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Unit 3 Age of Reason British Literature Ms. Carroll
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Age of Reason ► Also called The Enlightenment ► Late 1600s-1700s ► Characterized by the use of scientific reasoning to understand the world
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Neoclassical Style ► Formal and defined style of manners, clothing, architecture, art, and literature ► Used Greek and Roman civilization and literature as models ► Highly elegant ► Rise in literacy ► Use of humor/satire resurfaced
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Literature of the Period ► Social observers— Writing that reflected the concerns and experiences of the middle class Middle class growing and becoming more literate
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► Journalism grows in popularity Didn’t just report Highly opinionated Mocked, moralized, and gossiped on times from the serious stuff to the trivial Creation of magazines
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► Rise of the novel
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Satire ► Part of the Neoclassical style ► Origins are ancient and somewhat vague ► Written for a century in England but peaked in 18 th century ► Defined as a literary technique in which behaviors or institutions are ridiculed to improve society ► Swift explains: “Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover everybody’s face but their own.”
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Satire, cont’d ► Ridicules people, events, literature ► Clever ► Loses its relevance over time ► Two styles Horatian: gentle and playful Juvenalian: darker, more biting style
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► Popular Satirists: Dryden, Pope, Swift ► Called guardians of culture, seeking to protect highly developed civilization from corruption by attacking hypocrisy, arrogance, greed, vanity, and stupidity ► Still relevant today ► Uses irony, exaggeration (hyperbole), and humor
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Jonathon Swift 1667-1745 ► Greatest satirist in English Literature ► Born in Ireland to English parents ► Anglican priest ► Raged against arrogance, phoniness, and shallowness of the people ► Two famous pieces “A Modest Proposal” Gulliver’s Travels
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“A Modest Proposal” ► Essay that criticizes social conditions in Ireland under English rule ► States the problem” Ireland’s poor are leading wretched lives ► Proposes solutions to decrease population, find new food sources, and curb begging ► Uses “reasonable” logic ► Appeals to two audiences: English and Irish
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Gulliver’s Travels ► Published anonymously in 1726 ► One of the most durable and enjoyable British satires ► Fantasy ► Lilliputians: symbolize the petty conflicts of English politics ► Brobdingnag: judges English people as vermin
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