Genres of Literature: Poetry

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Genres of Literature

 Poetry: Verbal utterances that are


composed according to metrical schemes.

 Non-fiction: Writing that is about real life,


rather than imaginary people and events.

 Drama: Work that is meant to be


performed on stage (theater) by actors in
the form of a play.

 Fiction: Writing that comes from the


author’s imagination and is usually written
in narrative form.
Poetry
- Poetry is an imaginative awareness of
experience expressed through meaning, sound,
and rhythmic language so as to evoke an
emotional response.
- Poetry has been known to employ meter and
rhyme, but this is by no means necessary.
- Poetry is an ancient form that has gone
through numerous and drastic reinvention over
time.
Poetry defined by Famous Poets
- William Wordsworth defined poetry as “the
spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings.”
-Emily Dickinson said, “If I read a book and it
makes my body so cold no fire ever can warm
me, I know that is poetry.”
- Dylan Thomas defined poetry this way:
“Poetry is what makes me laugh or cry or yawn,
what makes my toenails twinkle, what makes me
want to do this or that or nothing.”
Old English Literature (600 -1100 A.D)
 Old English Literature (600 -1100 A.D.)
also known as Anglo-Saxon - the
earliest form of English.
 Old English poems are usually long
narrative epics giving accounts of great
deeds of warriors and heroes.
 Beowulf: greatest and first Old English
poem (epic) written in the 7th century by
an unknown author.
 Laws and Anglo-Saxon Chronicle: oldest
Anglo-Saxon prose.
Middle English Literature (1100 - 1500)
 MiddleEnglish: Language used from 1100
1500 A.D.
 The Canterbury Tales (17,000 lines):poem
written by Geoffrey Chaucer (father of English
poetry) which can be classified as religious.
 Troilusand Cryseyde: Chaucer’s other
important poem.
 Unknown author: Sir Gwain and the Green
Knight (1360)
Middle English Literature (1100 - 1500)

 Prose – mainly religious e.g. The Ancren


Riwle (13th century) about the proper conduct of
women
 First English plays (Drama):
- Miracle/Mystery plays: stories from the bible
- Morality Plays: characters are not people, but
personified as virtues (Truth, Honor, Greed,
Revenge).
- Interlude: a funny play by two or three actors.
Elizabethan Poetry and Prose (1558 -1603)

 Golden age in English History (height of the


English Renaissance - Age of Shakespeare)

 EnglishRenaissance: cultural and artistic


movement in England - early 16th - early 17th
century.
Elizabethan Poetry and Prose (1558 -1603)
 Greatest Elizabethan Poets:
- Sir Thomas Wyatt: first to bring the sonnet form to
England. (Petrarch – 14th century Italian poet)

- Earl of Surrey: first to write poems in blank verse.

 Sonnet: 14 – line lyric poem of fixed form and rhyme


pattern. (Italian and Shakespearean)
 Blank Verse: verse without rhyme, usually in lines of
five iambic feet.
Elizabethan Poetry, Prose, and Drama (1558-
1603)

 Edmund Spencer: first proper Elizabethan


poet, The Shepherd’s Calendar (pastoral poem)
 Combined Shakespearean and Italian sonnet
forms (Spenserian sonnet)
 Lyrical poetry: gives expression and more
focus to the poet’s thoughts and feelings
(prominent towards the end of the Elizabethan
age)
Elizabethan Poetry, Prose, and Drama
(1558-1603)
 Best lyrics in Elizabethan works: Shakespeare’s
Twelfth Night (1601) and Christopher Marlowe’s The
Passionate Shepherd to His Love (1599)

 Jacobean era (1603-25): Lyrical works lost its force


and metaphysical poetry began.
 John Donne: greatest metaphysical poet
(Jacobean era)
 Metaphysical poetry: poems that are less beautiful
and musical, containing more tricks of style and images.
Elizabethan Poetry, Prose, Drama and
Novel (1558-1603)

 John Donne: greatest works: Holy Sonnets


Poems: realistic and sensual style, liveliness of
language and creativity of metaphor.

 Metaphor: a method of describing something by


saying it is like something else without using “like”
and “as”. E.g. This man is a snake.
Elizabethan Poetry, Prose, Drama
and Novel (1558-1603)
 Ben Jonson (1572-1637): known as “Rare Ben
Jonson” wrote poetry, prose, and drama
 Best lyrics: To Celia.
 Satirical plays: Volpone (1606) and The Alchemist
(1610).
 Prose: Timber or Discoveries (1640)
 Known as father of English Literary Criticism -
criticized Shakespeare, Spenser, and Donne.
Elizabethan Poetry, Prose, Drama
and Novel (1558-1603)
 New kind of Novel: John Lyly’s Euphues (1578-80)
 Euphues: known for its style – alliteration and
similes.
 Simile: A method of describing something by
comparing it to something else using “like” or “as”.
E.g. She looks like a red rose.
 John Lyly’s Eupheus: impact on style. The term
'euphuism' was added to the language referring to
Lyly’s style.
Elizabethan Poetry, Prose, Drama
and Novel (1558-1603)

 Other Elizabethan Novelists: Robert Greene and


Thomas Nash.
 Thomas Nash: Picaresque novels (Spain): novels
based on adventures (in different places) of men
who are wicked but lovable
 Elizabethan novels: little value – started false
beginning, and died out.

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