Neoclassics And Romantics
Neoclassical, also known as, The Age of Reason and The Enlightenment was
during
1660-1770. They exhibit strong tradition and ancient values from
the classical
writers of Rome and Greece. Who were thought to have achieved
excellence in
literary and ideas. Such as form, balance, discipline,
restraint, unity, order
and the use of tragedy, satire and epic. In their
opinion, literature was a form
of "Art", therefor must be perfected by long
study, practice and attention
to details. The purpose of literature was to
instruct the use of reason over
emotion. They prefer society to the
individual and public life over private.
There are four major emphases in
this age, firstly, emphasis on decorum,
conventions and defined codes of
behavior. Secondly, emphasis on moderation, and
thirdly, characters type,
humans were primarily subject matter of literature,
therefor poetry was mere
imitation of humans life, and finally, neoclassic
poetry emphasizes on
general rather than particular. They had rigid class
system, women had no
voice and children were unimportant. Believed in divine
order, a rational and
moral universe, and in constant human nature, overall
effort towards
stability. While the Romantics, from 1798 until 1832, emphasized
a number of
ideas that were a reaction against the proceeding "Age of
Reason". As
Shelley stated, that the literature of the age "has arisen as
it were from a
new birth". They concentrated on innovation rather than
traditionalism in
their material, forms and style of literature, and introduced
symbolism.
Wordsworth was one of the key poets in that age; his poetry was about
his own
feelings, spontaneous and genuine rather than a mirror of men in
action,
therefor concentrating on inner self and life but not society. In
order to
achieve that you have to be in solitude. They believed in the power
of
imagination vs. cold reasoning. They felt that both art and literature
had
become artificial, and that artists and writers should return to nature
for
inspiration. Emotions or feelings were the source of true moral guidance.
They
believed in individual liberty, and in people being true to themselves.
And that
the natural goodness in people could change society. But mostly
they
concentrated on inviting the reader to identify the protagonist with the
poets
themselves.