English Notes Latest Questions

  1. The period you’re referring to, is the Late Victorian age (1890-1901), Modern Age (1901- 50s) comprising the war years (1914-1918) and again at 1939-45. Firstly, Individualism- some of the great English novelists focused on an individual coming into collision with the society, for example, Tess of tRead more

    The period you’re referring to, is the Late Victorian age (1890-1901), Modern Age (1901- 50s) comprising the war years (1914-1918) and again at 1939-45.

    Firstly, Individualism- some of the great English novelists focused on an individual coming into collision with the society, for example, Tess of the D’urbervilles (Hardy), Middlemarch (Eliot).  Novels started to showcase the force of sexual desires among the characters which were earlier considered as Taboo in English literature.

    Secondly, Experimentation was another literary feature of that age where writers abandoned the old techniques and forms and started writing in free verses such as in the cases of W.B. Yeats, Auden, T.S. Eliot, who discarded the traditional rhyming techniques and started writing with images mixed from past with modern consciousness. Novelists such as James Joyce and Virginia Woolf developed the form of narration called stream of consciousness.

    Thirdly, Absurdity- The brutal picture of the two world wars deeply affected the writers of the period. The overall carnage turned the consciousness of the writers into absurdity each day.

    Fourthly, Symbolism- Although not a modern concept yet the modernists’ use of symbols in their work was an innovation. Their works left the readers’ imagination to wander farther than the earlier writers.

    Lastly, Formalism- Writers of this period saw literature as not something as a plain flowering of creativity but as a craft.

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  1. Lucifer
    Lucifer better to reign in hell than to serve in heaven
    This answer was edited.

    14th Century is also known as the Age of Chaucer. This period holds a great significance in the history of English Literature. It was the time of great turmoil, disturbance. First, there was the outbreak of the Black Plague and second there was political unrest due to the Hundred Years War. Thus, poRead more

    14th Century is also known as the Age of Chaucer. This period holds a great significance in the history of English Literature. It was the time of great turmoil, disturbance. First, there was the outbreak of the Black Plague and second there was political unrest due to the Hundred Years War. Thus, political conditions, religious conditions and social conditions are interrelated and dependent on each other.

    Religious Conditions

    As we find in The Canterbury Tales, people used to go on pilgrimage e.g. in The Canterbury Tales, the people go to the shrine of Thomas Becket. They belonged to all classes and ranks.  This shows that, people had strong belief in shrines and used to go there on foot. We also find that these routes were tough and long so, they would form groups for their mutual benefits (irrespective of classes and ranks).

    The other aspect of religion which we find is the hollowness. The religious leaders and institutions seem to be corrupt. As the Church used to exercise maximum power over commoners, people were tired of it and hence they began to question the authority of Church.

    Not only people, but the rulers were also fed up with unnecessary involvement of Church in state matters. They started to exert more power. Consequently, the power and domination of Church began to decline.

    Political Conditions

    As said before, there were wars and political instability. The rulers began to question the authority of Church and began to exercise power by themselves. As the war became more costly, the rulers started collecting the taxes directly. This way, the Noble Class also lost its power and feudalism started declining.

    The peasants who earlier used to serve the feudal lords left them and migrated to cities to become craftsmen, merchants, and artisans. The Canterbury Tales depicts this. There are people from different professions in the poem.

    Social Conditions

    Social Conditions were directly influenced by political and religious turmoil. The Black Death took away one third of total population. The war also had devastating effect. And, Church and noble class left no stone unturned to money from the commoners.

    This led the people to hate feudal lords, Church and even the rulers. People began to question the authority of Church, they started moving to the cities which made the feudalism decline. Not only this, there was also advancement of Science.

    Thus the century was characterised by turmoil, rationality and quest for change.

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  1. Literature of Neoclassical Age is characterized by order, decorum, accuracy, concision, restraint, reason, regularity, wit, structure. Man was the supreme subject for the writers of this age Values of absolutism and rationality were propagated. Writers were witty, gentlemanly, moral, incisive, ratioRead more

    Literature of Neoclassical Age is characterized by order, decorum, accuracy, concision, restraint, reason, regularity, wit, structure.
    Man was the supreme subject for the writers of this age
    Values of absolutism and rationality were propagated.
    Writers were witty, gentlemanly, moral, incisive, rational and capable of moral outrage.
    Formal, full of allusions, didactic and Dressed up language are remarkable characteristics of this age.
    Satire, Parody, Epistle, Epic, Fables, Essays, Sonnets were the popular genre of Literature in this Age.

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  1. Literature of any age holds a mirror to the society of that period. In doing so, it seeks to reflect the social fabric and expose the many social evils that plague nearly every modern-day society. This is true for Modern Indian literature as well. The social conditions of India not only determine thRead more

    Literature of any age holds a mirror to the society of that period. In doing so, it seeks to reflect the social fabric and expose the many social evils that plague nearly every modern-day society. This is true for Modern Indian literature as well. The social conditions of India not only determine the subjects and themes in literary works but also impact the manner in which literature is received and interpreted.

    Ever since its Independence in 1947, literature in India has taken a new turn. No longer are the British colonisers and India’s struggle for independence central to Indian literature. They undoubtedly still form a background and thus continue to hold historical significance, but the changing social setup has altered the ways of writers and consequently their writing. The increased tolerance and acceptability of unconventional themes in literature points to a certain broadening of the mental horizons of Indian society.

    Owing to cultural diversity, the fabric of Indian society is complex. The modern Indian novel and poetry seek to capture the essence of Indian life with all its complexities. For a society that is constantly in flux, literature has also been dynamic. The social stratification in India is essentially done on lines of religion and caste. Untouchability still remains a bitter truth in many parts of India. Due to this, there has been a surge in writers from the Minority or Oppressed sections. The emergence of Dalit literature as a new discipline is in itself proof of how conditions of the marginalised groups have become a subject of literary interest.

    The social reality of modern India is also expressed in the treatment of the subjects of alienation, identity and rootlessness in works of Indian diasporic writers like Jhumpa Lahiri. Arvind Adiga’s novel “The White Tiger” is an exemplary representation of the ugliest social realities of corruption and restricted social mobility in India.

    Gender Inequality, too, remains a major concern. Mahesh Dattani’s play “Tara” gives a heart-searing portrayal of gender discrimination. This play voices the contemporary issue of preference for a male child over a female child in most Indian communities. From this struggle to even out the gender differences has emerged the genre of Feminist literature in India. Modern-day writers like Arundhati Roy have voiced issues of women in their works. Kamala Das remains a pioneer in the field of Feminist literature. The ideas of women’s sexuality, liberation from gender stereotypes and freedom from the cult of the domestic woman are recurrent in today’s works. In Girish Karnad’s play “Naga-Mandala”, the unhappy married life of Rani not only highlights the modern-day problem of marriages but also the male chauvinism and the oppression of women.

    The East versus West conflict is central to modern Indian society. Due to an educated young population that constitutes more than half of the Indians, society has spiralled into further conflicts. There is an ever-widening gulf between the traditional Indian value system and the newer, more progressive and apparently Westernised worldview of the younger population. As Indian society attempts to free itself from the clutches of orthodox thought, literature strives to capture the essence of this conflict. The subject of degeneration of values and the conflict between change and preservation, therefore, impact a writer’s work in a choice of themes and settings.

    The family unit in Indian society was traditionally bigger. The joint family system is crumbling and the family is disintegrating into a smaller unit. An emphasis on the individual rather than the community is a hallmark of the modern world and India is no exception. Much of Modern Indian Poetry addresses this present-day condition in which the joint-family system is disappearing.

    The failure of institutions like marriage and the fragility of other familial relations is explored in Arundhati Roy’s novel “The God of Small Things”. Vikram Seth’s novel “A Suitable Boy” also aptly highlights the conflict a modern-day Indian feels when going through the process of choosing a life partner. It brings forth the pressure of social obligations and the need to conform to norms that determine such choices.

    Modern Indian literature also reflects modern thought, which is unconventional and often radical. Such unconventional modern themes like homosexuality, are explored in Mahesh Dattani’s plays “Bravely Fought the Queen” and “Dance Like a Man”. Hence, Modern Indian English Literature has made treatment of such formerly unacceptable topics possible. This is how the social conditions, the changing mindsets and the broadening perspectives impact literature.

    Thus, Modern Indian Literature does not limit itself to a mere glorification of the multiculturalism and diversity of Indian society but also presents a harsh critique of the social conditions of contemporary India.

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