The Female Hero in British Literature and War Alfred the Great‚ Winston Churchill‚ and David Beckham are British men who were given the title of “hero” for their feats ranging from conquering nations to being the first Briton to win league titles in four countries. But what makes these men heroes? According to Christopher Reeve‚ an actor portraying the character of Superman in movies‚ “A hero is someone who‚ in spite of weakness‚ doubt‚ or not always knowing the answers‚ goes ahead and overcomes
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Two Unlikely Women in British Literature Rachael Haines British Literature Summer Term Critical Essay Allison‚ the Wife of Bath in Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales and Lady Macbeth from Shakespeare’s Macbeth‚ are two bold women in literature who abandon the expectations of society on women of the time and instead use manipulation to gain power and control. These two women‚ Allison and Lady Macbeth are significant female characters because they represent upheaval in their respective societies
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Institution Instructor Course Date British Literature Shakespeare’s king Lear King Lear‚ by William Shakespeare is a tragedy. The title depicts a character‚ who descents into madness mainly after he disposes of his important estate between his two daughters‚ but neglects one of his three daughters. His choice if purely caused by the flattery of two of his three daughters between whom he disposes of his estate. His decision ultimately becomes tragic consequences‚ which affects his entire family
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The writings of the poets of the Romantic Period were directly affected by the events that took place around them. Most of these writers were deeply associated with London‚ and as the capital of England‚ anything that took place affected them most. This was a direct reflection of the subject matter of their various works‚ from the influence of the Church of England‚ to the rights of women during that time period. The first work of this time period I will discuss is London from William Blake’s Songs
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In most early British literature a woman is often presented as only one thing: an object. They can be objects of desire‚ objects of beauty‚ or merely objects to be owned‚ but it is rare that a woman is anything more than that. It is even more uncommon to find a female character in literature that is presented as an equal to the men around her. In William Congreve’s The Way of the World he plays on the similarities of both his female and male characters to establish just how much of an issue gender
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BRITISH LITERATURE (from 19th cent. up to now) ROMANTICISM (first half of 19th cent.) • Romantic poetry – two generations: • „Lake school“ (Wordsworth‚ Coleridge) • Byron‚ Shelley‚ Keats • Romantic novel – historical novel (Sir Walter Scott) – gothic novel‚ horror (Mary Shelley) The Lake Poets The Lyrical Ballads William Wordsworth Samuel Taylor Coleridge The second generation George Gordon Byron: Childe Harold´s Pilgrimage Percy Bysshe Shelley: Ode to the West Wind John Keats: Ode to a
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writing of the Romantic period‚ inspiring writers to address themes of democracy and human rights and to consider the function of revolution as apocalyptic change. • Romantic poets presented a theory of poetry in direct opposition to representative eighteenth-century theories of poetry as imitative of human life and nature by suggesting that poetic inspiration was located not outside in nature‚ but inside the poet’s mind‚ in a "spontaneous" emotional response. • Literature also became a
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Characteristics of the Romantic Period in William Wordsworth’s poem “Tintern Abbey.” Tintern Abbey is a poem written by William Wordsworth‚ a British romantic poet born in 1770 and died in 1850. The full title of this poem is “Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey‚ on Revisiting the Banks of the Wye during a Tour. July 13‚ 1798.” (p. 190) The poem evokes nature‚ memory and basically all the characteristics of the romantic period. Throughout Wordsworth’s work nature
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Augustan to Gothic period 1713-1789 Introduction The 18th century in English literature can be divided into two periods: THE AUGUSTAN AGE (The Age of Pope) - 1700-1745 and THE AGE OF SENSIBILITY (The Age of Johnson) - 1745-1785. This was the period of heavy colonizations of the new world and the time when cities rise. Various inventions‚ as well as the Industrial and Agricultural Revolution‚ influenced manufacturing and the British trade with the rest of the world; both of which grew tremendously
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In Romantic art‚ nature—with its uncontrollable power‚ unpredictability‚ and potential for cataclysmic extremes—offered an alternative to the ordered world of Enlightenment thought. The violent and terrifying images of nature conjured by Romantic artists recall the eighteenth-century aesthetic of the Sublime. As articulated by the British statesman Edmund Burke in a 1757 treatise and echoed by the French philosopher Denis Diderot a decade later‚ "all that stuns the soul‚ all that imprints a feeling
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