Renaissance

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Renaissance is a French word which means ‘rebirth’, ‘revival’ or ‘reawakening’. The Renaissance may be described or defined as the new spirit which, from a variety of causes, appeared in man’s outlook in the latter part of the Middle Ages. The age of Queen Elizabeth is known as the age of Renaissance. Renaissance means rebirth. It conveys the idea that for centuries, European culture had been dead and then by some means had rediscovered life. It led to the rediscovery of Greek and roman literature. This reawakening of classical learning came to Italy in the 14th century. The Renaissance was essentially a European movement which had its birth in Italy and from there spread to Germany, France and England.
Thus, the Renaissance is a great cataclysm which affected the European culture and literature of the fifteenth and sixteenth century. Though it started as a movement, it actually turned out to be a mighty spirit that enveloped the western world. Though the spirit of renaissance invaded all countries in Europe, it did not produce similar results everywhere. For example, in France, the spirit reflected in the plastic arts; in Italy, in painting and music; in Germany in religion and in England in literature. The spirit of Renaissance reached the shores of England not only late but through Italy and France. Moreover the effects and results were too glorious to describe. Continue reading

Reformation

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The writers of the 17th century generally worked under the influence of the Renaissance and Reformation and Milton was no exception to it. In Milton’s poetry, there is a nice fusion of the elements upheld by the Renaissance and the Reformation.
Reformation was a religious movement and aimed at the cultivation of religious, spiritual and moral values. The spirit of Reformation includes all that Hebraism stands for viz. spiritual discipline, moral austerity and the other-worldly outlook. The writers working under the influence of Reformation, championed theological dogmas rather than humanistic culture. They aimed at self-purification rather than the cultivation of art or music. They were opposed to all kinds of gay frivolities and artistic pursuits. They were puritans to whom religion and morality were the preeminent concerns. And they looked askance at learning or classical matters and the adorers of Art and Beauty. They never practiced literature for the sake of art or culture. These writers influenced by the Reformation were moralists, preachers and reformers rather than humanists or artists. Continue reading