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資源型式:
自行填入
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提供者:Marguerite Connor 康慕婷;
Cecilia Liu 劉雪珍 |
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Introduction to the
Seventeenth Century
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General Introduction
Historical Background
Major Authors
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General Introduction |
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The
early seventeenth century
extends from the accession of the first Stuart king (James I) in 1603
to the coronation of the third (Charles II) in 1660. But the events
that occurred between these boundaries make much more sense if they are
seen in a larger pattern extending from 1588 to 1688. Between these two
dates massive political and social events took place that bridge the
gap between the Tudor "tyranny by consent" of the sixteenth century and
the equally ill-defined but equally functional constitutional monarchy
of the eighteenth century.
A sense of deep disquiet, of
traditions under challenge, is felt everywhere in the literary culture
of the early 17th century. Long before the term was applied to our own
time, the era of Donne and Robert Burton (the obsessive anatomist of
melancholy) deserved to be called the Age of Anxiety. One may think of
the "Metaphysical"
poets who
followed Donne (such as Herbert, Crashaw, Vaugham, and Cowley) as
trying to reinforce the traditional lyric forms of love and devotion by
stretching them to comprehend new and extreme intellectual energies. In
the other direction, Jonson and his "sons" the so-called
Cavalier poets (such as Herrick, Suckling, Lovelace, Waller, and
Denham) generally tried to compress and limit their poems, giving them
a high polish and a sense of easy domination at the expense of their
intellectual content. The common contrast of Cavalier with
Metaphysical does describe two poetic alternatives of the early
century. Yet both style were wholly inadequate containers for
the sort of gigantic energy that Milton was trying to express.
At the heart of the century of rapid
change lies the
Puritan Revolt of 1640-60. The century together with the English Revolution
was a time of intense ferment in all areas of life —religion, science,
politics, domestic relations, culture. That ferment was reflected in
the literature of the era, which also registered a heightened focus on
and analysis of the self and the personal life. However, little of this
seems in evidence in the elaborate frontispiece to Michael Drayton's
long "chorographical" poem on the landscape, regions, and local history
of Great Britain (1612), which appeared in the first years of the reign
of the Stuart king James I (1603-1625). The great seventeenth-century
heroic poem,
Paradise Lost, treats the Fall of Man and its tragic
consequences.
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Historical
Background |
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The 17th century was a time of enormous change in
England. In 1603 the last
Tudor monarch Elizabeth I
died and the throne
went to her Stuart cousin, the Scottish King James VI who became James I of England.
James
was an autocrat who believed strongly in the Divine Right of
Kings. He believed that God had placed him on the throne as
God's lieutenant on earth. This autocratic ideal was to have
terrible ramifications for Stuart kings.
Religious strife - During the early part of the century there was a
growing religious division in people. The Anglican (official)
Church was the middle way. On one side stood the illegal
Roman Catholic Church, and on the other stood the growing Puritan
movement.
Puritans were even more conservative in their forms of
worship than were the Anglicans. They were
convinced that all were equal in the sight of God, and because of this,
kings were not strictly necessary. I am simplifying here, and
this is all rather complex.
The
popularity and strength of the Puritan movement grew throughout the
1630-40s until in 1642 Civil War broke out between the Puritans, who
were supported by and actually controlled Parliament, and the Court, or
Royal Party. This religious strife is often mirrored in the
poetry of the pre-war years.
Civil War - When the war broke out, James's son Charles I
was king. Charles had inherited his father's ideas
of kingship, but not his strength. He also failed to realize
the growing strength of the merchant/middle class. The war
went on until 1649 when Charles was captured by the Parliamentary
forces and in a revolutionary move, beheaded. He family had
already fled to France and Holland. His son, Charles II
became king in name only but didn't come to the throne until
1660. Instead
Oliver Cromwell, who had been head of the Parlimentarian Army, was
named Lord High Protector of England, and England entered what is known
as the Commonwealth
Period.
Commonwealth - During this rather austere period of Puritan
rule, theaters were closed and literature fell into a bit of a
slump. Poetry was only seen as good when it talked about God
or holy stories, and narratives were seen as nothing more than lies and
lies are sinful. The greatest art form during this period is
the essay.
Restoration - In 1660, 2 years after Cromwell's death, the
Parliament and the people of England decided that they wanted their
monarchy back and
Charles II was asked to come and take the throne.
He did and there was a great creative output after the years of grim
Puritan rule. But Charles remained childless and his apparent
heir, his brother James, was a Catholic. According to English
law, Catholics could not hold public office, and people feared another
Mary Tudor. So things were politically unstable at
times.
Charles
II, C. 16560-65. National Portrait Gallery. The
Restoration and the Eighteenth Century.
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The
was effigy of Charles II, made immediately after his death, which stood
over his catafalque. (from Royal Charles
Antonia Fraser. Delta, 1979: 364)
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Glorious Revolution - This is what the people called it in 1688 when
James left and his Protestant daughter Mary took the throne as Mary II
with her husband and first cousin William III. They have been
the only joint rulers in British history. Some felt that
James was the true and rightful king, and people took sides.
This split will be reflected in the literature for the rest
of the century.
from The Restoration and the Eighteenth
Century Martin Price. NY: Oxford UP,
1973.
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Major Authors |
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Susanna Centlivre
Colley Cibber
John
Donne 約翰˙唐恩
George Farquhar
George Herbert 喬治.赫伯特
Robert Herrick 羅伯•海瑞克
Ben Johnson 班.姜森
Andrew Marvell 安德魯.馬葦爾
John
Milton
約翰.密爾頓
Mary
Pix
Richard
Steele
John
Vanbrugh
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References: |
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The Nature of Love 2: From the
Courtly to the Romantic.
Irving Singer. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1987.
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Goddesses. Lanier Graham. NY: Abbeville
P, n.d.
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1.Apsara Combing Her Hair;
Khmer, Cambodia, n.d. Musee des Arts Asiatiques Guimet Paris. Goddesses
p. 182.
- 2.
Kandariya-Mahhadeva Temple (north facade), Khajoraho, India, 10th-11th
century. Goddesses p. 180.
- 3. Aphrodite Rising
from the Sea.Greece, 6th-5th century B.C.E.Museo Naxionale elle Terme,
Rome.Goddesses p. 184.
- 4. Aphrodite ("Venus
Genetrix"). 5th-4th century B.C.E. Musee du Louvre,
Paris. Goddesses p. 185.
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5. The Birth of
Venus.
Sandro Botticelli
(1445-1510). Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence. Goddesses
p. 190.
- 6.
The Birth of Venus. 1912. Odilon Redon
(1840-1916). Musee du Petit Palais,
Paris. Goddesses p. 193.
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7. Barbarians' Venus, 1921.
Paul Klee
(1897-1940). The Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, California. Goddesses
p. 195.
- 8. Black Venus,
1965-67. Niki de Saint Phalle (b. 1930). Whitney
Museum of American Art, New York. Goddesses
p. 197.
- 9. Poster for the
film "Blode Venus," 1932. Private
Collection. Goddesses
p. 196.
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