English - Neoclassical Period
English - Neoclassical Period
English - Neoclassical Period
1660-1798
17th -18th Century
The Neoclassical Period = Age of Reason
= Enlightenment
After the Renaissance--a period of exploration and
expansiveness--came a reaction in the direction of
order and restraint.
The period is called neoclassical because its writers
looked back to the ideals and art forms of classical
times, emphasizing even more than their Renaissance
predecessors the classical ideals of order and rational
control.
The classical ideals of order and moderation which
inspired this period, its realistically limited aspirations,
and its emphasis on the common sense of society rather
than individual imagination, could all be characterized
as rational. And, indeed, it is often known as the Age of
Reason.
‘From the head, not the heart’
• The Age of Enlightenment has been crucial for
developments and advances in human rights,
education, and modern democracy.
• One of the principal objectives of the Age of
Enlightenment was to rebel against the
authorities.
• The philosophers and artists insisted that the
individual use reason and logic instead of
accepting what the Monarchy (King), law, and the
Church presented as truth.
‘From the head, not the heart’
The neoclassic poetry differs from that of the
Elizabethan Age, the climax of Renaissance, in three
ways:
First, it is more formal, with its demand to follow exact
rules;
Second, it is more artificial, polished, straightforward,
dull and lacks the creative liveliness of the
Elizabethans;
Third, the chief poetic form is heroic couplet which
replaced the variety of forms in the Elizabethan Age.
The Neoclassical Period
1660-1798
Let me smile with the wise and feed with the rich.