Shared Flashcard Set

Details

MAT Literature
MAT Literature
74
Literature
Graduate
10/30/2012

Additional Literature Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
Aeschylus
Definition
(525 B.C.E - 456 B.C.E)
Responsible for the origin and development of Greek Drama
Introduced 2nd speaking character and concept of conflict
(Prometheus Bound, Oresteia, Agamemnon, Chophori, and Eumenides)
Term
Aristophanes
Definition
(450 B.C.E - 385 B.C.E)
Considered the father of Greek comedy
(Lysistrata, The Clouds, and The Birds)
Term
Aristotle
Definition
(384 B.C.E - 322 B.C.E.)
Introduced and popularized the concept of literary criticism
(The Poetics)
Term
Euripides
Definition
(485 B.C.E - 405 B.C.E)
Chiefly responsible for introducing the technique of deus ex machina
(The Trojan Women, Helen, The Bacchae)
Term
Homer
Definition
(c. 9th Cen. B.C.E)
Products of non-literature culture. 1st works of Western literature
(Odyssey, Illiad)
Term
Ovid
Definition
(43 B.C.E - 18 C.E)
(Publius Ovidius Naso)
Brought erotic verse to popularity
(Metamorphoses, Love's Remedy)
Term
Plato
Definition
(428 B.C.E - 399 B.C.E)
Father of Western philosophy
(Republic, Apology, Symposium)
Term
Sappho
Definition
(c. 612 B.C.E. - ?)
Verse fragments
(Early Greek poetry)
Term
Sophocles
Definition
(496 B.C.E. - 406 B.C.E)
Added 3rd speaking character and moved Greek drama further from religious commentary to more basic human interaction
(Oedipus, Tyrannus, Antigone, Electra)
Term
Virgil
Definition
(70 B.C.E - 19 B.C.E)
(Publius Vegilius Maro)
Popularized the pastoral poem and the concept of civic virtue
(The Aeneid)
Term
Alighieri, Dante
Definition
(1265-1321)
Considered to have single-handedly founded modern European literature
perfected "terza rima" (rhyme in threes)
(Divine Comedy, The Inferno, Purgatorio, Paridiso)
Term
Bacon, Francis
Definition
(1561-1626)
Founder of the inductive method of modern science and philosophical writings about science
(Essays, The New Atlantis)
Term
Boccaccio, Giovanni
Definition
(1313-1375)
Introduced the use of the vernacular in classically focused literature
(The Decameron)
Term
Chaucer, Geoffrey
Definition
(1340-1400)
Chiefly responsible for bringing literature to the middle class
(The Canterbury Tales, Troilus and Criseyde)
Term
de Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel
Definition
(1547-1616)
Spanish writer
Wrote the 1st Modern novel
(Don Quixote)
Term
Jonson, Ben
Definition
(1573-1637)
English playwright
(Every Man in His Humour)
Term
Machiavelli, Nicolo
Definition
(1469-1527)
The Prince outlined a governmental structure based on the self-interest of the ruler; such rule is still called "Machiavellian."
(The Prince, La Madrigola)
Term
Marlowe, Christopher
Definition
(1564-1593)
Author of 1st real historical drama and 1st English tragedy
(The Tragedy of Doctor Faustus, Edward the Second)
Term
Milton, John
Definition
(1608-1674)
Puritan poet noted for allegorical religious epics
(Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained)
Term
Petrarch, Francesco
Definition
(1304-1374)
Italian poet
His works provided the basis for love poetry and popularized popularized the theme of humanism.
(The Canzoniere)
Term
Rabelais, Francois
Definition
(1494-1553)
Introduced satiric narrative
(Gargantua, Pantagruel)
Term
Shakespeare, William
Definition
(1564-1616)
Considered the greatest English poet and dramatist
(Hamlet, King Lear, Macbeth, Romeo and Juliet, Twelfth Night, Richard III, Julius Caesar, Much Ado About Nothing, Sonnets)
Term
Spenser, Edmund
Definition
(1552-1599)
great Elizabethan poet
Popularize the use of allegory
(The Faerie Queen, Amoretti)
Term
Dryden, John
Definition
(1631-1700)
Influential in establishing the heroic couplet
(Alexander's Feast, Heroic Stanzas)
Term
Moliere
(Jean-Baptiste Poquelin)
Definition
(1622-1673)
Perfected literary conversation and introduced everyday speech to theatre
(Don Juan, Tartuffe, The Misanthrope)
Term
Racine, Jean
Definition
(1639-1699)
Renowned for lyric poetry based on Greek and Roman literature
(Andromaque, Bernice and Phaedre)
Term
Addison, Joseph
Definition
(1672-1719)
Outstanding poet, critic, and playwright whose numerous essays marked political free thinking of his time
(The Tattler, The Spectator, Cato)
Term
Blake, William
Definition
(1757-1827)
Visual artist and poet who defied neoclassical convention with subjects of truth and beauty
(Songs of Innocence, Songs of Experience)
Term
Franklin, Benjamin
Definition
(1706-1790)
Scientist, educator, abolitionist, philosopher, economist, political theorist, and statesman who defined the colonial New World in his writings; principle figure of the American Enlightenment
(Poor Richard's Almanac, Observations on the Increase of Mankind, numerous essays and state papers)
Term
Pope, Alexander
Definition
(1688-1744)
Classicist and wit who formulated rules for poetry and satirized British social circles
the greatest English poet of early 1700's
(The Dunciad, The Rape of the Lock, An Essay on Criticism, An Essay on Man)
Term
Rousseau, Jean-Jacques
Definition
(1712-1778)
Libertine whose focused prose inspired the French Revolution
(Social Contract, The New Heloise)
Term
Swift, Jonathan
Definition
(1667-1745)
English author noted for his direct style, clear, sharp prose and critical wit
(Gulliver's Travels, Take of a Tub, "A Modest Proposal")
Term
Voltaire
(Francois-Marie Arouet)
Definition
(1694-1778)
French author
Progressive philosopher and freethinker best known for synthesizing French and English critical theory
(Candide, Zadig)
Term
Austen, Jane
Definition
(1775-1817)
English novelist
Principally known for novels of manners and middle English society
(Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice)
Term
Baudelaire, Charles
Definition
(1821-1867)
French Symbolist poet
(Flowers of Evil (Les Fleurs du Mal))
Term
Bronte, Charlotte
Definition
(1816-1855)
English author - Victorian novelist, sister to Emily Bronte
(Jane Eyre)
Term
Bronte, Emily
Definition
(1816-1848)
English author - Victorian novelist, sister to Charlotte Bronte
(Wuthering Heights)
Term
Browning, Elizabeth Barrett
Definition
(1806-1861)
English poet, married to Robert Browning
(Sonnets for the Portuguese, Aurora Leigh)
Term
Browning, Robert
Definition
(1812-1889)
English poet, married to Elizabeth Browning, known for dramatic monologues
(Bells and Pomegranates, My Last Duchess
Term
Byron, George Gordon (Lord)
Definition
(1788-1824)
English romantic poet and major figure in the Romantic movement and inspiration for the Byronic hero
(Don Juan, Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, classic poetry)
Term
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor
Definition
(1772-1834)
English romantic poet and foremost literary critic of the Romantic period
(Rime of the Ancient Mariner, "Kubla Khan," "Christabel")
Term
Conrad, Joseph
Definition
(1857-1924)
Born in Berdychiv, Ukraine of Polish parents, major English post-colonialist novelist
(Heart of Darkness, Lord Jim)
Term
Dickens, Charles
Definition
(1812-1870)
English novelist
(Great Expectations, Oliver Twist, David Copperfield, A Tale of Two Cities, A Christmas Carol)
Term
Dickinson, Emily
Definition
(1830-1886)
American poet in 19th century
(Because I Could Not Stop for Death)
Term
Dostoyevsky, Fyodor
Definition
(1821-1881)
Russian novelist
(Crime and Punishment, Notes From the Underground, The Brothers Karamazov, The Idiot)
Term
Eliot, George
Definition
(1819-1880)
English author
(Mill on the Floss)
Term
Flaubert, Gustave
Definition
(1821-1880)
French novelist
(Madame Bovary)
Term
Hawthorne, Nathaniel
Definition
(1804-1864)
American transcendentalist author who set many of his stories against the somber background of Puritan New England
(The Scarlet Letter, in which Hester Pryne is the adultress, Author Dimmesdale the adulterer, and Roger Chillingsworth the husband; The House of Seven Gable)
Term
Ibsen, Henrik
Definition
(1828-1906)
Norwegian playwright and forerunner of the Expressionist movement and considered the father of modern realistic drama
(A Doll's House, Hedda Gabler)
Term
Kafka, Franz
Definition
(1883-1924)
Born in Prague to middle-class German-speaking Jewish family
Major existentialist novelist
(The Metamorphosis, The Castle)
Term
Keats, John
Definition
(1795-1821)
English romantic poet
Most versatile of the Romantics
(Endymion, Ode to a Nightingale, Ode on a Grecian Urn, La Belle Dame sans Merci, Hyperion)
Term
Lawrence, D.H.
Definition
(1885-1930)
English novelist
(Lady Chatterly's Lover, The Rainbow, Sons and Lovers)
Term
Melville, Herman
Definition
(1819-1891)
American transcendentalist novelist
(Moby-Dick, in which Ismael narrates the story of Captain Ahab's search for a white whale; Billy Budd; Typee)
Term
Poe, Edgar Allan
Definition
(1809-1849)
American transcendentalist poet, critic and short-story writer who dealt with macabre issues of insanity and horror; the father of modern mystery and detective fiction.
(Fall of the House of Ushers, The Tell-Tale Heart, The Raven, The Murders in the Rue Morgue)
Term
Rossetti, Christina
Definition
(1830-1894)
English poet
(Goblin Market)
Term
Shelley, Mary
Definition
(1797-1851)
Romantic novelist whose liberal social and political views underscore her work, sister to Percy Shelley
(Frankenstein, The Last Man)
Term
Shelley, Percy Bysshe
Definition
(1792-1822)
English romantic poet who mastered metaphor and metrical form, brother to Mary Shelley
(Adonais, Prometheus Unbound, Ode to the West Wind)
Term
Stowe, Harriet Beecher
Definition
(1811-1896)
American novelist, wrote most important novel of the abolitionist movement
(Uncle Tom's Cabin)
Term
Thoreau, Henry David
Definition
(1818-1848)
American transcendentalist philosopher and writer and social theorist
(Walden)
Term
Tolstoy, Leo Nikolayevich
Definition
(1828-1910)
Major Russian novelist
(War and Peace, Anna Karenina)
Term
Twain, Mark
(Samuel Clemens)
Definition
(1835-1910)
American novelist, essayist, and satirist
(Huckleberry Finn, Tom Sawyer, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court)
Term
Whitman, Walt
Definition
(1819-1892)
American poet, his poems sing the praise of America and democracy
(Leaves of Grass, "O Captain! My Captain!" a poem on Lincoln's death)
Term
Wilde, Oscar
Definition
(1854-1900)
Irish playwright, novelist, dramatist, and social critic, attacked Victorian narrow-mindedness and complacency
(The Picture of Dorian Gray, The Importance of Being Earnest)
Term
Wordsworth, William
Definition
(1770-1850)
English romantic poet who broke with neoclassical theory in much of his nature poetry
(The Prelude, Lyrical Ballads)
Term
Baldwin, James
Definition
(1924-1987)
American poet and novelist
(Go Tell It on the Mountain, The Fire Next Time)
Term
Beckett, Samuel
Definition
(1906-1989)
Irish-born French playwright and novelist; themes include existentialism and absurdity
(Waiting for Godot, Happy Day, Malloy)
Term
Bishop, Elizabeth
Definition
(1911-1979)
American poet
(Collected Works)
Term
Cummings, E.E.
Definition
(1894-1962)
Known for non-traditional forms of poetry
(Tulips and Chimneys)
Term
Eliot, T.S.
Definition
(1888-1965)
English Christian poet and theorist
(The Waste Land, Prufrock and Other Observations, Murder in the Cathedral)
Term
Faulkner, William
Definition
(1897-1962)
American novelist; wrote about the South; know for his use of stream of consciousness
(The Sound and the Fury, As I Lay Dying, Absalom, Absalom!
Term
Frost, Robert
Definition
(1874-1963)
American poet
(Birches, The Road Not Taken, Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening, Mending Wall, After Apple-Picking)
Term
Ginsberg, Allen
Definition
(1926-1997)
American Beat poet
(Howl)
Term
metrical foot
Definition
¯ = stressed/long syllable
˘ = unstressed/short syllable (macron and breve notation)

Disyllables
˘ ˘ pyrrhus, dibrach
˘ ¯ iamb
¯ ˘ trochee, choree (or choreus)
¯ ¯ spondee

Trisyllables
˘ ˘ ˘ tribrach
¯ ˘ ˘ dactyl
˘ ¯ ˘ amphibrach
˘ ˘ ¯ anapest, antidactylus
˘ ¯ ¯ bacchius
¯ ¯ ˘ antibacchius
¯ ˘ ¯ cretic, amphimacer
¯ ¯ ¯ molossus
Term
James, Henry
Definition
(1843-1916)
American author, known for his subtle psychological character studies.
(The Turn of the Screw, The Ambassadors, Daisy Miller, Washington Square, The Portrait of a Lady)

Brother William James was a philosopher.
Supporting users have an ad free experience!