EN119 Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Caspar David Friedrich, Henry Fuseli, Horatii
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(cid:862)dia(cid:271)oli(cid:272)al,(cid:863) (cid:862)fie(cid:374)d,(cid:863) (cid:862)i(cid:373)p of ata(cid:374),(cid:863) (cid:862)e(cid:455)e are (cid:272)louded (cid:449)i(cid:374)do(cid:449)s of hell(cid:863) A term common applied to a trend or development in literature. (cid:373)o(cid:448)e(cid:373)e(cid:374)ts refer to a(cid:374) era or e(cid:454)te(cid:374)ded (cid:862)period(cid:863) that is defined by changing belief systems, values, philosophical outlooks and intellectual attitudes the spirit of an era. Movements are usually social and intellectual, and they in turn influence literary and other artistic forms of expression, such as music and architecture, literature and visual art. To be classified as a literary movement, many writers would have to subscribe to its central tenets, and employ certain techniques and aesthetic principles in their works. A literary movement in the late 18th and early 19th century. Desire to break free from rigid rules and conventions governing art. Interested in subjective experience; the unconscious, the individual. Oath of the horatii by jaques-louis david (1784 ad) Wanderer above the sea of fog by caspar david friedrich (1818 ad)