When Queen Anne died without any heirs, the English throne was offered to her nearest Protestant relative, George of Hanover, who thus became George I of England. Throughout the long reign of George, his son, and grandson, all named George, the very nature of English society and the political face of the realm changed.
In
part this was because the first two Georges took little interest in the
politics of rule, and were quite content to let ministers rule on their behalf.
These ministers, representatives of the king, or Prime Ministers, rather
enjoyed ruling, and throughout this "Georgian period" the foundations
of English political party system was solidified into something resembling what
we have today.
But more than politics changed; English
society underwent a revolution in art and architecture. This was the age of the
grand country house, when many of the magnificent homes that we can visit
today were built.
Abroad, the English acquired more and more territory overseas through conquest and settlement, lands that would eventually make up an Empire stretching to every corner of the globe. Read here.
1714
- 1727
|
Queen Anne was succeeded by George I of the House of Hanover, who was a
descendant of the Stuarts through his maternal grandmother, Elizabeth,
daughter of James I.
During his reign, real power was held by the Whigs’ leader, Sir Robert Walpole, Britain's
first Prime Minister.
|
1727-
1760
|
George II exercised little control over British domestic policy, which was
largely controlled by Great Britain's parliament.
During the last years of his reign, William Pitt the Elder of the Whigs, was appointed Prime Minister. He became famous as the wartime political leader of Britain in the Seven Years' War, especially for his single-minded devotion to victory over France. Victory made Britain dominant in world affairs. He was also known for his wide popular appeal, his opposition to corruption in government, his advocacy of British greatness, expansionism and colonialism, and his antagonism toward Britain's chief enemies and rivals for colonial power, Spain and France.
|
The 18th century in English literature has been called the Augustan Age, the Neoclassical Age and the Age of Reason.
Moreover, the middle classes expanded considerably in commercial, agricultural and industrial ventures. Middle class people began to frequent clubs and coffee-houses, where they met to exchange ideas and opinions and read newspapers. It was in this period that journalism began to flourish.
The literature of this period was distinguished by its striving for harmony and precision, its urbanity, and its imitation of classical models such as Homer, Cicero, Virgil, and Horace.
The Augustan Age was also characterised by the spirit of the Enlightenment which was spreading throughout Europe. The Enlightenment contrasted with the darkness of irrationality and superstition which characterised the Middle Ages. Immanuel Kant, one of the greatest of Enlightenment thinkers, said that "the watchward of the Enlightenment is: sapere aude! Have the courage to use one's own reason!" The Enlightenment implied a new way of thinking characterised by a philosophical, scientific and rational spirit, a general scepticism and freedom from superstition. Belief in progress and in the power of reason increased and was a distinctive trait of the period, which is also known as the Age of Reason.
The literature of the Augustan Age was undoubtedly dominated by the rise of the novel. The Chambers 20th Century Dictionary defines a novel as "a fictitious prose narrative or tale presenting a picture of real life". In this sense, the idea we have of the novel comes from the 18th century. Before that time there were plenty of forms of prose fiction, but these certainly didn't present a picture of real life.
The rise of the novel was influenced by the growth of the increasingly affluent middle classes, whose outlook was mainly practical and realistic. They were beginning to buy and read more books and many of these new readers were women. The new reading public were not interested in stories of chivalry or romance, or in fantastic tales; they wanted to read stories which reflected their own interests and problems with characters they could more or less identify with.
The father of the English novel is generally considered to be Daniel Defoe. His three great novels Robinson Crusoe, Moll Flanders and Roxana were all published before 1730.
As to Robinson Crusoe, the protagonist belongs to the middle class, he is full of enterprise and commercial wisdom; faith in God's favour was also a distinguishing feature of the Puritan middle class, and this is reflected in Defoe's novels.
The novels by Samuel Richardson present the respectable, pious side of the middle class. They praise virtues like temperance, economy, sobriety and modesty, all typically bourgeois. Women were often the heroines of novels and were also avid readers of them.
5 comments:
Thank you very much for your interesting and well organised lesson. I will use it!
Thanks a lot for this enlightenment. It helped me a lot to understand this period, it is really in simple and plain English. Kind regards from Argentina!
Hello, there! Thanks to you for reading and commenting! =)
Really appreciate this. These notes were very helpful.Thanks !
Very helpful. Thanks.
Post a Comment