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| | BUBL LINK: American literature - general |
 | | Bibliographies of American literature from the 17th to the 20th centuries covering romanticism, transcendentalism, realism, naturalism, and the Harlem renaissance. |  | | In the case of English literature, topics include romance, middle ages, renaissance and reformation, prose and poetry, drama, cavalier and puritan, the age of Dryden, from Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift, the age of Johnson, the French revolution, the romantic revival, and the Victorian age. |  | | Major subject headings include English language and literature, new literatures in English, American language and literature, and Celtic language and literature. |
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http://bubl.ac.uk/link/a/americanliterature-general.htm
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| | MSN Encarta - Search Results - Naturalism (literature) |
 | | French Literature : The 19th Century: Naturalism |  | | Search for books about your topic, "Naturalism (literature)" |  | | Naturalism (literature), in literature, the theory that literary composition should be based on an objective, empirical presentation of human beings.... |
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http://encarta.msn.com/Naturalism_(literature).html
(166 words)
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| | BUBL LINK: American literature - general |
 | | Bibliographies of American literature from the 17th to the 20th centuries covering romanticism, transcendentalism, realism, naturalism, and the Harlem renaissance. |  | | In the case of English literature, topics include romance, middle ages, renaissance and reformation, prose and poetry, drama, cavalier and puritan, the age of Dryden, from Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift, the age of Johnson, the French revolution, the romantic revival, and the Victorian age. |  | | Major subject headings include English language and literature, new literatures in English, American language and literature, and Celtic language and literature. |
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http://bubl.ac.uk/link/a/americanliterature-general.htm
(1022 words)
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| | Amer_Realism |
 | | Naturalism was a literary movement of the late nineteenth century that yielded influence on the twentieth. |  | | With regard to contemporary literature, realism is so pervasive that it seems natural and unimportant. |  | | After all, realistic literature reflected more than mere external reality. |
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http://ncteamericancollection.org/amer_realism.htm
(1488 words)
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| | Sample Chapter for Lye, C.: America's Asia: Racial Form and American Literature, 1893-1945. |
 | | On the one hand, the literature of naturalism is attracted to representing the socially unrepresented. |  | | They also happen to be questions that centrally preoccupy American literary naturalism, whose well-known subordination of individual agency to the determinations of force reflects its interest in the effects of commodification at a time of heightened public discussion about the growth of monopoly power. |  | | By focusing on American literature of the early twentieth century to forge these links, it also stakes a claim for how cultural study enriches historical understanding. |
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http://www.pupress.princeton.edu/chapters/i7895.html
(4139 words)
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| | BUBL LINK: American literature - general |
 | | Bibliographies of American literature from the 17th to the 20th centuries covering romanticism, transcendentalism, realism, naturalism, and the Harlem renaissance. |  | | In the case of English literature, topics include romance, middle ages, renaissance and reformation, prose and poetry, drama, cavalier and puritan, the age of Dryden, from Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift, the age of Johnson, the French revolution, the romantic revival, and the Victorian age. |  | | Major subject headings include English language and literature, new literatures in English, American language and literature, and Celtic language and literature. |
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http://bubl.ac.uk/link/a/americanliterature-general.htm
(4139 words)
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| | DUTCH LITERATURE - LoveToKnow Article on DUTCH LITERATURE |
 | | Roemer Visscher stands at the threshold of the new Renaissance literature, himself practising the faded arts of the rhetoricians, but pointing by his counsel and his conversation to the naturalism of the great period. |  | | Dutch literature presented features of remarkable interest between 1882 and 1888, but since that time the general heightening of the average of merit, the abandonment of the old dry conventions, and a recognition of the artistic value of words and forms, are more evident to a foreign observer than any very important single expression. |  | | The recent literature of Holland presents the interesting phenomenon of an aesthetic revolution, carefully and cleverly planned, crowned with unanticipated success, and dying away in a languor encouraged b~y the complete ~ absence of organized resistance. |
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http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/D/DU/DUTCH_LITERATURE.htm
(13380 words)
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| | TAD INTRODUCTION TO GRADE 11 |
 | | Literature from 1865 to 1915 -- Realism and Naturalism -- authors such as Mark Twain, Booker T. Washington, Willa Cather, Edwin Arlington Robinson, William Jennings Bryan. |  | | Literature from 1865 to 1915 -- Realism and Naturalism -- authors such as Mark Twain, Booker T. Washington, Willa Cather, Edwin Arlington Robinson, William Jennings Bryan |  | | Literature from 1946 to the present -- Contemporary Literature -- authors such as Arthur Miller, Martin Luther King, Bernard Malamud, Anne Tyler, Larry McMurtry |
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http://www.educationnews.org/tad_introduction_to_grade_11.htm
(13380 words)
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| | American Renaissance (from American literature) -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | A revolt against literary romanticism, naturalism developed in France in the 1880s and began to appear in American literature just before the turn of the 20th century. |  | | More results on "American Renaissance (from American literature)" when you join. |  | | Thus literature became deeply rooted in the history of the countries of Latin America. |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?tocId=42257
(13380 words)
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| | DUTCH LITERATURE - LoveToKnow Article on DUTCH LITERATURE |
 | | Roemer Visscher stands at the threshold of the new Renaissance literature, himself practising the faded arts of the rhetoricians, but pointing by his counsel and his conversation to the naturalism of the great period. |  | | Dutch literature presented features of remarkable interest between 1882 and 1888, but since that time the general heightening of the average of merit, the abandonment of the old dry conventions, and a recognition of the artistic value of words and forms, are more evident to a foreign observer than any very important single expression. |  | | The recent literature of Holland presents the interesting phenomenon of an aesthetic revolution, carefully and cleverly planned, crowned with unanticipated success, and dying away in a languor encouraged b~y the complete ~ absence of organized resistance. |
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http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/D/DU/DUTCH_LITERATURE.htm
(13380 words)
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| | ARTS LIBRARY @ YALE |
 | | The beginnings of modern art literature must be sought in 15th-centuryFlorence, that is in the milieu in which the new artistic concept of scientific naturalism pressed for a theoretical foundation. |  | | Linked to this esteem for the "learned" artist and his gift for invention is the fact that handbooks on mythology and allegory, originally intended primarily for writers, were drawn increasingly into the orbit of the literature of art. |  | | It remains our most succinct historical survey of "the literature of art," and while the author modestly regards it as "pre-historic," informed students know it rather as a classic. |
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http://www.library.yale.edu/art/ehgkl1.html
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| | Jens Bjorneboe: Literature and Reality |
 | | I believe that all development in literature is due to a new return to naturalism, but in a new way, and with new eyes. |  | | What follows from this is the idiocy of demanding of literature that it "must be" or "ought to be" this or that. |  | | We have touched on literature, or belles-lettres, as a medium for describing things which can't be presented by other means; love, death, eternity, endlessness and empty outer space. |
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http://home.att.net/~emurer/texts/lit-real.htm
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| | 9.1.r_fox.txt |
 | | The Norton anthology is organized rather straightforwardly into seven periods: The Vernacular Tradition; The Literature of Slavery and Freedom: 1746-1865; Literature of the Reconstruction to the New Negro Renaissance: 1865-1919; Harlem Renaissance: 1919-1940; Realism, Naturalism, Modernism: 1940-1960; The Black Arts Movement: 1960-1970; Literature Since 1970. |  | | "Anthologies of African-American Literature from 1845 to 1994." Callaloo 20.2 (1997): 461-481. |  | | Nobel prizes for literature awarded to Wole Soyinka (Nigeria) in 1986, Derek Walcott (St. Lucia) in 1992, and Toni Morrison (United States) in 1993 have been acknowledgements of the superlative degree of achievement of authors across the African continuum. |
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http://jefferson.village.virginia.edu/pmc/text-only/issue.998/9.1.r_fox.txt
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| | Developments in Danish literature (from Scandinavian literature) -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | A revolt against literary romanticism, naturalism developed in France in the 1880s and began to appear in American literature just before the turn of the 20th century. |  | | More results on "Developments in Danish literature (from Scandinavian literature)" when you join. |  | | More from Britannica on "Developments in Danish literature (from Scandinavian literature)"... |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-29239?tocId=29239
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| | Symbolism Summary & Essays - n/a |
 | | Symbolism also represented a reaction against Realism and Naturalism in literature, which sought to accurately represent the external world of nature and human society through descriptions of objective reality. |  | | French Symbolism affected international literature of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, in particular, inspiring the Russian symbolist movement, which developed in the 1880s. |  | | The symbolist movement in literature originated during the 1850s in France and lasted until about 1900. |
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http://www.enotes.com/symbolism
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| | Dept. of State: International Information Programs: Publications - Outline of American Literature - Key Literature Sites |
 | | An extensive compilation of American literature Web sites arranged in the categories of discussion lists, early American, romanticism, realism and naturalism, modernism, and contemporary. |  | | Links to literature and history written by and on African Americans. |  | | From Bibliomania, descriptive information on the various periods in American literature from early colonial times (1607-1700) to "modern literature," which ends for this offering in the very early 20th century. |
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http://usinfo.state.gov/products/pubs/oal/amlitweb.htm
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| | Postcolonial Indian Literature in English: Narayan, Jhabvala, Rushdie |
 | | Indian literature in English which is accessible to us in the West, still has its roots in colonial literature and the tensions between East and West. |  | | The following are three examples of the progression of post-Independence literature. |  | | Postcolonial Indian Literature in English: Narayan, Jhabvala, Rushdie |
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http://www.qub.ac.uk/en/imperial/india/postcol.htm
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| | Dept. of State: International Information Programs: Publications - Outline of American Literature - Key Literature Sites |
 | | An extensive compilation of American literature Web sites arranged in the categories of discussion lists, early American, romanticism, realism and naturalism, modernism, and contemporary. |  | | Links to literature and history written by and on African Americans. |  | | From Bibliomania, descriptive information on the various periods in American literature from early colonial times (1607-1700) to "modern literature," which ends for this offering in the very early 20th century. |
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http://usinfo.state.gov/products/pubs/oal/amlitweb.htm
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| | To: |
 | | Introduction to the major tendencies, authors and works of 18th and 19th Centuries Spanish Peninsular Literature; presentation and analysis of the main literary movements of the period, from the Enlightenment to Naturalism. |  | | Survey of the major trends and representative authors and works of Spanish literature since the end of the Franco dictatorship. |  | | In-depth study of Spanish literature published between 1936, the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, and 1975, the end of the Fanco dictatorship. |
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http://www.wvu.edu/~facultys/1000EA1.htm
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| | UMass Course Catalog: Portuguese Courses |
 | | 19th-century Portuguese literature; principal movements (romanticism, realism, naturalism, symbolism) and their manifestations in various genres. |  | | Brazilian literature from its colonial beginnings to its modern manifestations. |  | | Introduction to Brazil through contemporary film and literature. |
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http://www.umass.edu/ug_catalog/archive_2002/spanport/portcourses.html
(715 words)
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| | English (ENGL) |
 | | Specific offerings may include Colonial American literature, American Renaissance, American Realism and Naturalism, Nineteenth Century American Poetry, or Nineteenth Century Women Writers. |  | | Specific topics may include Greek and Roman Drama, Medieval European literature, the Modern European novel, Russian literature, and Japanese literature. |  | | 700-701 Graduate Studies in Language or Literature (3, 3 - As Needed) Advanced study in literature or linguistics. |
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http://www.utm.edu/admin/admin/catalog02/encours.htm
(1337 words)
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| | Tom Kovach: Teaching Interests |
 | | Graduate Courses taught: Approaches to German Studies; Intensive Reading German for the Sciences and Humanities; Introduction to Graduate Study in Languages and Literature; Intellectual History of Vienna 1890-1930; German Romanticism; Late Romanticism; German and English Romanticism; Hlderlin; The German Elegy; German Novellen of the Mid-Nineteenth Century; European and American Naturalism. |  | | An Introduction to Literary Study; Survey of German Literature 1755-1880; Introduction to Poetry in German; Intellectual Tradition of the West (101-2-3, Liberal Education and Honors), Intermediate and Advanced German Translation, Elementary and Intermediate German. |  | | Undergraduate Courses taught: Love, Decay, and Madness in Vienna 1890-1920; What is Literature? |
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http://www.u.arizona.edu/~tkovach/tkteach.html
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| | Graduate Course Cycle and Numbers |
 | | German Literature: Naturalism to the Present (since 1890) |  | | 392 SEMINAR IN GERMANIC LITERATURE AND CULTURE: Topics vary and include the study of selected movements, genres, authors, and trends in Germanic literature and culture. |  | | 192 COLLOQUIUM IN GERMANIC LITERATURE: The colloquium is usually conducted by the visiting writer-in-residence. |
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http://gmc.utexas.edu/graduate/coursenumbs.html
(120 words)
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| | Graduate Course Cycle and Numbers |
 | | German Literature: Naturalism to the Present (since 1890) |  | | 392 SEMINAR IN GERMANIC LITERATURE AND CULTURE: Topics vary and include the study of selected movements, genres, authors, and trends in Germanic literature and culture. |  | | 192 COLLOQUIUM IN GERMANIC LITERATURE: The colloquium is usually conducted by the visiting writer-in-residence. |
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http://gmc.utexas.edu/graduate/coursenumbs.html
(120 words)
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| | Scottish Literature 2: "Fiona MacLeod" (William Sharp) 1855 - 1905 |
 | | ." Aestheticism itself is in part a rejection of the other great shift in late-nineteenth century literature, towards naturalism in the novel: a realism that concentrates on the ugly, the sordid, the degraded. |  | | It is obvious that if one would write English literature, one must write in English and in the English tradition." |  | | Scottish Literature 2: "Fiona MacLeod" (William Sharp) 1855 - 1905 |
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http://www.englit.ed.ac.uk/studying/undergrd/scottish_lit_2/Handouts/ri_pharais.htm
(120 words)
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| | Eng 438/538: Modernist Movement in Literature |
 | | Eng 438/538, Section 01: Modernist Movement in Literature |  | | We will read many of these pieces as examples of "early modern" schools of literary endeavor, including Naturalism, Symbolism, Aestheticism, and Impressionism. |  | | Through a selection of the novella, the novel, drama, poetry, and prose, this course will examine the intellectual, cultural, and historical changes from the fin de siècle through the early 20th century (prior to World War I)as an introduction to the umbrella movement known as Modernism. |
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http://oregonstate.edu/dept/english/cod/winter05/eng438.htm
(221 words)
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| | British Literature: 1870–1945 |
 | | The course follows some key issues of the 1870–1945 period of the development of British literature, from the traditions of realism and naturalism of the last decades of the 19th century to various expressions of modernism in the first half of the 20th century. |  | | Oscar Wilde: The Importance of Being Earnest (a link to The Literature Network version) |  | | Lawrence: Lady Chatterley's Lover (a link to The Literature Network version) |
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http://www.phil.muni.cz/angl/englishdigit/br_lit1870.html
(239 words)
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| | Juhani Aho |
 | | Movements in French literature, realism and naturalism, had left traces in Aho's work and especially his short stories - which he called 'splinters' - showed the influence of Alphonse Daudet (1840-1897), whose Letters from My Windmill (1869) wasn't translated into Finnish until 1907. |  | | As a writer Aho was highly respected and influential Finnish politicians suggested him as the Finnish candidate for the Nobel Prize in literature. |  | | Clearly, he was the unanimous centre of attention at his table, just as Kalle was his." |
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http://kirjasto.sci.fi/jaho.htm
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| | Realism in American Literature |
 | | As Donald Pizer notes in his introduction to The Cambridge Companion to American Realism and Naturalism: Howells to London, the term "realism" is difficult to define, in part because it is used differently in European contexts than in American literature. |  | | Put rather too simplistically, one rough distinction made by critics is that realism espousing a deterministic philosophy and focusing on the lower classes is considered naturalism. |  | | Campbell, Donna M. "Realism in American Literature, 1860-1890." Literary Movements. |
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http://www.wsu.edu/~campbelld/amlit/realism.htm
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| | LIFEPAC Gold American Literature Curriculum |
 | | Periods covered include Early American Literature (1600-1800), The Growth of a Nation (1800-1840), The American Renaissance (1840-1855), War and Reconciliation (1855-1865), Realism and Naturalism (1865-1915), The Modern Age (1915-1946), and From Modern to Postmodern (1946-present). |  | | The LIFEPAC Gold American Literature Complete Boxed Set includes 5 full-color LIFEPAC student worktexts, and a complete Teacher's Guide including a synopsis of every LIFEPAC worktext, complete answer keys and text keys, and tips on managing your home school. |  | | The student will appreciate literature as a reflection of the thought and life of the times. |
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http://www.homeschooldiscount.com/hc2/AO_american_lit.htm
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