Middle English Period History (1066-1485)

Middle English Period (1066-1485)

Some people refer to this era as the Pre-Renaissance period.

11th Century (1066-1100)

1066: Following the death of Edward the Confessor, Harold, the queen’s brother, was proclaimed king. However, William, Duke of Normandy, invaded England. Harold was killed in the Battle of Hastings, leading to William becoming king of England (reigned 1066-1087), known as William the Conqueror.

William ordered the publication of the Domesday Book, a comprehensive record of land holdings.

Read More

Spanish Neoclassical Literature: Reason, Rules & Key Authors

Neoclassicism: Reason and Rules in Literature

Neoclassicism considered Greek and Latin writers as role models. It represented a return to Greco-Roman classics, which is the origin of the term ‘neo-classicism’. Neoclassicism gave preference to reason over feelings and imposed rules to which literary works must conform. As a result, lyrical production was largely abandoned. It rejected the imaginative and fantastic, as writing was intended not to educate, but to entertain. Neoclassical literature has

Read More

Quevedo’s El Buscón: Picaresque Masterpiece

Quevedo’s El Buscón

El Buscón: The life of a con man named Don Pablos was first printed in 1626. It was a great success. Quevedo tested his pen as a writer within the genre of the picaresque novel, but rather than simply following generic models, he wrote a very original text.

Influences and Structure

El Lazarillo provides the overall structure of the work. It coincides with both novels (Lazarillo and Guzmán de Alfarache) in its epistolary form and features the protagonist’s zeal for social mobility,

Read More

Romanticism and Modernism in Literature

Romanticism

After the Napoleonic War (War of Independence), many romantics had to go into exile. But with the death of Fernando VII, Romanticism was officially proclaimed in Spain, influencing Romantic writers. Spanish Romanticism drew from English sources (more auditory and externalizing) and German sources (more intimate and spiritualized).

General Issues

  • The Romantic spirit suffers from the limitations imposed by the outside world on its desires, living in a constant feeling of incompleteness and
Read More

Spanish Literary Forms: Novel, Ballads, Coplas

The Novel: Emergence of a Genre

Prosecuting the facts critically, delving into causes, and addressing the psychological level of character finally animates the story with dialogues and epistles. A new literary genre, the novel, emerges in the 14th century, linked to the degeneration of the epic and the decline of feudal society due to the rise of the bourgeoisie.

Early Forms: Adventure and Chivalry

The first manifestations include:

  • The Adventure Story: This involves the feeling of love and action found
Read More

Renaissance Novels: Byzantine, Pastoral, and More

Byzantine Novel

The discovery of Ethiopian texts and early translations provided a model for a new subgenre of Greek adventure novels during the Renaissance: the Byzantine romance or adventure.

History

The Byzantine novel typically features a young, beautiful, and chaste couple in love who are separated and ultimately reunited. The narrative is structured around a journey, which represents the protagonists’ confrontation with themselves and the world. They overcome challenges with divine grace.

During

Read More