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Toso Martina – Russo Ludovica – 4A
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The world began to change: The wars of Roses (war for the throne between the Hause of York and the House of Lancaster); In 1471 William Caxton printed his first text; Modern English, as a new language was born; In 1492 America was discovered; The globe was circumnavigated, and Copernicus had put the Earth in the centre of the universe; Developments in art, philosophy and way of learning based on the rediscovery of the classical world of Greece and Rome; In 1533 Henry VIII brought a Reformation that had changed England’s religious life: so England became protestant and indipendent.
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ELIZABETH I Her reign was connected with the consolidation of the Tudor dynasty; Her nation was divided into Catholics, Protestants and Puritans who could live together; She had to face the economic problems caused by the increase in population and price inflation; her long reign saw also prosperity, in the birth of scientific learning and fluorishing literary culture; It was one of the most interesting and important periods. MARY I Henry’s daughter; She brought Catholicism back to England: hundreds of people were burned as heretics she was called Bloody Mary She decided that Church of England had to remain protestant Protestant England was separated from Europe.
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Literature was inspired by italian poets; Literature didn’t have a religious perspective on life anymore but favoured individual expression and gave to the world a new meaning; The central theme of Elizabethan literature, which found its best expression in drama in drama, was the conflict between individual and social order; It reflected the wide range of interests of the age and the new vitality of the language; Focus on the man and his weaknesses, flaws and qualities. Reflects the wide range of interests and the new vitality of language.
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The most important exponents of drama were: Christopher Marlowe; Robert Greene and Thomas Nashe; Brought new life to classical models; The golden age of drama was represented by Shakespeare: he drew from all kinds of sources, showed a deep knowledge of the human heart and portrayed life without imposing his personal idea.
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More personal and private than drama, unprecedented peaks of lyricism and beauty; John Donne and George Herbert were the most significant between Metaphysical poets innovative poets who talked of religion and love in a violent, direct and intellectually complex language; To say their concepts, they used metaphors and paradoxes, and so they represented relationship between the individual, God and the universe; This was also the age of questions: people wanted to understand the real nature of man and love; Changes brought uncertainty and restlessness: the idea of the world changed and people used to find the meaning of their life only to religion. The medieval world offered people an image of the divine order in the universe the world seemed to be well ordered.
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