Transition from romantic to Victorian age
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HE AGE OF TRANSITION AND THE ROMANTICISM
The Age of Transition is an historical and cultural period situated between 1760 and 1798, and so between the Augustan Age and the Romantic Age, which saw the explosion of the romantic movement from 1798, year of the publication of the Lyrical Ballads by Wordsworth and Coleridge. This age sees a coexistence of different tendencies, between the concepts of regularity, clarity, order, neo-classicism and the supremacy of reason and, on the other side, the new romantic emphasis on feeling and emotions and the rediscovery of Medieval times.
Augustan age: emphasis on reason and on man as asocial being
Preoromantic period: man as an indivifual and emphasis on each individual's felling and emotions.
Neoclassical poetry was quite artificial and conventional. Based on imitation of clasical models.
Preromantic poetry rejected these models because people try to express their own emotions and feelings.
HE AGE OF TRANSITION AND THE ROMANTICISM
The Age of Transition is an historical and cultural period situated between 1760 and 1798, and so between the Augustan Age and the Romantic Age, which saw the explosion of the romantic movement from 1798, year of the publication of the Lyrical Ballads by Wordsworth and Coleridge. This age sees a coexistence of different tendencies, between the concepts of regularity, clarity, order, neo-classicism and the supremacy of reason and, on the other side, the new romantic emphasis on feeling and emotions and the rediscovery of Medieval times.
Augustan age: emphasis on reason and on man as asocial being
Preoromantic period: man as an indivifual and emphasis on each individual's felling and emotions.
Neoclassical poetry was quite artificial and conventional. Based on imitation of clasical models.
Preromantic poetry rejected these models because people try to express their own emotions and feelings.
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