernism was to become an important literary movement in the early decades of the new century there were also many fine writers who like Thomas Hardy were not modernists During the early decades of the twentieth century the Georgian poets like Rupert Brooke 1887 1915 and Walter de la Mare 1873 1956 maintained a conservative approach to poetry by combining romanticism sentimentality and hedonism Another Georgian poet Edward Thomas 1878 1917 174 is one of the First World War poets along with Wilfred Owen 1893 1918 Rupert Brooke 1887 1915 Isaac Rosenberg 1890 1917 and Siegfried Sassoon 1886 1967 Irish playwrights George Bernard Shaw 1856 1950 J M Synge 1871 1909 and Sean O Casey were influential in British drama Shaw s career began in the last decade of the nineteenth century while Synge s plays belong to the first decade of the twentieth century Synge s most famous play The Playboy of the Western World caused outrage and riots when it was first performed in Dublin in 1907 175 George Bernard Shaw turned the Edwardian theatre into an arena for debate about important political and social issues 176 Novelists who are not considered modernists include H G Wells 1866 1946 John Galsworthy 1867 1933 Nobel Prize in Literature 1932 whose works include The Forsyte Saga 1906 21 and E M Forster s 1879 1970 though Forster s work is frequently regarded as containing both modernist and Victorian elements 177 Forster s most famous work A Passage to India 1924 reflected challenges to imperialism while his earlier novels examined the restrictions and hypocrisy of Edwardian society in England The most popular British writer of the early years of the twentieth century was arguably Rudyard Kipling 1865 1936 a highly versatile writer of novels short stories and poems In addition to W B Yeats other important early modernist poets were the American born poet T S Eliot 1888 1965 Eliot became a British citizen in 1927 but was born and educated in America His most famous works are Prufrock 1915 The Waste Land 1922 and Four Quartets 1935 42 Amongst the novelists after Joseph Conrad other important early modernists include Dorothy Richardson 1873 1957 whose novel Pointed Roof 1915 is one of the earliest examples of the stream of consciousness technique and D H Lawrence 1885 1930 who published The Rainbow in 1915 though it was immediately seized by the police and Women in Love in 1920 178 Then in 1922 Irishman James Joyce s important modernist novel Ulysses appeared Ulysses has been called a demonstration and summation of the entire movement 179 nbsp James Joyce 1918Modernism 1923 1939 Edit The modernist movement continued through the 1920s 1930s and beyond nbsp Virginia Woolf 1927Important British writers between the World Wars include the Scottish poet Hugh MacDiarmid 1892 1978 who began publishing in the 1920s and novelist Virginia Woolf 1882 1941 who was an influential feminist and a major stylistic innovator associated with the stream of consciousness technique in novels like Mrs Dalloway 1925 and To the Lighthouse 1927 T S Eliot had begun this attempt to revive poetic drama with Sweeney Agonistes in 1932 and this was followed by others including three further plays after the war In Parenthesis a modernist epic poem based on author David Jones s 1895 1974 experience of World War I was published in 1937 An important development beginning in the 1930s and 1940s was a tradition of working class novels actually written by working class background writers Among these were coal miner Jack Jones James Hanley whose father was a stoker and who also went to sea as a young man and coal miners Lewis Jones from South Wales and Harold Heslop from County Durham 180 Aldous Huxley 1894 1963 published his famous dystopia Brave New World in 1932 the same year as John Cowper Powys s A Glastonbury Romance 181 Samuel Beckett 1906 1989 published his first major work the novel Murphy in 1938 This same year Graham Greene s 1904 1991 first major novel Brighton Rock was published Then in 1939 James Joyce s published Finnegans Wake in which he creates a special language to express the consciousness of a dreaming character 182 It was also in 1939 that another Irish modernist poet W B Yeats died British poet W H Auden 1907 1973 was another significant modernist in the 1930s Post modernism 1940 2000 Edit Though some have seen modernism ending by around 1939 183 with regard to English literature When if modernism petered out and postmodernism began has been contested almost as hotly as when the transition from Victorianism to modernism occurred 184 In fact a number of modernists were still living and publishing in the 1950s and 1960 including T S Eliot Dorothy Richardson and Ezra Pound Furthermore Basil Bunting born in 1901 published little until Briggflatts in 1965 and Samuel Beckett born in Ireland in 1906 continued to produce significant works until the 1980s though some view him as a post modernist 185 Among British writers in the 1940s and 1950s were poet Dylan Thomas and novelist Graham Greene whose works span the 1930s to the 1980s while Evelyn Waugh W H Auden continued publishing into the 1960s Postmodern literature is both a continuation of the experimentation championed by writers of the modernist period relying heavily for example on fragmentation paradox questionable narrators etc and a reaction against Enlightenment ideas implicit in Modernist literature Postmodern literature like postmodernism as a whole is difficult to define and there is little agreement on the exact characteristics scope and importance of postmodern literature Among postmodern writers are the Americans Henry Miller William S Burroughs Joseph Heller Kurt Vonnegut William Gaddis Hunter S Thompson Truman Capote and Thomas Pynchon The novel Edit nbsp nbsp George Orwell left and Aldous Huxley right In 1947 Malcolm Lowry published Under the Volcano while George Orwell s satire of totalitarianism Nineteen Eighty Four was published in 1949 Other novelists writing in the 1950s and later were Anthony Powell whose twelve volume cycle of novels A Dance to the Music of Time is a comic examination of movements and manners power and passivity in English political cultural and military life in the mid 20th century Nobel Prize laureate William Golding s allegorical novel Lord of the Flies 1954 explores how culture created by man fails using as an example a group of British schoolboys marooned on a deserted island Philosopher Iris Murdoch was a prolific writer of novels throughout the second half of the 20th century that deal especially with sexual relationships morality and the power of the unconscious Scottish writer Muriel Spark pushed the boundaries of realism in her novels The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie 1961 at times takes the reader briefly into the distant future to see the various fates that befall its characters Anthony Burgess is especially remembered for his dystopian novel A Clockwork Orange 1962 set in the not too distant future During the 1960s and 1970s Paul Scott wrote his monumental series on the last decade of British rule in India The Raj Quartet 1966 1975 Scotland has in the late 20th century produced several important novelists including the writer of How Late it Was How Late James Kelman who like Samuel Beckett can create humour out of the most grim situations and Alasdair Gray whose Lanark A Life in Four Books 1981 is a dystopian fantasy set in a surreal version of Glasgow called Unthank 186 Two significant Irish novelists are John Banville born 1945 and Colm Toibin born 1955 Martin Amis 1949 Pat Barker born 1943 Ian McEwan born 1948 and Julian Barnes born 1946 are other prominent late twentieth century British novelists Drama Edit An important cultural movement in the British theatre which developed in the late 1950s and early 1960s was Kitchen sink realism or kitchen sink drama a term coined to describe art novels film and television plays The term angry young men was often applied to members of this artistic movement It used a style of social realism which depicts the domestic lives of the working class to explore social issues and political issues The drawing room plays of the post war period typical of dramatists like Terence Rattigan and Noel Coward were challenged in the 1950s by these Angry Young Men in plays like John Osborne s Look Back in Anger 1956 Again in the 1950s the absurdist play Waiting for Godot 1955 by Irish writer Samuel Beckett profoundly affected British drama The Theatre of the Absurd influenced Harold Pinter born 1930 The Birthday Party 1958 whose works are often characterised by menace or claustrophobia Beckett also influenced Tom Stoppard born 1937 Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead 1966 Stoppard s works are however also notable for their high spirited wit and the great range of intellectual issues which he tackles in different plays An important new element in the world of British drama from the beginnings of radio in the 1920s was the commissioning of plays or the adaption of existing plays by BBC radio This was especially important in the 1950s and 1960s and from the 1960s for television Many major British playwrights in fact either effectively began their careers with the BBC or had works adapted for radio including Caryl Churchill and Tom Stoppard whose first professional production was in the fifteen minute Just Before Midnight programme on BBC Radio which showcased new dramatists 187 John Mortimer made his radio debut as a dramatist in 1955 with his adaptation of his own novel Like Men Betrayed for the BBC Light Programme Other notable radio dramatists included Brendan Behan and novelist Angela Carter Among the most famous works created for radio are Dylan Thomas s Under Milk Wood 1954 Samuel Beckett s All That Fall 1957 Harold Pinter s A Slight Ache 1959 and Robert Bolt s A Man for All Seasons 1954 188 Poetry Edit Major poets like T S Eliot W H Auden and Dylan Thomas were still publishing in this period Though W H Auden s 1907 1973 career began in the 1930s and 1940s he published several volumes in the 1950s and 1960s His stature in modern literature has been contested but probably the most common critical view from the 1930s onward ranked him as one of the three major twentieth century British poets and heir to Yeats and Eliot 189 New poets starting their careers in the 1950s and 1960s include Philip Larkin 1922 1985 The Whitsun Weddings 1964 Ted Hughes 1930 1998 The Hawk in the Rain 1957 Sylvia Plath 1932 1962 The Colossus 1960 and Irishman born Northern Ireland Seamus Heaney 1939 2013 Death of a Naturalist 1966 Northern Ireland has also produced a number of other significant poets including Derek Mahon and Paul Muldoon In the 1960s and 1970s Martian poetry aimed to break the grip of the familiar by describing ordinary things in unfamiliar ways as though for example through the eyes of a Martian Poets most closely associated with it are Craig Raine and Christopher Reid Another literary movement in this period was the British Poetry Revival was a wide reaching collection of groupings and subgroupings that embraces performance sound and concrete poetry 190 The Mersey Beat poets were Adrian Henri Brian Patten and Roger McGough Their work was a self conscious attempt at creating an English equivalent to the American Beats Other noteworthy later twentieth century poets are Welshman R S Thomas Geoffrey Hill Charles Tomlinson and Carol Ann Duffy Geoffrey Hill born 1932 is considered one of the most distinguished English poets of his generation 191 Charles Tomlinson born 1927 is another important English poet of an older generation though since his first publication in 1951 has built a career that has seen more notice in the international scene than in his native England 192 Literature from the Commonwealth of Nations Edit See also Postcolonial Australian Canadian Caribbean Indian New Zealand Pakistani African note 2 and Migrant literature nbsp Doris Lessing Cologne 2006 From 1950 on a significant number of major writers came from countries that had over the centuries been settled by the British other than America which had been producing significant writers from at least the Victorian period There had of course been a few important works in English prior to 1950 from the then British Empire The South African writer Olive Schreiner s famous novel The Story of an African Farm was published in 1883 and New Zealander Katherine Mansfield published her first collection of short stories In a German Pension in 1911 The first major novelist writing in English from the Indian sub continent R K Narayan began publishing in England in the 1930s thanks to the encouragement of English novelist Graham Greene 193 Caribbean writer Jean Rhys s writing career began as early as 1928 though her most famous work Wide Sargasso Sea was not published until 1966 South Africa s Alan Paton s famous Cry the Beloved Country dates from 1948 Doris Lessing from Southern Rhodesia now Zimbabwe was a dominant presence in the English literary scene frequently publishing from 1950 on throughout the 20th century and she won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2007 nbsp Sir Salman Rushdie at the 2016 Hay Festival the UK s largest annual literary festivalSalman Rushdie is another post Second World War writers from the former British colonies who permanently settled in Britain Rushdie achieved fame with Midnight s Children 1981 His most controversial novel The Satanic Verses 1989 was inspired in part by the life of Muhammad V S Naipaul born 1932 born in Trinidad was another immigrant who wrote among other things A Bend in the River 1979 Naipaul won the Nobel Prize in Literature 194 From Nigeria a number of writers have achieved an international reputation for works in English including novelist Chinua Achebe as well as playwright Wole Soyinka Soyinka won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1986 as did South African novelist Nadine Gordimer in 1995 Other South African writers in English are novelist J M Coetzee Nobel Prize 2003 and playwright Athol Fugard Kenya s most internationally renowned author is Ngũgĩ wa Thiong o who has written novels plays and short stories in English Poet Derek Walcott from St Lucia in the Caribbean was another Nobel Prize winner in 1992 An Australian Patrick White a major novelist in this period whose first work was published in 1939 won in 1973 Other noteworthy Australian writers at the end of this period are poet Les Murray 1938 2019 and novelist Peter Carey born 1943 who is one of only four writers to have won the Booker Prize twice 195 Major Canadian novelists include Carol Shields Lawrence Hill Margaret Atwood and Alice Munro Carol Shields novel The Stone Diaries won the 1995 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and another novel Larry s Party won the Orange Prize in 1998 Lawrence Hill s Book of Negroes won the 2008 Commonwealth Writers Prize Overall Best Book Award while Alice Munro became the first Canadian to win the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2013 196 Munro also received the Man Booker International Prize in 2009 Amongst internationally known poets are Leonard Cohen and Anne Carson Carson in 1996 won the Lannan Literary Award for poetry The foundation s awards in 2006 for poetry fiction and nonfiction each came with US 150 000 American writers Edit Main articles American literature American poetry and Theater of the United States From 1940 into the 21st century American playwrights poets and novelists have continued to be internationally prominent Genre fiction in the twentieth century Edit Main article Genre fiction Many works published in the twentieth century were examples of genre fiction This designation includes the crime novels spy novel historical romance fantasy graphic novel and science fiction nbsp J R R Tolkien 1940sAgatha Christie 1890 1976 was an important and hugely successful crime fiction writer who is best remembered for her 66 detective novels as well as her many short stories and successful plays for the West End theatre Along with Dorothy L Sayers 1893 1957 Ngaio Marsh 1895 1982 and Margery Allingham 1904 1966 Christie dominated the mystery novel in the 1920s and 1930s often called The Golden Age of Detective Fiction Together these four women writers were honored as The Queens of Crime 197 Other recent noteworthy writers in this genre are Ruth Rendell P D James and the Scot Ian Rankin Erskine Childers The Riddle of the Sands 1903 is an early example of spy fiction John Buchan 1875 1940 a Scottish diplomat and later the Governor General of Canada is sometimes considered the inventor of the thriller genre His five novels featuring the heroic Richard Hannay are among the earliest in the genre The first Hannay novel The Thirty Nine Steps was made into a famous thriller movie by Alfred Hitchcock Hannay was the prototype for the even more famous fictional character James Bond 007 created by Ian Fleming and the protagonist in a long line of films Another noted writer in the spy novel genre was John le Carre nbsp J K Rowling 2006The novelist Georgette Heyer created the historical romance genre Emma Orczy s original play The Scarlet Pimpernel 1905 a hero with a secret identity became a favourite of London audiences playing more than 2 000 performances and becoming one of the most popular shows staged in England to that date 198 Among significant writers in the fantasy genre were J R R Tolkien author of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings C S Lewis author of The Chronicles of Narnia and J K Rowling who wrote the highly successful Harry Potter series Lloyd Alexander winner of the Newbery Honor as well as the Newbery Medal for his The Chronicles of Prydain pentalogy is another significant author of fantasy novels for younger readers Like fantasy in the later decades of the 20th century the genre of science fiction began to be taken more seriously and this was because of the work of writers such as Arthur C Clarke 2001 A Space Odyssey and Michael Moorcock Another prominent writer in this genre Douglas Adams is particularly associated with the comic science fiction work The Hitchhiker s Guide to the Galaxy Mainstream novelists such Doris Lessing and Margaret Atwood also wrote works in this genre Known for his macabre darkly comic fantasy works for children Roald Dahl became one of the best selling authors of the 20th century and his best loved children s novels include Charlie and the Chocolate Factory Matilda James and the Giant Peach The Witches Fantastic Mr Fox and The BFG 199 Noted writers in the field of comic books are Neil Gaiman and Alan Moore while Gaiman also produces graphic novels Literary criticism in the twentieth century Edit Main article Literary Criticism Literary criticism gathered momentum in the twentieth century In this era prominent academic journals were established to address specific aspects of English literature Most of these academic journals gained widespread credibility because of being published by university presses The growth of universities thus contributed to a stronger connection between English literature and literary criticism in the twentieth century Nobel Prizes in English literature EditRudyard Kipling 1907 UK born in British India Rabindranath Tagore 1913 India W B Yeats 1923 Ireland George Bernard Shaw 1925 Ireland Sinclair Lewis 1930 US John Galsworthy 1932 UK Eugene O Neill 1936 US Pearl S Buck 1938 US T S Eliot 1948 UK born in the US William Faulkner 1949 US Bertrand Russell 1950 UK Winston Churchill 1953 UK Ernest Hemingway 1954 US John Steinbeck 1962 US Samuel Beckett 1969 Ireland lived in France much of his life Patrick White 1973 Australia Saul Bellow 1976 US born in Canada Isaac Bashevis Singer 1978 US born in Poland William Golding 1983 UK Wole Soyinka 1986 Nigeria Joseph Brodsky 1987 US born in Russia Nadine Gordimer 1991 South Africa Derek Walcott 1992 St Lucia West Indies Toni Morrison 1993 US Seamus Heaney 1995 Ireland V S Naipaul 2001 UK born in Trinidad J M Coetzee 2003 South Africa Harold Pinter 2005 UK Doris Lessing 2007 UK grew up in Zimbabwe Alice Munro 2013 Canada Bob Dylan 2016 US Kazuo Ishiguro 2017 UK born in Japan Louise Gluck 2020 US Abdulrazak Gurnah 2021 TanzaniaSee also EditBritish literature Theatre of the United Kingdom Literature of Birmingham English novel English poetry List of English language poets Irish literature Irish theatre Literature of Northern Ireland Literature in the other languages of Britain Scottish literature Theatre in Scotland Welsh literature in English Theatre of Wales Women s writing in English List of Commonwealth Writers prizesNotes Edit The Encyclopaedia Britannica defines English literature more narrowly as the body of written works produced in the English language by inhabitants of the British Isles including Ireland from the 7th century to the present day The major literatures written in English outside the British Isles are treated separately under American literature Australian literature Canadian literature and New Zealand literature However despite this it includes literature from the Republic of Ireland Anglo American modernism and discusses postcolonial literature 1 Archived 1 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine See also full articles on American literature and other literatures in the English language And see former British colonies Nigeria Kenya South African literature etcReferences Edit English Literature refers to the study of texts from around the world written in the English language International Student com 2 Archived 3 November 2022 at the Wayback Machine like so many other collective enterprises in our century has ceased to be principally about the identity of a single nation it is a global phenomenon Preface to The Norton Anthology of English Literature vol 1 8th edition 3 Archived 16 November 2022 at the Wayback Machine How the English Language has evolved through history childrensuniversity manchester ac uk Manchester University Archived from the original on 10 October 2017 Retrieved 15 December 2016 a b Baugh Albert and Cable Thomas 2002 The History of the English Language Upper Saddle River New Jersey Prentice Hall pp 79 81 And now at last it being brought unto such a conclusion as that we have great hope that the Church of England sic shall reape good fruit thereby Bible King James Version 1611 Epistle Dedicatorie Archived 31 January 2020 at the Wayback Machine How English evolved into a global language BBC News BBC 20 December 2010 Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Retrieved 9 August 2015 Greenblatt 2005 p 11 Bevington 2002 pp 1 3 Wells 1997 p 399 Craig 2003 p 3 a b The Oxford Companion to English Literature p 890 Ferguson 2004b Maddison 2001 p 97 The total population of the Empire was 412 million in 1913 Maddison 2001 pp 241 World population in 1913 in thousands 1 791 020 Drabble 1996 p 323 a b Angus Cameron 1983 Anglo Saxon literature in Dictionary of the Middle Ages vol 1 pp 274 88 a b c d Lotte Hedeager 2011 Knowledge Production Reconsidered Iron Age myth and materiality an archaeology of Scandinavia AD 400 1000 Abindon Oxfordshire New York Routledge pp 177 90 ISBN 978 0 415 60602 8 OCLC 666403125 Stanley Brian Greenfield A New Critical History of Old English Literature New York New York University Press Abels Richard 2005 Alfred the Great War Kingship and Culture in Anglo Saxon England Longman p 15 ISBN 0 582 04047 7 Drabble 1996 p 369 Magoun Francis P jr 1953 The Oral Formulaic Character of Anglo Saxon Narrative Poetry Speculum 28 3 446 67 doi 10 2307 2847021 JSTOR 2847021 S2CID 162903356 Fry Donald K jr 1968 The Beowulf Poet A Collection of Critical Essays Englewood Cliffs Prentice Hall pp 83 113 Robinson 2001 Like most Old English poems Beowulf has no title in the unique manuscript in which it survives British Library Cotton Vitellius A xv which was copied round the year 1000 AD but modern scholars agree in naming it after the hero whose life is its subject Tolkien 1958 p 127 Hieatt A Kent 1983 Beowulf and Other Old English Poems New York Bantam Books pp xi xiii Kiernan 1996 pp xix xx 3 4 23 34 60 62 90 162 171 258 257 277 78 footnote 69 a b Fulk amp Cain 2003 Drabble 1996 p 1052 Marsden Richard 2004 The Cambridge Old English Reader Cambridge Cambridge UP p 221 ISBN 978 0 521 45612 8 Walter John Sedgefield ed King Alfred s Old English Version of Boethius De consolatione philosophiae 1968 1899 Rubenstein JC 2004 Eadmer of Canterbury c 1060 c 1126 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8383 Retrieved 8 February 2011 Subscription or UK public library membership required Drabble 1996 p 44 Versions of the Bible Catholic Encyclopedia New advent archived from the original on 18 May 2013 retrieved 26 March 2013 Drabble 1996 p 852 Long William J 1909 English Literature Its History and Its Significance for the Life of the English Speaking World Public domain p 57 Long William J 1909 English Literature Its History and Its Significance for the Life of the English Speaking World Public domain p 82 a b Sir Gawayne and the Grene Knight Encyclopaedia Britannica online academic ed 24 March 2013 archived from the original on 30 May 2015 retrieved 21 June 2022 Gower John Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Colledge Edmund Walsh James 1978 Julian of Norwich ISBN 978 0 8091 2091 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b The Oxford Companion to English Literature 1996 p 182 Malory s Morte d Arthur Exhibition Guide University of Rochester Robbins Library Digital Projects Archived from the original on 21 August 2021 Retrieved 21 August 2021 Cuddon J A 1999 Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory London Penguin Books p 523 Gassner John Quinn Edward 1969 England middle ages The Reader s Encyclopedia of World Drama London Methuen pp 203 04 OCLC 249158675 A Glossary of Literary Terms M H Abrams Fort Worth Texas Harcourt Brace 1999 pp 165 66 Jenner Henry A Handbook of the Cornish Language Archived from the original on 26 August 2013 Retrieved 7 April 2013 via Project Gutenberg A brief history of the Cornish language Maga Cornish Language Partnership Archived from the original on 25 December 2008 Richardson and Johnston 1991 97 98 Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory p 523 The Norton Anthology of English Literature Vol 1 2000 p 445 and The Oxford Companion to English Literature 1996 p 775 a b Ward amp Waller 1907 1916 Vol 3 Renascence and Reformation English Renaissance Poetry Foundation online Archived from the original on 11 January 2021 Retrieved 9 January 2021 A Companion to English Renaissance Literature and Culture ed Michael Hattaway 2000 Tillyard 1929 Burrow 2004 Ward et al 1907 21 3 Gorboduc and Titus Andronicus James D Carroll Notes and Queries 2004 pp 51 267 69 The Spanish tragedy a play London J M Dent and co 1898 The Oxford Companion to English Literature ed Margaret Drabble Oxford Oxford University Press 1996 pp 832 935 Bradley 1991 85 Muir 2005 12 16 Dowden 1881 57 Ben Jonson Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Academic Edition Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2012 Web 20 September 2012 lt https www britannica com EBchecked topic 127459 Ben Jonson The Oxford Companion to English Literature 1996 p 546 Revenge Tragedy in A Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory ed JA Cuddon London Penguin Books 1999 pp 744 46 Chapman s Homer The Iliad Ed Allardyce Nicoll Bollingen Series 41 Princeton Princeton UP 1998 Chapman s Homer The Odyssey Ed Allardyce Nicoll Bollingen Series 41 Princeton Princeton UP 2000 Burrow Colin Metaphysical poets act c 1600 c 1690 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press archived from the original on 24 September 2015 retrieved 7 May 2012 Gardner Helen The Metaphysical Poets Penguin Books 1957 ISBN 0 14 042038 X Drabble 1996 pp 100 01 John Milton Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2013 Web 8 April 2013 lt https www britannica com EBchecked topic 383113 John Milton Archived 8 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine gt Sanders Karen 2003 Ethics amp Journalism Sage p 66 ISBN 978 0 7619 6967 9 Archived from the original on 26 March 2023 Retrieved 22 March 2023 John Dryden Major Works ed by Keith Walker Oxford Oxford University Press 1987 p 37 Hatch Mary Jo 2009 The Three Faces of Leadership Manager Artist Priest John Wiley amp Sons p 47 J A Cuddon A Dictionary of Literary Terms London Penguin 1999 p 514 Alexander Pope Poets org 25 January 2007 Archived from the original on 28 January 2014 Retrieved 6 January 2013 A Handbook to English Literature 7th edition ed Harmon amp Holman Upper Saddle River NJ Prentice Hall 1996 p 575 Rogers Pat 2006 Johnson Samuel 1709 1784 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 14918 Retrieved 25 August 2008 Subscription or UK public library membership required Bate 1977 p 240 The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature 1990 pp 564 698 906 The Oxford Companion to English Literature p 947 Fanny Burney Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved 21 August 2021 The Oxford Companion to English Literature ed Margaret Drabble Oxford Oxford University Press 1996 p 151 J A Cuddon A Dictionary of Literary Terms p 588 a b Pre Romanticism Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved 21 August 2021 William Harmon and C Hugh Holman A Handbook to Literature Upper Saddle River New Jersey Prentice Hall 1986 pp 452 53 502 The Oxford Companion to English Literature 1996 p 418 The Oxford Companion to English Literature p 1106 J Buchan Crowded with Genius London Harper Collins 2003 ISBN 0 06 055888 1 p 163 Richard Maxwell and Katie Trumpener eds The Cambridge Companion to Fiction in the Romantic Period 2008 J A Cuddon A Dictionary of Literary Terms 1999 p 809 J A Cuddon pp 588 89 The Oxford Companion to English Literature pp 957 58 The Castle of Otranto The creepy tale that launched gothic fiction Archived 3 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine BBC Retrieved 14 October 2017 Oxford Book of Gothic Tales Oxford Oxford University Press 2001 Parker Patricia L Charlotte Temple by Susanna Rowson The English Journal 65 1 1976 59 60 JSTOR Web 1 March 2010 Schweitzer Ivy Review Early American Literature 23 2 1988 221 225 JSTOR Web 1 March 2010 Hamilton Kristie An Assault on the Will Republican Virtue and the City in Hannah Webster Foster s The Coquette Early American Literature 24 2 1989 135 151 JSTOR Web 1 March 2010 Joudrey Thomas J 2013 Maintaining Stability Fancy and Passion in the Coquette The New England Quarterly 86 60 88 doi 10 1162 TNEQ a 00257 S2CID 57567236 Archived from the original on 5 February 2023 Retrieved 21 September 2017 The Norton Anthology of English Literature 7th edition vol 2 p 5 The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature p 21 Encyclopaedia Britannica Romanticism Retrieved 30 January 2008 from Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Britannica com Retrieved 2010 08 24 Christopher Casey 30 October 2008 Grecian Grandeurs and the Rude Wasting of Old Time Britain the Elgin Marbles and Post Revolutionary Hellenism Foundations Volume III Number 1 Retrieved 2009 06 25 The Norton Anthology of English Literature vol 2 2000 p 2 The Norton Anthology of English Literature vol 2 2000 p 9 William Blake Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Academic Edition Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2012 Web 2 October 2012 lt https www britannica com EBchecked topic 68793 William Blake Archived 3 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine gt The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature p 885 Samuel Taylor Coleridge Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Academic Edition Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2013 Web 13 May 2013 lt https www britannica com EBchecked topic 125261 Samuel Taylor Coleridge Archived 26 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine gt The Norton Anthology of English Literature vol 2 2000 p 11 Horace Ainsworth Eaton Thomas De Quincey A Biography New York Oxford University Press 1936 reprinted New York Octagon Books 1972 Grevel Lindop The Opium Eater A Life of Thomas De Quincey London J M Dent amp Sons 1981 The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature p 587 The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature p 379 Rupert Christiansen Romantic Affinities Portraits From an Age 1780 1830 London Bodley Head 1988 p 215 The Oxford Companion to English Literature 1996 p 905 4 Archived 5 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine viewed 12 May 2013 The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature p 248 John Keats Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Academic Edition Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2013 Web 12 May 2013 lt https www britannica com EBchecked topic 314020 John Keats Archived 26 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine gt The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature pp 649 50 The Oxford Companion to English Literature 1996 p 534 a b The Encyclopaedia of Romantic Literature edited by Frederick Burwick Nancy Goslee and Diane Hoeveler Geoffrey Summerfield in introduction to John Clare Selected Poems Penguin Books 1990 pp 13 22 ISBN 0 14 043724 X Sales Roger 2002 John Clare A Literary Life Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0 333 65270 3 The Oxford Companion to English Literature 1996 p 239 Frank Whitehead George Crabbe A Reappraisal Susquehanna University Press 1995 ISBN 0 945636 70 9 Litz pp 3 14 Grundy Jane Austen and Literary Traditions The Cambridge Companion to Jane Austen pp 192 93 Waldron Critical Responses Early Jane Austen in Context pp 83 89 90 Duffy Criticism 1814 1870 The Jane Austen Companion pp 93 94 A Walton Litz Jane Austen A Study of Her Development New York Oxford University Press 1965 p 142 Oliver MacDonagh Jane Austen Real and Imagined Worlds New Haven Yale University Press 1991 pp 66 75 Collins 160 61 a b George L McMichael and Frederick C Crews eds Anthology of American Literature Colonial through romantic 6th ed 1997 p 613 Harner Gary Wayne 1990 Edgar Allan Poe in France Baudelaire s Labor of Love In Fisher Benjamin Franklin IV Poe and His Times The Artist and His Milieu Baltimore The Edgar Allan Poe Society ISBN 978 0 9616449 2 5 Ann Woodlief American Romanticism or the American Renaissance Introduction Archived 22 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine Holloway John 1913 The Victorian Sage Studies in Argument London Macmillan amp Co Ltd p 1 Emerson Ralph Waldo 1881 The Literary Work of Thomas Carlyle Archived 8 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine Scribner s Monthly No 22 p 92 Mr Carlyle has yet for many years been accepted by competent critics of all shades of opinion as the undoubted head of English letters Stephen Leslie ed 1887 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 9 London Smith Elder amp Co p 124 Carlyle during these years had become the acknowledged head of English literature Carlyle Thomas 1843 Past and Present The Works of Thomas Carlyle in Thirty Volumes Vol 10 New York Charles Scribner s Sons published 1903 Carlyle Thomas 1841 On Heroes Hero Worship and the Heroic in History The Works of Thomas Carlyle in Thirty Volumes Vol 5 New York Charles Scribner s Sons published 1903 Carlyle Thomas 1904 Critical and Miscellaneous Essays Volume IV The Works of Thomas Carlyle in Thirty Volumes Vol 29 New York Charles Scribner s Sons Carlylese Merriam Webster com Dictionary Merriam Webster https www merriam webster com dictionary Carlylese George Eliot Thomas Carlyle George Eliot Archive accessed March 12 2022 https georgeeliotarchive org items show 96 Ruskin John 1905 Cook E T Wedderburn Alexander eds Unto This Last Munera Pulveris Time and Tide With Other Writings on Political Economy 1860 1873 Archived 29 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine The Works of John Ruskin Vol XVII London George Allen 156 Charing Cross Road New York Longmans Green and Co p xxxix Ruskin John 1903 1905 Cook E T Wedderburn Alexander eds Modern Painters Archived 15 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine The Works of John Ruskin Vols III VII London George Allen 156 Charing Cross Road New York Longmans Green and Co Purton Valerie ed 2018 John Ruskin and Nineteenth Century Education Anthem Nineteenth Century Series Anthem ISBN 9781783088058 Henderson William 2014 John Ruskin s Political Economy Routledge ISBN 9780415757683 The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature 1990 p 93 Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature p 95 Bloomsbury Guide p 101 James Louis 2006 The Norton Anthology of English Literature 7th edition vol 2 p 1335 Lucasta Miller The Bronte Myth New York Anchor 2005 pp 12 13 Juliet Gardiner The History today who s who in British history 2000 p 109 Carter McRae The Routledge History of Literature in English Britain and Ireland 2001 p 240 Davies Stevie 1996 Introduction and Notes The Tenant of Wildfell Hall Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 043474 3 Abrams M H et al Eds Elizabeth Gaskell 1810 1865 The Norton Anthology of English Literature The Major Authors The Romantic Period through the Twentieth Century 7th ed Vol B New York amp London W W Norton amp Company 2001 The Oxford Companion to English Literature 1996 p 1013 The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature 1990 p 490 a b The Oxford Companion to English Literature 1996 pp 650 51 Dennis Taylor Hardy and Wordsworth Victorian Poetry vol 24 no 4 Winter 1986 George MacDonald BBC Archived from the original on 12 March 2022 Retrieved 12 March 2022 Dozois Gardner 1997 Preface Modern Classics of Fantasy New York St Martin s Press pp xvi xvii ISBN 031215173X David Deirdre The Cambridge Companion to the Victorian Novel p 179 Cambridge University Press 2001 Romanticism American in The Oxford Dictionary of American Art and Artists ed by Ann Lee Morgan Oxford University Press 2007 online Archived 28 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine Gravett Sharon L 1995 Carlyle s Demanding Companion Henry David Thoreau Carlyle Studies Annual 15 21 31 JSTOR lt 44946086 lt Carlyle Thomas 2003 Tarr Rodger L ed Sartor Resartus The Life and Opinions of Herr Teufelsdrockh in Three Books University of California Press pp xxxiii Henry James Encyclopedia of World Biography Gale 1998 Biography in Context Accessed 4 October 2017 Cain Jimmie E Jr 4 April 2006 Bram Stoker and Russophobia Evidence of the British Fear of Russia in Dracula and The Lady of the Shroud McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 2407 8 The Norton Anthology of English Literature 7th ed vol 2 New York Norton 2000 p 1060 Carol T Christ Victorian and Modern Poetics Chicago University of Chicago Press 1986 Robert Browning The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature New York Prentice Hall 1990 p 373 The Oxford Companion to English Literature p 981 Landow George P The Literary Canon Victorian Web archived from the original on 19 February 2015 retrieved 3 May 2013 Ward et al 1907 21 p page needed A handbook to Literature ed William Harmon amp C Hugh Holman Upper Saddle River NJ Prentice Hall 1996 407 Everett Glenn Arthur Hugh Clough A Brief Biography Victorian Web archived from the original on 17 November 2012 retrieved 16 September 2012 The Norton Anthology of English Literature 7th edition vol 2 ed M H Abrams p 1741 The Norton Anthology of English Literature 7th edition vol 2 p 1740 The Norton Anthology of English Literature 7th edition vol 2 p 2041 Kenrick John G amp S Story Part III Archived 1 June 2022 at the Wayback Machine accessed 13 October 2006 and Powell Jim William S Gilbert s Wicked Wit for Liberty Archived 29 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine accessed 13 October 2006 Online text and basic information U Toronto archived from the original on 12 February 2012 Article on long runs in the theatre before 1920 Archived from the original on 13 June 2020 Retrieved 16 September 2012 M H Abrams A Glossary of literary Terms 7th edition New York Harcourt Brace 1999 p 167 M H Abrams p 167 M H Abrams p 168 Marshall Berman All that is Solid Melts into Air Harmsworth Penguin 1988 p 23 Drabble 1996 pp 377 988 The Oxford Companion to English Literature 1996 p 781 English literature Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Academic Edition Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2012 Web 15 November 2012 lt https www britannica com EBchecked topic 188217 English literature Archived 2 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine gt The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature ed Marion Wynne Davies New York Prentice Hall 1990 p 118 The Oxford Companion to English Literature ed Margaret Drabble p 562 Beebe Maurice Fall 1972 Ulysses and the Age of Modernism James Joyce Quarterly University of Tulsa 10 1 p 176 Chris Gostick Extra Material on James Hanley s Boy in the OneWorld Classics edition of Boy 2007 pp 182 83 Drabble 1996 p 660 Davies 1990 p 644 Dettmar Kevin JH 2005 Modernism in Kastan David Scott ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of British Literature Oxford University Press archived from the original on 2 June 2013 retrieved 21 October 2013 Birch Dinah ed 2011 modernism The Oxford Companion to English Literature Oxford Reference Online Oxford University Press archived from the original on 2 June 2013 retrieved 21 August 2012 The Cambridge Companion to Irish Literature ed John Wilson Foster Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2006 Janice Galloway Rereading Lanark by Alasdair Gray The Guardian Saturday 12 October 2002 Crook Tim International radio drama UK IRDP archived from the original on 5 October 2016 retrieved 29 January 2013 J C Trewin Critic on the Hearth Listener London 5 August 1954 224 Smith Stan 2004 Introduction In Stan Smith The Cambridge Companion to W H Auden Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 1 14 ISBN 0 521 82962 3 Greene 2012 p 426 Bloom Harold ed 1986 Geoffrey Hill Modern Critical Views Infobase Charles Tomlinson UK Carcanet Press archived from the original on 23 March 2012 retrieved 15 November 2012 Drabble 1996 p 697 2001 Laureates Literature The Nobel Prize Archived from the original on 15 September 2012 Retrieved 6 September 2012 Man Booker official site J G Farrell 5 Archived 29 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine Hilary Mantel Dame Hilary Mantel the Man Booker Prizes Archived from the original on 13 March 2016 Retrieved 22 March 2016 J M Coetzee J M Coetzee the Man Booker Prizes Archived from the original on 17 March 2016 Retrieved 22 March 2016 Nobel winner Alice Munro hailed as master of short stories CBC News Archived from the original on 26 April 2017 Retrieved 25 April 2017 Kaplan C 2013 Queens of Crime The Golden Age of Crime Fiction In Joannou M eds The History of British Women s Writing 1920 1945 The History of British Women s Writing Palgrave Macmillan London https doi org 10 1057 9781137292179 9 Kabatchnik Amnon 2008 Blood on the Stage Milestone Plays of Crime Mystery and Detection an Annotated Repertoire 1900 1925 Scarecrow Press p 28 The novel The Scarlet Pimpernel was published soon after the play opened and was an immediate success Once upon a time there was a man who liked to make up stories The Independent Archived from the original on 30 January 2012 Retrieved 14 October 2017 Bibliography EditBate Walter Jackson 1977 Samuel Johnson New York Harcourt Brace Jovanovich ISBN 978 0 15 179260 3 Bevington David 2002 Shakespeare Oxford Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 22719 9 Bradley A C 1991 Shakespearean Tragedy Lectures on Hamlet Othello King Lear and Macbeth London Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 053019 3 Burrow Colin 2004 Wyatt Sir Thomas c 1503 1542 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 30111 Subscription or UK public library membership required Craig Leon Harold 2003 Of Philosophers and Kings Political Philosophy in Shakespeare sMacbethandKing Lear Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 8605 1 Davies Marion Wynne ed 1990 The Bloomsbury Guide to English Literature New York Prentice Hall Dowden Edward 1881 Shakspere New York D Appleton amp Company OCLC 8164385 OL 6461529M Drabble Margaret ed 1996 The Oxford Companion to English Literature Oxford Oxford University Press Ferguson Niall 2004b Empire The Rise and Demise of the British World Order and the Lessons for Global Power Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 02329 5 Fulk RD Cain Christopher M 2003 A History of Old English Literature Malden Blackwell Greenblatt Stephen 2005 Will in the World How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare London Pimlico ISBN 978 0 7126 0098 9 Greene Roland et al eds 2012 Poetry of England The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics 4th rev ed Princeton NJ Princeton University Press pp 420 428 ISBN 978 0 691 15491 6 Kiernan Kevin 1996 Beowulf and the Beowulf Manuscript Ann Arbor MI University of Michigan ISBN 978 0 472 08412 8 Muir Kenneth 2005 Shakespeare s Tragic Sequence London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 35325 0 Orchard Andy 2003 A Critical Companion to Beowulf Cambridge DS Brewer Robinson Fred C 2001 The Cambridge Companion to Old English Literature Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 143 Tillyard E M W 1929 The Poetry of Sir Thomas Wyatt A Selection and a Study London The Scholartis Press ISBN 978 0 403 08614 6 Tolkien John Ronald Reuel 1958 Beowulf The Monsters and the Critics London Oxford University Press Ward A W Waller A R eds 1907 1916 The Cambridge History of English Literature Vol 1 14 Cambridge Cambridge University Press Ward AW Waller AR Trent WP Erskine J Sherman SP Van Doren C eds 1907 21 History of English and American literature New York GP Putnam s Sons University Press Wells Stanley 1997 Shakespeare A Life in Drama New York W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 31562 2 External links Edit nbsp Wikiversity has learning resources about Topic Literary Studies nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to English language literature The Cambridge History of English and American Literature an Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes Online Version of 1907 1921 print via Bartleby com The English Literary Canon British literature Books tagged British literature LibraryThing Discovering Literature Shakespeare at the British Library Discovering Literature Romantics and Victorians at the British Library Discovering Literature 20th century at the British Library Luminarium Anthology of Middle English Literature 1350 1485 Luminarium 16th Century Renaissance English Literature 1485 1603 Luminarium Seventeenth Century English Literature 1603 1660 Luminarium Eighteenth Century English Literature 1660 1785 Eighteenth Century Poetry Archive ECPA A Bibliography of Literary Theory Criticism and Philology Ed Jose Angel Garcia Landa University of Zaragoza Spain Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title English literature amp oldid 1175558994, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.