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The Restoration and the Eighteenth Century Notes

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1 The Restoration and the Eighteenth Century Notes

2 Restoration People from England and Europe poured into North America
England was exhausted by war and disease, but produced many brilliant works of philosophy, art, and literature.

3 This era has been labeled:
Augustan Age and Neoclassical period: Likened to Rome when Emperor Augustus restored peace and order after Julius Caesar was assassinated. England restored their king and experienced a period of calm and order after an era of political turmoil.

4 The Enlightenment and Age of Reason
People stopped asking “Why?” questions and started asking “How?” questions: how body works and laws of the universe. Natural phenomena explained by scientific observations.

5 Modern English Prose: Royal Society of London for the Promotion of Natural Knowledge Called for exact, precise prose Short to the point vs. their predecessors endless sentences John Dryden: “founder and first true master” of modern English prose.

6 Religious Change Deism: the universe is a perfect mechanism, which God had built and left to run on its own; ex: meteors aren’t a sign from God, rather God didn’t interfere in human affairs Most people still held onto strong views of Christianity.

7 New Writing Journalism (for the middle class) and First English Novels (something new)

8 The Age of Satire Satire: a kind of writing that ridicules human weakness, vice, or folly in order to bring about social reform. Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift both used satire to expose the moral corruption & crass (extreme) commercialism of 18th century England.

9 Jonathan Swift ( ) Principal prose writer of early 18th century England’s greatest satirist Obtained a master’s degree from Oxford ordained a priest in the Church of Ireland

10 Jonathan Swift He did not write for fame or money; most books & pamphlets were published anonymously. Aim in writing: improve human conduct; make people more humane & decent

11 Swift’s Works Tale of a Tub exposes “gross corruption in religion & learning” Gulliver’s Travels attacks different varieties of human misbehavior. A Modest Proposal his most famous pamphlet

12 Terms: verbal irony is a contrast between what is said and what is actually meant situational irony contrast between what is expected to happen and what actually does happen dramatic irony contrast between what a character knows and what the reader or audience knows


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