eng 210
Terms
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1st reform bill
- 1832
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abolition of slavery in Brit. colonies
- 1807
- ballad
-
song that tells a story, transmitted orally-or a written poem that imitates the structure and style of an oral ballad
- ballad stanza
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stanza is 4 lines long, usually alternating tetrameter and trimeter ABAB or ABCB
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blank verse
- unrhymed lines of iambic pentanomer
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Britain in WW2
- 1941
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closet drama
- play written to be read never to be written to be presented on a stage
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domestic ideology
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men and women occupy different spheres of life
men-public life, politics, business
women- angel in the home
ACTIONS-hide legal power over women, disguise economic exploitation
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dramatic monologue
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speaker who is clearly not the poet interacts w/ specific listeners at a specific moment of crisis or decision
- fancy
- deliberate game of mix and match fixates and definite things are combined w/o changing process
- formal realism
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deal with form and how story is told
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free verse
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verse w/o regular meter or rhyme scheme
- hyperreality
- representation that is no longer a representation of anything outside itself
- ideology
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A) Decisions based upon experience
B)Way of representing the world that misrepresents social relationships in order to disguise an underlying conflict
- indain mutiny/first war of independence
- 1857
- lyric ballad
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adressses reader, tells a story, meant to be heard
- orientalism
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-knowledge about the orient
-political justification for empire
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Pakistan/India Independence
- 1947
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Passenger Service on Stockton and Darlington
- 1825
- primary imagination
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power at work in all perceptions fusing and combining sensations to createa a meaningful world
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romantic symbol
- symbol and what is being symbolized to fuse together as the same thing
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secondary imagination
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what good artists use, depends on act of will, but is like the primary imagination b/c fuses and combines many different elements
- sensibility
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natural capacity for feelings
baurbauld- humanity, liberty, justice
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stream of concious
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written equivalent of writer's thought process
- utilitarianism
- not motives, results and how much they can be used to promote the greater good- total more important than individual