Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Behn. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Behn. Mostrar todas las entradas

viernes, 13 de noviembre de 2020

Epistolary Literature (NIVEL AVANZADO)



Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the great 18th Century fashion for epistolary literature. From its first appearance in the 17th Century with writers like Aphra Behn, epistolary fiction, fiction in the form of letters, reached its heyday in the 18th Century with works like Clarissa by Samuel Richardson. At over a million words, it's a contender for the longest English novel. It inspired impassioned followers such as Denis Diderot who described reading Richardson's novels like this: 

“In the space of a few hours I had been through a host of situations which the longest life can scarcely provide in its whole course. I had heard the genuine language of the passions; I had seen the secret springs of self-interest and self-love operating in a hundred different ways: I had become privy to a multitude of incidents and I felt I had gained in experience.” 

This sense of the reader gaining a privileged peek into the psychology of the protagonists was a key device of the epistolary form and essential to the development of the novel. Its emphasis on moral instruction also propelled the genre into literary respectability. These novels were a publishing sensation. Philosophers like Rousseau and Montesquieu took up the style, using it to convey their ideas on morality and society.So why was letter writing so important to 18th Century authors? How did this style aid the development of the novel? And why did epistolary literature fall out of favour?With John Mullan, Professor of English at University College London; Karen O’Brien, Professor in English at the University of Warwick; and Brean Hammond, Professor of Modern English Literature at the University of Nottingham.

 

 

 

 

University of Nottingham.

miércoles, 30 de octubre de 2019

Otras autoras feministas tempranas (NIVEL AVANZADO)



NIVEL AVANZADO:

Tenemos en las lecturas un poema de una escritora feminista, Sarah Egerton.  Otra escritora feminista del 1700 es Mary Astell, con su Serious Advice to the Ladies y sus Reflections on Marriage. 


"Mary Astell." Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Astell




 


Una autora significativa de la época de la Restauración es Aphra Behn  (1640-1689).  Destaca su novela Oroonoko; or, The Royal Slave (1688). 

Oroonoko, or The Royal Slave is a novel by Aphra Behn. Aphra Behn was the first woman writer in England to make a living by her pen, and her novel Oroonoko was the first work published in English to express sympathy for African slaves. Perhaps based partly on Behn's own experiences living in Surinam, the novel tells the tragic story of a noble slave, Oroonoko, and his love Imoinda. The work was an instant success and was adapted for the stage in 1695. Behn's work paved the way for women writers who came after her, as Virginia Woolf noted in A Room of One's Own (1928): "All women together ought to let flowers fall upon the tomb of Aphra Behn, ... for it was she who earned them the right to speak their minds."

Un blog sobre literatura inglesa (y norteamericana)

  Este blog fue utilizado como material auxiliar para una asignatura del grado de Lenguas Modernas en la Universidad de Zaragoza, asignatur...