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LITERATURE I REALISM AND MODERNISM NOVEL GROUP 4 Lecturer : Mrs. Rani Arranged by : Dian Andriyani : Insan Akbar : Mufadilla Santy : Reni Yunita Siregar : Reni Anggraeni

REALISM AND MODERNISM NOVEL

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Page 1: REALISM AND MODERNISM NOVEL

LITERATURE I

REALISM AND MODERNISM NOVEL

GROUP 4Lecturer : Mrs. RaniArranged by : Dian Andriyani

: Insan Akbar: Mufadilla Santy: Reni Yunita Siregar: Reni Anggraeni

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Realism Novel

Realism is a literary movement that occurred during 1865-1900. It focused on giving a view of what was occurring at that time, and on

providing insight into what was really going on in society.

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Realism Sets Itself

At work to consider characters and events which are apparently the most ordinary and uninteresting, in order to extract from these their full value and true meaning. It would apprehend in all particulars the connection between the familiar and the extraordinary, and the seen and unseen of human nature.

From The Novel and Its Future By: George Parsons Lathrop

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How did Realism come to be?

As the United States grew rapidly after the Civil War, the increasing rates of democracy and literacy, the rapid growth in industrialism and urbanization, an expanding population base

due to immigration, and a relative rise in middle-class affluence provided a fertile literary environment for readers interested in

understanding these rapid shifts in culture.” - (Campless)

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Characteristics1. Reaction against Romanticism (A literary movement that focused around feeling, imagination, and intuition).2. Realism is situated with truth and depicted life and society as they were. 3. Focuses mainly on present issues and truths from now rather than the past or fantasy. 4. Focus is on the characters rather than the actual plot The class of the characters are important and usually portray the middle or lower class.5. Events that occur in the story are predictable because of the lack of over dramatization and fantasy.6. Diction is natural (talking, conversational).

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Opposing Romanticism

1. Springing from a developed outrage to romanticism, realism is known as the complete opposite, and focuses on ongoing social issues that should not be disregarded.

2. Realism rejects romantic themes of artificiality and ignorance, and instead embraces raw life as something beautiful and art worthy.

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Realism vs Romanticism

REALISM

TrulyUglyObjective realFocuses on directing the attention to the problems at hand

ROMANTICISM

EmotionImaginationNationalismEscape from reality

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THE MODERN

NOVEL

Dr M. Fahmy Raiyah

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THE NOVEL

DEFINITIONThe novel is a long fictional prose narrative.

The novel is differentiated from the novella and theshort story in terms of length.

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THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE NOVEL

Antecedents: There are many possible antecedents of the novel, in Elizabethan prose fiction and the French heroic romance but probably Miguel Cervantes’s Don Quixote is considered by many critics as the closest in form to the novel as known in the modern times.

The 18th century: The novel, as we know it today, starts in Britain in the 18th century at the hands of such writers as Samuel Richardson, Henry Fielding and Daniel Defoe. Pamela, (I, 1740; II, 1741) by Samuel Richardson, is usually considered the first English novel.

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The Romantic Novel: During the first half of 19th century, the novel reflected the romantic spirit of the age, which was characterized by the return to nature and which valued the imagination over reason and emotion over intellect. The Gothic novel was one form of the romantic novel; it presented horror and the supernatural.

Major romantic novels include Charlotte Bronte’s (1816-55) Jane Eyre (1847) and Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights (1847).

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The Victorian Novel: The Victorian Age is marked roughly by the reign of Queen Victoria of England from 1837-1901. The novel was the dominant genre in the Victorian period. The Victorian novel is characterized by its realism and its treatment of the social issues of that period. Charles Dickens (1812-1870) created a host of unforgettable characters in such novels as Oliver Twist, Great Expectations, David Copperfield, Hard Times, and A Tale of Two Cities. William Thackeray's (1811-1863) most famous work is Vanity Fair. George Eliot's (1819–80) most important works are Middlemarch, The Mill on the Floss and Adam Bede. The major novelist of the later part of the period was Thomas Hardy (1840-1928), whose best works include Tess of the D'Urbervilles, Far from the Madding Crowd, and Jude the Obscure.

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THE MODERN NOVEL

The modern novel is the novel written in the modern times-the twentieth century and the end of the nineteenth century. It necessarily reflects the aspirations, concerns, fears, ways of thinking, as well as the artistic and literary taste of the modern era. The modern scientific discoveries, the new technologies, the social and political ideologies, the ideas and the beliefs, and people’s different conceptions about of themselves and about the universe at large find their way into the modern novels.

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CHARACTERISTICS OF THE MODERN NOVEL

The modern novel breaks away with many of the literary conventions of the novel written in the preceding period.

The modern novel is realistic. It attempts at a presenting a frank image of the world and all aspects of the human experience. But the modern novel abandons the realism of the nineteenth century, in which only the sordid aspects of life are depicted.

The modern novel is more subjective, presenting the world from the perspective of the individual character, reflecting his or her biases or distorted vision. A relativistic perception of reality replaces the objective views of the whole community.

Morality is relative.

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The modern novel is psychological. Under the influence of the modern theories of Sigmund Freud, the modern novel tends to reveal the hidden inner motives behind people’s actions.

The technique of the stream of consciousness reflects the character’s jumbled flow of perceptions, memories and feelings.

A break with the linear, developmental, cause-and-effect presentation of the 'reality‘ and with the chronological order of the plot mark a large number of modern novels.

The impact of the two world wars has left its mark on modern art and literature. A deep sense of pessimism has replaced the nineteenth-century optimism.

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THANK YOU AND HAVE A NICE DAY