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6. Modern Age Twentieth Century English Literature | MCQ | Questions-Answers | Short Notes | NEB Grade XI | Major English | A Historical Survey of English Language and Literature

 



6. Modern Age Twentieth Century English Literature | 
A Historical Survey of English Language and Literature

 

 

 

Exercises

Group A

 

A. Multiple Choice Questions

Tick (√) the best answer.

 

1. Virginia Woolf wrote the famous novel.................

a) To the Lighthouse                    

b) Adam Bede

c) The Mayor of Casterbridge               

d) The Grass is Singing

 

2. George Orwell's 'Nineteen Eighty-Four' is a .................fiction.

a) religious            

b) science               

c) detective            

d) traditional

 

3. D. H. Lawrence's novels are influenced by...........theories of Sigmund Freud.

a) natural               

b) universal            

c) social         

d) psychological

 

4. The Edwardian Period begins in 1901 and extends to around............

a) 1900

b) 1910

c) 1914

d) 1920

 

5. The Modern Period begins in...............and extends up to now.

a) 1914

b) 1915

c) 1916

d) 1917

 

6. ..........................is an aesthetic movement which focuses on visual arts, music, literature and drama, which rejected the old Victorian standards of arts.

a) Restoration

b) Renaissance

c) Modernism

d) Jacobean Age

 

7. The major figures regarded as the founders of the Twentieth Century Modernism are...........................

a) Woolf, Joyce, Eliot, Kafka

b) Stevens, Proust, Mallarme, Charles

c) Pound, Charles, Kafka, Rike

d) Charles, Proust, Mallarme, Pound

 

8. Twentieth century literature has given birth to................ideas in the field of literature.

a) diverse

b) traditional

c) conservative

d) scientific

 

9. Writers such as G. B. Shaw and John Galsworthy attacked the social and political.................of England.

a) nepotism

b) idealism

c) corruption

d) benefit

 

10. One of the features of modernism is the development of...................................

a) comedy of manner

b) science fiction

c) interludes

d) monarchy

 

11. The concept of 'scientific romance' can be found in the novels of........................who achieved the remarkable success of his time.

a) Julius Verne

b) G. B. Shaw

c) John Galsworthy

d) Christopher Fry

 

12. The drama in the modernist period mainly passed through.........................successive stages.

a) five

b) two

c) four

d) three

 

13. The dramas were written in the twentieth century follow the principle of..........................and deal with the real problems of life using a realistic technique.

a) behaviorism

b) naturalism

c) aesthetic

d) fictions

 

13. The major features of modern literature are.................

a) Realism, Impressionism, absurdum, behaviorism

b) Realism, behaviorism, Impressionism, absurdum

c) Realism, Impressionism, Surrealism, Absurdism

d) Realism, Impressionism, Surrealism, fictions

 

14. .............................tried to bring the feeling of nothingness in the literature reflecting the conditions of contemporary life: like war, god, and humankind.

a) Surrealism

b) Impressionism

c) Realism

d) Absurdism

 

15. ...............................focused on liberating the subconscious mind, see connections overlooked by the logical mind, deny the supreme authority of rationality and so, portrays the objects.

a) Surrealism

b) Impressionism

c) Realism

d) Absurdism

 

16. ........................emphasize the role of individual perception and explore the nature of the conscious and subconscious mind.

a) Surrealism

b) Impressionism

c) Realism

d) Absurdism

 

17. Modernism focused on the exploration of external objects and events as common or middle-class people feel in everyday life, which is called...................

a) Surrealism

b) Impressionism

c) Realism

d) Absurdism

 

18. The novels and the novelists of this period can be broadly classified into four categories:....................

a) Women Novelists, Detective Novelists, Science Fictions, and Other novelists.

b) Women Novelists, Detective Novelists, Science Fictions, and gothic novelists.

c) Women Novelists, Detective Novelists, Science Fictions, and terror novelists.

d) Women Novelists, Detective Novelists, Science Fictions, and ghost novelists.

 

19. .........................presents a family holiday in an island. In this novel, the youngest son James Ramsay, has an inordinate desire to go by boat to the lighthouse but is prevented by his father.

a) The Waves

b) Orlando

c) Mrs. Dalloway

d) To the Lighthouse

 

20. ..........................is a novel written on the events of a single day.

a) The Waves

b) Orlando

c) Mrs. Dalloway

d) To the Lighthouse

 

21. ...........................presents a main character who begins as a man in the 16th century and ends as a woman in 1928, still only thirty six years old.

a) The Waves

b) Orlando

c) Mrs. Dalloway

d) To the Lighthouse

 

22. ............................is about the lives of six characters; three boys and three girls and records the impressions of their thoughts from school life to the old age and death.

a) The Waves

b) Orlando

c) Mrs. Dalloway

d) To the Lighthouse

 

23. ....................major novels are: 'The Bell', 'A Severed Head', 'Under the Net' and 'The Black Prince'.

a) Virginia Woolf's

b) Iris Murdoch's

c) Margaret Drabble's

 

d) Doris Lessing's

 

24. ......................is set in Southern Africa. It explores the mind of the wife of a poor white farmer and her difficulties that lead to her destruction.

a) The Grass is Singing

b) Children of Violence

c) The Golden Notebook

d) The Milestone

 

25. .........................is about Martha Quest who tries to isolate herself from the old ideas of the society, politics and religion.

a) The Grass is Singing

b) Children of Violence

c) The Golden Notebook

d) The Milestone

 

26. .....................is a powerful attempt to write honestly about women's lives and beliefs; and the pressures that political and social events in the 20th century life and society put on them.

a) The Grass is Singing

b) Children of Violence

c) The Golden Notebook

d) The Milestone

 

27. Margaret Drabble's major novels are.............................

a) The Ice Age

b) The Golden Notebook

c) The Waterfall

d) all of them

 

28. ...........................is about a girl who has avoided any deep feelings or close relationships with other people.

a) The Ice Age

b) The Golden Notebook

c) The Waterfall

d) The Milestone

 

29. ........................is about a poetess, who is unable at the beginning of the novel to connect body and mind.

a) The Ice Age

b) The Golden Notebook

c) The Waterfall

d) The Milestone

 

30. ......................presents a wider picture of an unhappy world in which the coldness of the spirit and the feelings that come when people only live in one part of their personalities are shown as dangers to the whole society.

a) The Ice Age

b) The Golden Notebook

c) The Waterfall

d) The Milestone

 

 

31. Agatha Christie's famous detective novel is....................

a) The Spy Who Came in from the Cold

b) The detective

c) The Mysterious Affair of Styles

d) Sherlock Holmes

 

32. ......................is an immortal character in English literature written by Arthur Conan Doyle.

a) The Spy Who Came in from the Cold

b) The detective

c) The Mysterious Affair of Styles

d) Sherlock Holmes

 

33. Early science fiction falls into three main categories:.............

a) Pessimistic View, Science Fiction, Neutral View

b) Pessimistic View, Neutral View, Optimistic View

c) Neutral View, Science Fiction, Optimistic View

d) Science Fiction, Neutral View, Pessimistic View

 

34. ...............famous science novel is 'The Four-Gated City'.

a) Doris Lessing

b) H. G. Wells

c) George Orwell

d) Arthur Clarke

 

35. The Time Machine, The War to the War, The Invisible Man, The War of the Worlds, and The First Men in the Moon are................famous science fiction novels.

a) Doris Lessing's

b) H. G. Wells's

c) George Orwell's

d) Arthur Clarke's

 

36. ..........................'Nineteen Eighty-Four' is also a science fiction in which he shows how the advancement of all watching T.V would help to limit the freedom of people.

a) Doris Lessing's

b) H. G. Wells's

c) George Orwell's

d) Arthur Clarke's

 

37. In.....................novel, 'The City and the Stars', the struggle between man and the machine is shown.

a) Doris Lessing's

b) H. G. Wells's

c) George Orwell's

d) Arthur Clarke's

 

38. ....................novel '2001: A Space Odyssey' takes up the subject of exploration in space.

a) Doris Lessing's

b) H. G. Wells's

c) George Orwell's

d) Arthur Clarke's

 

39. ......................novel 'The Jungle Book' is about a boy who is raised by wolves. He lives in the remote areas of India but later leaves the forest to become a man.

a) Doris Lessing's

b) Rudyard Kipling's

c) George Orwell's

d) E. M. Forster's

 

40. ...................famous novels are: A Passage to India, Howard's Ends, The Longest Journey, A Room with a View and The Machine Stops.

a) Doris Lessing's

b) Rudyard Kipling's

c) George Orwell's

d) E. M. Forster's

 

41. The novel, ........................shows the conflict between spirituality and materialism.

a) The Ice Age

b) Howard's End

c) The Waterfall

d) The Milestone

 

42. .......................major novels are: Sons and Lovers, Women in Love, The Rainbow, The White Peacock, The Lost Girl, Kangaroo, and Lady Chatterley's Lover.

a) Doris Lessing's

b) Rudyard Kipling's

c) D. H. Lawrence

d) E. M. Forster's

 

43. ........................is a thinly autobiographical novel, which ends with the death of the mother which gives relief to the son.

a) The Ice Age

b) Sons and Lovers

c) The Waterfall

d) The Rainbow

 

44. The novel...........................tells the story of a family through three couples who are of three generations.

a) Ulysses

b) Finnegan's Wake

c) The Rainbow

d) The Dead

 

45. The novel......................is about an artist named Stephen Dedalus who wants to free himself from this cruel world.

a) Ulysses

b) Finnegan's Wake

c) The Rainbow

d) The Dead

 

46. The novel...................is about a husband who realizes that his wife is in love with another man.

a) Ulysses

b) Finnegan's Wake

c) The Rainbow

d) The Dead

 

47. The novel, .................is a very complex novel that combines the reality of life with the world of the dream.

a) Ulysses

b) Finnegan's Wake

c) The Rainbow

d) The Dead

 

48. .........................describes a future world where word and action are seen and controlled by the government. The government has developed a kind of television that can watch the people in their homes.

a) Ulysses

b) Finnegan's Wake

c) Nineteen Eighty-Four

d) The Dead

 

49. ....................is a political allegory, which tells the story of a political revolution that has gone wrong.

a) Ulysses

b) Animal Farm

c) Nineteen Eighty-Four

d) The Dead

 

50. George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950) was born in..................

a) England

b) Ireland

c) America

d) Russia

 

51. ..........................shows that a woman's real aim in life is to find the man that nature tells her is the right father for her children.

a) Man and Superman

b) The Apple Cart

c) The Devil's Disciple

d) Major Barbara

 

52. ......................shows that he was in favour of monarchy rather than democratic leaders.

a) Man and Superman

b) The Apple Cart

c) The Devil's Disciple

d) Major Barbara

 

53. In this play, ..........................the man whom conventional society has thought of as evil and selfish is willing to sacrifice himself for others, while the minister of religion discovers that he should have been a soldier.

a) Man and Superman

b) The Apple Cart

c) The Devil's Disciple

d) Major Barbara


54. In this play, ......................the heroine, a woman of strong personality and ideals, exchanges her belief in Christianity for that in the Life Force.

a) Man and Superman

b) The Apple Cart

c) The Devil's Disciple

d) Major Barbara

 

55. In this novel, ........................, the novelist presents a soldier as a sympathetic figure who does not want to fight.

a) Man and Superman

b) Arms and the Man

c) The Devil's Disciple

d) Major Barbara

 

56. ..........................criticizes the social and political evils of the society and shows great sympathy towards poor and helpless people. His major plays are: Strife and Justice

a) Oscar Wilde

b) George Bernard Shaw

c) John Galsworthy

d) T. S. Eliot

 

57. In this play, ......................, the writer shows how the strike troubles the poor and working class people.

a) Man and Superman

b) Strife

c) The Devil's Disciple

d) Justice

 

58. ......................is about a poor man who signs a false cheque and later is sent to jail by the judge. Hopelessly, he kills himself.

a) Man and Superman

b) Strife

c) The Devil's Disciple

d) Justice

 

 

59. ..................famous plays are: Lady Windermere's Fan, An Ideal Husband, A Lady of No Importance, The Duchess of Padua, The Importance of Being Earnest, and Vera.

a) John Galsworthy's

b) George Bernard Shaw's

c) Oscar Wilde's

d) T. S. Eliot's

 

60. ......................plays are: The Rock, Murder in the Cathedral, The Family Reunion, The Cocktail Party, The Confidential Clerk, and The Elder Statesman.

a) John Galsworthy's

b) George Bernard Shaw's

c) Oscar Wilde's

d) T. S. Eliot's

 

61. ......................plays are: 'Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead', 'Travesties'.

a) Tom Stoppard's

b) George Bernard Shaw's

c) Oscar Wilde's

d) T. S. Eliot's

 

62. John Millington (JM) Synge (1871-1909), who is known as the dramatist of the life of..........................

a) urban people

b) aristocratic people

c) ordinary people

d) modern people

 

63. ..........................reflects adventurous youth with a hint of a time to come when youth is fled and man is left with only memories to comfort.

a) Riders to the Sea

b) The Play Boy of the Western World

c) Deirdre of Sorrows

d) Man and Superman

 

64. The best known Synge play, .............................is of Christine Mahon who left his father dead in the field and his relations with villagers and the landlord's daughter.

a) Riders to the Sea

b) The Play Boy of the Western World

c) Deirdre of Sorrows

d) Man and Superman

 

65. ......................is a one-act tragedy which talks about a family's destruction and is deeply impressive.

a) Riders to the Sea

b) The Play Boy of the Western World

c) Deirdre of Sorrows

d) Man and Superman

 

 

66. The major plays of Synge include:........................

a) Riders to the Sea, Deirdre of Sorrows, The Playboy of the Western World

b) Man and Superman, Deirdre of Sorrows, and Riders to the Sea

c) Deirdre of Sorrows, Man and Superman and Riders to the Sea

d) Deirdre of Sorrows, The Playboy of the Western World and Man and Superman

 

67. The play, .......................shows two tramps, Vladimir and Estragon, waiting for Godot whom they haven't known.

a) Riders to the Sea

b) Waiting for Godot

c) Deirdre of Sorrows

d) Man and Superman

 

68. ...............................has only one character, an old man sitting in a closed room with the tape-recorder in which he hears his previous recordings and compares to his present situation.

a) Riders to the Sea

b) The Play Boy of the Western World

c) Deirdre of Sorrows

d) Waiting for Godot

 

69. ..................................is considered as the grandmaster of a theatre of the absurd.

a) Oscar Wilde

b) George Bernard Shaw

c) Samuel Beckett

d) T. S. Eliot

 

70. The main theme of.............................is that no one takes care of others. There are only three characters and each character is empty. Their words and actions do not match.

a) The Caretaker

b) No Man's Land

c) The Birthday Party

d) Deirdre of Sorrows

 

71. .............................shows the meeting of two old men who had known each other when they were young. One is now rich and successful while the other man is in many ways a failure.

a) The Caretaker

b) No Man's Land

c) The Birthday Party

d) Deirdre of Sorrows

 

72. .............................is about guilt and transgression.

a) The Caretaker

b) No Man's Land

c) The Birthday Party

d) Deirdre of Sorrows

 

73. Harold Pinter's best known plays are....................

a) The Caretaker, No Man's Land, Deirdre of Sorrows

b) The Caretaker, Deirdre of Sorrows, The Birthday Party

c) The Caretaker, No Man's Land, The Birthday Party

d) Deirdre of Sorrows, No Man's Land, The Birthday Party

 

74. .......................(1852-1932) is an Irish writer and playwright who focused on the translation of Irish legends.

a) Oscar Wilde

b) Augusta Lady Gregory

c) Samuel Beckett

d) T. S. Eliot

 

75. ..........................strange realistic fantasies, The Golden Apple and The Dragons were published in 1916 and 1920.

a) John Galsworthy's

b) George Bernard Shaw's

c) Oscar Wilde's

d) Augusta Lady Gregory's

 

76. The use of.......................poetry is another trend used in the Twentieth Century.

a) audio

b) picture

c) visual

d) wild

 

77. W. B. Yeats and T. S. Eliot are considered as a...............literary genius.

a) child

b) versatile

c) novice

d) mature

 

78. W.B. Yeats.......................was an Irish poet.

a) (1863-1937)

b) (1864-1938)

c) (1865-1939)

d) (1866-1940)

 

79. His major poems are......................

a) An Irish Airman Foresees His Death, Sailing to Byzantium, The Caretaker

b) The Caretaker, Sailing to Byzantium, An Irish Airman Foresees His Death

c) The Second Coming, The Caretaker, Sailing to Byzantium

d) An Irish Airman Foresees His Death, The Second Coming, Sailing to Byzantium

 

80. In the poem, ........................the Airman knows that he will die in the war which won't leave any positive effect for his country.

a) An Irish Airman Foresees His Death

b) The Second Coming

c) Sailing to Byzantium

d) The Birthday Party

 

81. In.........................., he thought, after every 2000 years, the earth gets destroyed and a new era begins.

a) An Irish Airman Foresees His Death

b) The Second Coming

c) Sailing to Byzantium

d) The Birthday Party

 

82. The theme of.............................is that art never dies. Rather it escapes old age, decays and biological change takes place.

a) An Irish Airman Foresees His Death

b) The Second Coming

c) Sailing to Byzantium

d) The Birthday Party

 

83. T. S. Eliot's famous poem.......................describes the situation of Europe after the First World War.

a) An Irish Airman Foresees His Death

b) The Hollow Man

c) Sailing to Byzantium

d) The Birthday Party

 

 

84. ..........................is a long, complex poem that brings together a group of characters from different parts of the world and from different times.

a) The Waste Land

b) The Second Coming

c) Sailing to Byzantium

d) The Birthday Party

 

85. In the poem collection, .....................he claims that God is the only source that will provide wholeness and purpose to man's life.

a) An Irish Airman Foresees His Death

b) The Second Coming

c) Sailing to Byzantium

d) Four Quartets

 

86. The First World War poets are......................

a) Wilfred Owen, Isaac Rosenberg, Siegfried Sassoon, Rupert Brooke

 

 

b) Oscar Wilde, Isaac Rosenberg, Siegfried Sassoon, Rupert Brooke

c) Siegfried Sassoon, Oscar Wilde, Isaac Rosenberg, Rupert Brooke

d) Rupert Brooke, Isaac Rosenberg, Siegfried Sassoon, Oscar Wilde

 

87. In.......................poem 'Soldier', he glorifies England and says that he will be proud even if he dies for England.

a) John Galsworthy's

b) George Bernard Shaw's

c) Oscar Wilde's

d) Rupert Brooke's

 

88. In....................poem 'Everyone Sang', he writes how the end of the war brings comfort to everyone.

a) John Galsworthy's

b) Siegfried Sassoon's

c) Oscar Wilde's

d) Rupert Brooke's

 

89. ......................poem 'Anthem for the Doomed Youth' shows the waste of many young men in the First World War who died as cattle.

a) Wilfred Owen's

b) Siegfried Sassoon's

c) Oscar Wilde's

d) Rupert Brooke's

 

90. ..................................shows the brutality of war in his poem 'Returning We Hear the Larks'.

a) Wilfred Owen

b) Siegfried Sassoon

c) Isaac Rosenberg

d) Rupert Brooke


91. The poets of the Second World War are:..................

a) Roy Fuller and Keith Douglas

b) Siegfried Sassoon and Isaac Rosenberg

c) Isaac Rosenberg and Roy Fuller

d) Rupert Brooke and Isaac Rosenberg

 

92. .........................major poems are: The Dynasty (Part I 1903, II 1906, III 1908), Wessex Poems (1865-1901), Time's Laughing-Stocks (1901), Satires of Circumstance (1914), Human Shows (1935), Winter Words (1928), and Collected Poems (1932).

a) John Galsworthy's

b) Siegfried Sassoon's

c) Thomas Hardy's

d) Rupert Brooke's

 

93. ....................major works are: The Wreck of the Deutschland, Early Poetic Manuscripts and Notebooks (1989), Nature is a Heraclitean Fire, and The Comfort of the Resurrection, Sermons and Devotional Writing (1959).

a) John Galsworthy's

b) Gerard Manley Hopkins's

c) Thomas Hardy's

d) Rupert Brooke's

 

94. In.....................poem 'Museum of Fine Arts', he shows how people are indifferent towards others' sufferings.

a) John Galsworthy's

b) Gerard Manley Hopkins's

c) Thomas Hardy's

d) W. H. Auden's

 

95. Some of.......................fine poems are: "Poem in October", "Fern Hill" and "The Hunchback".

a) John Galsworthy's

b) Dylan Thomas's

c) Thomas Hardy's

d) W. H. Auden's

 

96. Some of...........................fine poems are: 'The Pike' and 'The Cave Birds'.

a) John Galsworthy's

b) Dylan Thomas's

c) Thomas Hardy's

d) Ted Hughes's

 

97. ...............................has used a single full stop at the end of his story The Last Voyage of the Ghost Ship.

a) John Galsworthy

b) G G Marquez

c) Thomas Hardy

d) Ted Hughes

 

 

 

 

 

Group B

Answer the following questions.

 

 

1. How did literature develop in the twentieth century? Discuss.

 

Twentieth century literature has given birth to diverse ideas in the field of literature. There were versatile writers during this period. An example of versatile writers is T. S. Eliot who is a poet, dramatist and critic. Each of the forms of literature (prose, poetry, drama, and fiction) equally developed in the twentieth century. The major subject matters include human life experiences and their study, misery, struggle, war effects and evolution of social evils.

 

Many absurdist writers introduced the theme of the meaninglessness of human existence. In this period, the marginal groups raised voices in their works. Writers such as G. B. Shaw and John Galsworthy attacked the social and political corruption of England. The writers like T. S. Eliot, W. H. Auden and W. B. Yeats wrote about religious awakening. These writers thought that the modern world had gone mad because a man had lost faith in religion and God.

 

Science fiction and detective novels also emerged in this period. Likewise, many women writers like Virginia Woolf, Iris Murdoch and Margaret Drabble wrote about female experiences. They made critic on male-dominated codes, norms and themes. Their main characters were women and they wrote from the female point of view. They wrote about the lives, problems and special concerns of women in the modern world. Many writers wrote psychological novels examining the deep and hidden psyche of the characters.

 

Development of science fiction

One of the features of modernism is the development of science fiction. There are several writings which explore the issues of classic and modern science. The writings of Mary Shelly on different Gothic novels share the concept of science fiction. She shared the readers with a powerful new approach to creating a thrilling sensation of wonder and fear. Hatzel was one of the writers who published a popular-science magazine for young people. The concept of 'scientific romance' can be found in the novels of Julius Verne who achieved the remarkable success of his time. He introduced 'scientific romance in literature. The introduction of graphic cartoons' was another impressive feature in literature.


New concept in the field of drama

The drama in the modernist period mainly passed through three successive stages: firstly, the phase marked with the plays of G. B. Shaw and John Galsworthy. It consisted of social drama modelled on the plays of Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen. Secondly, the middle phase of the modernist English, drama included the plays of Irish movement contributed by some elites like W. B. Yeats. In this phase, the drama consisted of the features of nationalism. Thirdly, the final phase of the modernist English drama included the plays of T. S. Eliot and Christopher Fry. The features of those dramas included poetic drama and were being inspired by Elizabethan and Jacobean drama. The dramas were written in themes like problems of marriage, justice, law, administration, tussle between capitalists and labour.


Understanding of human life

The drama in modern literature includes the feature of realism. The dramas were written in the twentieth century follow the principle of naturalism and deal with the real problems of life using a realistic technique like in the drama of Robertson Arthur Jones, Galsworthy and G. B. Shaw. The other technique found in the drama was problem play which is adopted by many dramatists in their dramas.

 

 

2. What is modernism? How did it affect literature? Justify.

 

Modernism is an aesthetic movement which focuses on visual arts, music, literature and drama. It rejected the old Victorian standards of arts. The writers in the nineteenth century wrote their creation with higher confidence regarding English society, culture and politics. There was a discussion on Realism in the late nineteenth century. This trend continued in the twentieth century.

 

The major figures of modern literature helped radically to redefine the way poetry and fiction could be. The writers in this century were affected by the changes in social trends, beliefs, political ideas and war effects. Modernism was the period of interdisciplinary and exploration of diverse ideas. Writers wrote about taboo subjects like lesbianism, gay, sex etc. openly.

 

The works of modern writers had no fixed themes. They were too open to many interpretations. Since this century faced two World Wars, the writers wrote against war, violence and barbarism too. Patriotism began to be thought as absurd and meaningless. Writers invented new forms and techniques, breaking away the established literary rules and norms. The major figures regarded as the founders of the Twentieth Century Modernism are: Woolf, Joyce, Eliot, Pound, Stevens, Proust, Mallarme, Kafka and Rike.

 

Although the twentieth-century drama is the product of the individual writer's ideas and experience, we often find some general features in common. They share some beliefs and concerns for their work. They try to show some parts of the realistic picture of the daily lives of common people on stage.

 

The most striking thing in twentieth-century English literature is the revolution in poetic taste and practice. Various movements and changes had a greater influence upon modern poetry. Though poets are often influenced by each other and some times, share a common outlook, their style and the ways of writing differ from each other. So modern poetry is essentially a private art form and it contains very much a story of individual poet.

 

Twentieth century literature has given birth to diverse ideas in the field of literature. There were versatile writers during this period. An example of versatile writers is T. S. Eliot who is a poet, dramatist and critic. Each of the forms of literature (prose, poetry, drama, and fiction) equally developed in the twentieth century. The major subject matters include human life experiences and their study, misery, struggle, war effects and evolution of social evils.

 

 

 

 

3. What are the features of 20th-century Modern literature?

 

Twentieth century literature has given birth to diverse ideas in the field of literature. There were versatile writers during this period. An example of versatile writers is T. S. Eliot who is a poet, dramatist and critic. Each of the forms of literature (prose, poetry, drama, and fiction) equally developed in the twentieth century. The major subject matters include human life experiences and their study, misery, struggle, war effects and evolution of social evils.

 

The major features of modern literature are as follows:

 

Realism: Modernism focused on the exploration of external objects and events as common or middle-class people feel in everyday life.

 

Impressionism: The writings in the modern literature focus on the psychological impression on the objects and events on the characters of their writings. They emphasize the role of individual perception and explore the nature of the conscious and subconscious mind.

 

Surrealism: This concept focused on liberating the subconscious mind, see connections overlooked by the logical mind, deny the supreme authority of rationality and so, portrays the objects.

 

Absurdism: It tried to bring the feeling of nothingness in the literature reflecting the conditions of contemporary life: like war, god, and humankind.

 

 

 

4. Who are the women novelists in the 20th century? State their contribution to English literature.

 

The novel is one of the successful forms of literature in the twentieth century. The novels include a wide variety of topics such as, nationalism, religious discrimination, human psychology, political and social satire: and war effects. One of the interesting developments in the twentieth-century literature is the remarkable increase in the number of women writers, especially novelist. Some women novelist generally deals with the same kind of subjects as men do, for example, Virginia Woolf and Iris Murdoch.

 

IVY COMPTON-BURNETT's novels deal with the family life in a very original way. She presents the reality of Victorian family life in her novels. Mostly her cruel and evil characters succeed where as good characters remain unsuccessful in their lives. No force from outside or inside can change her characters. The bad are never punished and good are never rewarded. In her novels she deals with the traditions of the Victorian family to show that the reality of their life is basically cruel and destructive. Her famous novels include 'Brothers and Sisters' 'Parents and Children' and 'A Heritage and its History'.

 

DORIS LESSING is mainly concerned with the women's problems in her novels. Her first novel, 'The Grass is Singing' is about the sad life of a poor white farmer's wife. It has the setting of southern Africa. In 'Children of Violence' the central a character, Martha Quest, tries to break away from Old social ideas and traditions in order to live a free life. In her famous novel, 'The Golden Notebook' Lessing deals with women's lives, beliefs and problems with her great courage, power and honesty. She explores how the pressures of the social and political events have been put on woman. The people in the novel are seen hostile and unfriendly towards women. They hurt and treat female characters cruelly because they themselves are weak.

 

MARGARET DRABBLE's novel also presents women as main characters. But they do not express ideas and feelings much about themselves; rather they are concerned mainly to receive higher education. In her novels, 'The Millstone' and 'The Waterfall' the central characters who find themselves in loneliness and frustration are brought into happy world by love and human feelings. Drabble creates a picture of unhappy in 'The Ice Age'. The people in the novel are seen unhappy because they only live in one part of their personalities. It is shown as a danger to the whole of society.

 

Virginia Woolf is the leading figure of modern experimental novel. She used the stream of consciousness technique in her novels to reveal the true psyche of her characters. Her novels are about loneliness and love. She was the supporter of women's rights and her novels show the psyche of characters rather than sequences of events in the external world. Woolf's popular novels are: Jacob's Room, The Voyage Out, Between the Acts, Night and Day, and The Years. A Room of Her Own is a feminist treatise based on the rights and space for women. Besides, Woolf wrote diaries and essays too.



Iris Murdoch's characters face difficult moral choices in their search for love and freedom and are mostly involved in complex networks of love affairs. Her novels are complex accounts of women's lives. Her characters struggle with the society but at last, they think that they cannot change themselves and their society. Her major novels are: 'The Bell', 'A Severed Head', 'Under the Net' and 'The Black Prince'.

 

 

 

5. Who are other influential Novelists apart from women novelists in the 20th century? State their contribution to English literature.

 

The novel is one of the successful forms of literature in the twentieth century. The novels include a wide variety of topics such as, nationalism, religious discrimination, human psychology, political and social satire: and war effects. The novels and the novelists of this period can be broadly classified into four categories: Women Novelists, Detective Novelists, Science Fictions and Other novelists. Here we are going to discuss other influential Novelists apart from women novelists in the 20th century and their contribution to English literature.

 

Rudyard Kipling was born in India and spent much time there but later moved to England. His novels project his ideas that English and England are superior to others. His novels deal with human attire and thought. His novel 'Kim' presents an Indian boy named Kim who is born to foreign parents. Kim helps the agent of the British Empire to acquire some secret papers from the Russians. His other novel The Jungle Book' is about a boy who is raised by wolves. He lives in the remote areas of India but later leaves the jungle to become a man.


E. M. Forster is believed as the beginner of the modernism in twentieth century fiction. He presented new ideas about people and society. He was a humanist writer. Though he was a British, he made a critic on the British government for its inhuman treatment to Indians. He attacked the false and pretentious behaviour of people. He thought that society should be free from materialistic attitude to achieve harmony and understanding. His famous novels are: A Passage to India, Howard's Ends, The Longest Journey, A Room with a View and The Machine Stops.

 

D. H. Lawrence's works express the inner qualities of human, nature. His novels influence the psychological theories of Sigmund Freud. His works analyze the human relationship in-depth particularly men-women relationships and men-men relationships in general. He shows how the relationship between people is always changing. He analyzes the relationship between man and his environment, the relationship between the generations, the relationship between man and woman, and the relationship between instinct and intellect. His major novels are: Sons and Lovers, Women in Love, The Rainbow, The White Peacock, The Lost Girl, Kangaroo, and Lady Chatterley's Lover.


James Joyce was born and educated in Ireland; he adopted a completely new style of writing which is termed as 'stream of consciousness technique' or 'interior monologue'. This technique allows the readers to move inside the minds of the characters and presents their thoughts and feelings in a continuous flow like a stream. It breaks all the usual rules of description, speech, and punctuation. The works of Joyce are complex and paradoxical with no fixed themes. He brings history and myth in his novels to give new insights. He thus wrote realistic novels. His major novels are:

 

George Orwell was a politically conscious novelist. He attacked all kinds of falsity, barbarism, and corruption in the British government. His major novels are: Nineteen Eighty-Four, and Animal Farm.

 

 

6. Show your acquaintance with the Development of Drama in the Twentieth Century.

 

The drama did not receive much attention from the writers during the nineteenth century. Some closet dramas were written in the 19th century. A closet drama is meant to be read aloud but not for stage performance. Romantic poet P. B. Shelley wrote a closet tragedy The Cenci in five acts. No worth mentioning play was written in the Victorian period. Hence, there was a revival of drama in the first quarter of the twentieth century. Drama is the mirror of society. Most of the plays in the twentieth-century focus on social phenomena. The ideas in modern drama emphasize on the subjectivity and working with human consciousness. The major dramatists of this period are: Samuel Beckett, G. B. Shaw, John Galsworthy, and others.


George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950) was born in Ireland. He gave new points of view and way of looking at the people and the society they lived in. He delighted in showing the opposite of what his audiences expected. Several of his plays show in various ways the working of his theory of the Life Force', the power that drives people to value life as a great gift and fight for a better world, and that leads women, in particular, to want to have children so that life can be continued. He did not believe in t Christianity but believed in the life force. He used comedy to expose social evils. Shaw wrote more than 50 plays during his lifetime. Therefore, most of his dramas reflect the issues of the society.



Oscar Wilde is famous for his plays in the century. His famous plays are: Lady Windermere's Fan, An Ideal Husband, A Lady of No Importance, The Duchess of Padua, The Importance of Being Earnest, and Vera. Among them, his most famous play is The Importance of Being Earnest which is filled with witty language. Two girls in this play fall in love with Earnest. They are in search of a man named Earnest. Two men pretend to be Earnest and trap those girls in their love. This shows the difference between appearance and reality. The characters are shallow and cunning with double standards.


Although T. S. Eliot is best known for his contribution to poetry and the ideas of modernism, he wrote some plays in verse. The medium of drama had shifted to prose from verse in the 18thcentury but T. S. Eliot wrote fine verse plays. His plays are: The Rock, Murder in the Cathedral, The Family Reunion, The Cocktail Party, The Confidential Clerk, and The Elder Statesman. Among them, Murder in the Cathedral is his masterpiece.

 

Tom Stoppard chooses characters from earlier plays and places them under different situations to provide audiences with new insights. His play 'Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead' is about two minor characters of Shakespeare's play Hamlet. Similarly, his other play Travesties' contains the characters of Wilde's play The Importance of Being Earnest' but they are analyzed from a different point of view.



John Millington Synge is one of the famous dramatists who reflected the life of Irish men and women; ordinary people living in Irish seacoast. There are two essentials of drama according to him: reality and joy. Synge's play teachers no lesson, and has no moral. The drama is a scene taken from life by one who sought truth for its own shake. Synge mainly focuses his contents of drama as the voices of living men which he has heard told by the fireside or at a country fair, from beggars to ballad singers near Dublin and from servant girls in the kitchen.

 

Samuel Beckett is considered as the grandmaster of a theatre of the absurd. The other dramatists belonging to this group are Harold Pinter and Tom Stoppard. The writers belonging to this group show their anguish at the absurdity of the human condition. For them, the man's existence on earth is meaningless. We do the same thing day after day. There is no newness or growth. They claim that our life is boring, dull, and monotonous.

 

The central theme of Harold Pinter plays is: every person stranger to others. Humans cannot communicate meaningfully with others. Humans are trapped in their own world. His major plays are:

 

Augusta Lady Gregory is an Irish writer and playwright who focused on the translation of Irish legends. Her comedies and fantasies are based on folklore. She wrote pleasant comedies based on Irish folkways and picturesque peasant speech, offsetting the more tragic tones. Lady Gregory wrote or translated nearly 40 plays.

 

 

7. Show your acquaintance with the Development of Poetry in the Twentieth Century.

 

Poetry is one of the successful genres of literature in this century. Poetry in this century incorporated the areas of social concern such as mythology, social disorder, exploitation, pessimism, war affairs, and human existence. The use of allusion and myth is often found in the poems written in this century. The subjective consciousness is one of the features found in poetry. The use of visual poetry is another trend used in this period.

 

W. B. Yeats was an Irish poet. In his earlier days, he wrote poems about Ireland, its people, and traditions. In later days, his poems became more universal in theme. He was disturbed by the brutality, loss of values, and fragmentation caused by modern civilizations. Yeats' poetry can be divided into three phases. In the first phase, his poetry seems to have been influenced by English Romanticism, Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, and symbolism, up to 1904. Yeats wrote love poems in the second phase, up to 1920. His unsuccessful love affair with Maud Gonne has been explicitly presented in his love poems. He wrote mature poems in the third phase and the poems deal with Irish culture and symbolic themes.


T. S. Eliot is one of the pioneers of modern poetry. He was disturbed by the damage, loss of hope, and fragmentation caused by the two world wars. He thought that belief in Christianity and submission to God are the only means to escape from fragmentation caused by modern civilization. For him, modern man is sexually impotent, hollow, fragmented, and destroyed. His major poems are:

 

Isaac Rosenberg also shows the brutality of war in his poem 'Returning We Hear the Larks'.


Thomas Hardy is an English poet and novelist who wrote different poems for more than 50 years. Though he is also a famous novelist, he wrote more than 1000 poems. He is regarded as a poet of human hardship and suffering. In his poems, romantic patriotism is expressed well. A sense of powerlessness has ruled his poetry.


Gerard Manley (G.M.) Hopkins is a philosophical poet. Most of his early poems have a religious tone. Along with newness in rhyme and rhythm in his poems, we find tragic pathos too. He combines emotional and intellectual features in his poetry. His major works are: The Wreck of the Deutschland, Early Poetic Manuscripts and Notebooks (1989), Nature is a Heraclitean Fire, The Comfort of the Resurrection, Sermons and Devotional Writing (1959).

 

W. H. Auden's poems show concern for important political and social events. He thought that the present situation of politics and social systems need to be changed. He thought that literature should help social and political change. His poems are about depression, unemployment, and indifference of human kinds towards others' sufferings. He also hated modern civilization that made humans like a machine without love and affection.

 

The language of Dylan Thomas is completely different: full of life, energy, and feeling with great strength and power. His works praise and delight in natural forces: the life of nature and the countryside, the forces of birth, sex and death. His poems raise issues completely different from others. Some of his fine poems are: "Poem in October", "Fern Hill" and "The Hunchback".



Ted Hughes is considered as an animal poet because his most poems are about animals and their uniqueness. He thought that violence is unconsciously hidden in the human and animal world. He describes the beauty and brutality he saw in nature. Some of his fine poems are: 'The Pike' and 'The Cave Birds'.

 

 

8. Show your acquaintance with The War Poets in the Twentieth Century.

 

The poets who participated in the war or whose poems are about war are termed as war poets. Some of them wrote poems from the trenches and died before the publication of their poems. These poets participated in the First World War from England.


Rupert Brooke had a romantic and patriotic view on ullova war. In his poem 'Soldier', he glorifies England and says that he will be proud even if he dies for England.

 

Siegfried Sassoon attacked the warlords or officers who ordered soldiers to kill other soldiers. He thought that war is destructive, pointless, and inhuman because it turns humans into beasts. He also hated the patriotic satisfaction of the people at home who believed the heroic stories that the government told them about war. He also hated people who glorified war without understanding the misery and suffering of people who went into the battlefield. In his poem 'Everyone Sang', he writes how the end of the war brings comfort to everyone.


Wilfred Owen's poems show very sorrowful discomfort, danger, and pain of the soldiers and the permanent damage which the war did to their minds and happiness. For him, the soldiers who fight from different countries are all humans and their suffering is same. No one can become a hero by killing fellow humans. In his poem 'Strange Meeting', he imagines a meeting in hell with an enemy soldier he had killed who reminds him of their common humanity. His other poem 'Anthem for the Doomed Youth' shows the waste of many young men in the First World War who died as cattle.

 

Isaac Rosenberg also shows the brutality of war in his poem 'Returning We Hear the Larks'. He belonged to working -class family and served as an ordinary soldier in the war. He had not received much formal education. So his experience of life in the war is different from other poets. This is reflected in the language of his poetry and in the events he describes. He did not follow the models and traditions of earlier poetry. He has used a new form of poetry to describe his new experience. His language has great life and energy.

 

The Second World War Poets saw the destruction caused by the Second World War. The heroic patriotism was lost forever. War did not only kill soldiers, it also killed their hopes and future. The poets wrote demanding the end of all sorts of wars. The poets of the Second World War are: Roy Fuller and Keith Douglas.

 

One of the most famous poets of the war is Brooke. But he does not express the painful view of the suffering caused by the war in his poetry. The romantic and patriotic view of many soldiers at the beginning of the war is reflected in one of his most famous poems. For Brooke death for a soldier was a great sacrifice for his country. The poet has been criticized for not responding to the horrors of war.

 

 

9. Who are the other influential poets in the 20th century? State their contribution to English literature.

 

Poetry is one of the successful genres of literature in this century. Poetry in this century incorporated the areas of social concern such as mythology, social disorder, exploitation, pessimism, war affairs, and human existence. The use of allusion and myth is often found in the poems written in this century. The subjective consciousness is one of the features found in poetry. The use of visual poetry is another trend used in this period.

 

Thomas Hardy is an English poet and novelist who wrote different poems for more than 50 years. Though he is also a famous novelist, he wrote more than 1000 poems. He is regarded as a poet of human hardship and suffering. In his poems, romantic patriotism is expressed well. A sense of powerlessness has ruled his poetry. His major poems are: The Dynasty (Part I 1903, II 1906, III 1908), Wessex Poems (1865-1901), Time's Laughing-Stocks (1901), Satires of Circumstance (1914), Human Shows (1935), Winter Words (1928), and Collected Poems (1932)


Gerard Manley (G.M.) Hopkins is a philosophical poet. Most of his early poems have a religious tone. Along with newness in rhyme and rhythm in his poems, we find tragic pathos too. He combines emotional and intellectual features in his poetry. He adopts the sprung rhythm in which one stressed syllable is followed by a number of unstressed syllables which was previously used by Milton. His major works are: The Wreck of the Deutschland, Early Poetic Manuscripts and Notebooks (1989), Nature is a Heraclitean Fire, The Comfort of the Resurrection, Sermons and Devotional Writing (1959).

 

W. H. Auden's poems show concern for important political and social events. He thought that the present situation of politics and social systems need to be changed. He thought that literature should help social and political change. He wrote directly about political events and their effect on private lives. His poems are about depression, unemployment, and indifference of human kinds towards others' sufferings. He also hated modern civilization that made humans like a machine without love and affection. In his poem 'Museum of Fine Arts', he shows how people are indifferent towards others' sufferings. In his later years, his poems show that spirituality and belief in Christian values can help humans to overcome anxiety, loss, and depression. He is also like Yeats because he believes that modern civilization has gone mad because humans have lost faith in God.

 

The language of Dylan Thomas is completely different: full of life, energy, and feeling with great strength and power. His works praise and delight in natural forces: the life of nature and the countryside, the forces of birth, sex and death. His poems raise issues completely different from others. Some of his fine poems are: "Poem in October", "Fern Hill" and "The Hunchback".


Ted Hughes is considered as an animal poet because his most poems are about animals and their uniqueness. He thought that violence is unconsciously hidden in the human and animal world. He describes the beauty and brutality he saw in nature. Some of his fine poems are: 'The Pike' and 'The Cave Birds'.

 

 

10. Samuel Beckett and Harold Pinter are the dramatists of human existence and other aspects. Explain.

 

It's true that Samuel Beckett and Harold Pinter are the dramatists of human existence and other aspects. Drama is the mirror of society. Most of the plays in the twentieth-century focus on social phenomena. The ideas in modern drama emphasize on the subjectivity and working with human consciousness.

 

Samuel Beckett is considered as the grandmaster of a theatre of the absurd. The other dramatists belonging to this group are Harold Pinter and Tom Stoppard. The writers belonging to this group show their anguish at the absurdity of the human condition. For them, the man's existence on earth is meaningless. We do the same thing day after day. There is no newness or growth. They claim that our life is boring, dull, and monotonous. The characters in their plays are often handicapped and like prisoners. They cannot communicate with other individuals. There is no proper plot and there is action without any purpose.

 

His plays are despairing plays. His characters refuse to love and relationship with other people. He sees the language as building a wall between human beings which stops them from communicating. His major dramas are:

 

Waiting for Godot: This play shows two tramps, Vladimir and Estragon, waiting for Godot whom they haven't known. Godot never comes to meet them, and may not even exist. They do a lot of talking but their communication is meaningless and without any logical reasoning.

 

Krapp's Last Tape: It has only one character, an old man sitting in a closed room with the tape-recorder in which he hears his previous recordings and compares to his present situation.


The central theme of Harold Pinter (1930-2008) plays is: every person stranger to others. Humans cannot communicate meaningfully with others. Humans are trapped in their own world. His major plays are:

 

The Caretaker: The main theme of this play is that no one takes care of others. There are only three characters and each character is empty. Their words and actions do not match.

 

No Man's Land: This play shows the meeting of two old men who had known each other when they were young. One is now rich and successful while the other man is in many ways a failure. In a sense, they are enemies. Although on the surface they meet as friends, there is always a feeling of danger between them. In some ways, it is the rich and successful man who is the real failure, because, in his heart, he is living in the 'no man's land' with no feelings and no hope.

 

 

11. State the Development of English language in the Twentieth Century.

 

Modern literature writing was rich in the diverse use of language. A moral concern was used increasingly in the very period. The titles of the writings signal the seriousness of the issues which the novelist sets out to explore, for example, Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice in the nineteenth-century novels.

 

Modernism is an aesthetic movement which focuses on visual arts, music, literature and drama. It rejected the old Victorian standards of arts. The writers in the nineteenth century wrote their creation with higher confidence regarding English society, culture and politics.

 

Modernism was the period of interdisciplinary and exploration of diverse ideas. Writers wrote about taboo subjects like lesbianism, gay, sex etc. openly. Since this century faced two World Wars, the writers wrote against war, violence and barbarism too. Patriotism began to be thought as absurd and meaningless. Writers invented new forms and techniques, breaking away the established literary rules and norms.

 

Twentieth century literature has given birth to diverse ideas in the field of literature. There were versatile writers during this period. The major subject matters include human life experiences and their study, misery, struggle, war effects and evolution of social evils. In this period, the marginal groups raised voices in their works. Writers attacked the social and political corruption of England. Some writers wrote about religious awakening. These writers thought that the modern world had gone mad because a man had lost faith in religion and God. Science fiction and detective novels also emerged in this period.

 

Modernist writers generally prefer titles which are more oblique and symbolic and require an act of interpretation from the reader. They do not always provide the reader with any definite anchor in recognizably realistic people and places like, Ulysses, The Rainbow, Heart of Darkness. Many of the writers have broken the structural and punctuation rules in their writings. For example: e ecumming uses small letters and rarely uses punctuation marks in his poems. G G Marquez has used a single full stop at the end of his story The Last Voyage of the Ghost Ship. The abbreviations and twisted cyber language have influenced the writing in the latter part of modernism.

 

 

12. Write short notes on:

 

a) Detective novelists

 

The other feature of the twentieth century novelists is ideas of suspense and detective story in novels. The detective novels are based on mystery, suspense and murder. The main character goes in search of finding the murderer, robber or something lost. The main character has to disguise to find the murderer or to solve the mystery. The detective novelists of the period are: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Agatha Christie and John Le Carre.

 

Arthur Conan Doyle is popular as a detective short story writer among the readers. His creation, Sherlock Holmes is an immortal character in English literature. His detectives are known as Sherlock Holmes' stories by modern readers. He wrote several detective novels too. The Hound of Baskervilles is a popular novel.

 

Agatha Christie's famous detective novel is 'The Mysterious Affair of Styles'. She was an English writer known for her 66 detective novels and 14 short story collections, particularly those revolving around fictional detectives Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple.

 

David John Moore Cornwell, better known by his pen name John le Carré, was a British author, best known for his espionage novels. During the 1950s and 1960s, he worked for both the Security Service and the Secret Intelligence Service. His famous novel is 'The Spy Who Came in from the Cold'.

 

 

b) Theatre of Absurd

 

Samuel Beckett is considered as the grandmaster of a theatre of the absurd. The other dramatists belonging to this group are Harold Pinter and Tom Stoppard. The writers belonging to this group show their anguish at the absurdity of the human condition. For them, the man's existence on earth is meaningless. We do the same thing day after day. There is no newness or growth. They claim that our life is boring, dull, and monotonous. The characters in their plays are often handicapped and like prisoners. They cannot communicate with other individuals. There is no proper plot and there is action without any purpose.

 

His plays are despairing plays. His characters refuse to love and relationship with other people. He sees the language as building a wall between human beings which stops them from communicating.

 

He started a new kind of fashion in drama. He did not follow the tradition form of well-made play. He believed in absurdism and his plays try to show the essential tragic condition of the modern man. For Beckett human life is absurd and happiness in human life is never possible.

 

The central theme of Harold Pinter plays is: every person stranger to others. Humans cannot communicate meaningfully with others. Humans are trapped in their own world. He is also a famous dramatist of twentieth-century. The central theme of his play is the impossibility of communication between characters in a closed situation. In his early plays the comfort and safety of the closed situation, often a room, is compared with the dangers of the world and the stranger outsiders. The world is full of dangers so there is fear and difficulty in communicating with other individuals, especially with the strangers of the outside world.

 

Although the twentieth-century drama is the product of the individual writer's ideas and experience, we often find some general features in common. They share some beliefs and concerns for their work. They try to show some parts of the realistic picture of the daily lives of common people on stage.

 

 

c) Augusta Lady Gregory as a pleader for change/ liberation

 

Augusta Lady Gregory (1852-1932) is an Irish writer and playwright who focused on the translation of Irish legends. Her comedies and fantasies are based on folklore. She wrote pleasant comedies based on Irish folkways and picturesque peasant speech, offsetting the more tragic tones of dramas by Yeats and J. M. Synge. Lady Gregory wrote or translated nearly 40 plays. Seven Short Plays (1909), her first dramatic work, is among her best, which is vivid in dialogue and characterization.

 

The longer comedies, The Image and Damer's Gold were published in 1910 and 1913. Her strange realistic fantasies, The Golden Apple and The Dragons were published in 1916 and 1920. She also arranged and made continuous narratives out of the various versions of Irish sagas, translating them into an Anglo-Irish peasant dialect that she labelled "Kiltartan." These were published as Cuchulain of Muirthemne (1902) and Gods and Fighting Men (1904). Gregory was an active director of the theatre until ill-health led her to the retirement in 1928.

 

The drama did not receive much attention from the writers during the nineteenth century. Hence, there was a revival of drama in the first quarter of the twentieth century. Drama is the mirror of society. Most of the plays in the twentieth-century focus on social phenomena. The ideas in modern drama emphasize on the subjectivity and working with human consciousness. The major dramatists of this period are: Samuel Beckett, G. B. Shaw, John Galsworthy, and others.

 

 

d) John Millington (JM) Synge as a dramatist of the life of ordinary people

 

Synge is one of the famous dramatists who reflected the life of Irish men and women; ordinary people living in Irish seacoast. He believes that life, whether in a crowded city or a fishing village, is everywhere a complex thing, having both tears and laughter, nobility and savagery, Christian ideals, and heathen habits. For Synge, every aspect of life is a challenge. There are two essentials of drama according to him: reality and joy. Synge's' play teachers no lesson, and has no moral.

 

The drama is a scene taken from life by one who sought truth for its own shake. No matter it is a comedy or a tragedy, it needs to be objective, impersonal, detached keeping himself and his opinion wholly out of the picture. Synge mainly focuses his contents of drama as the voices of living men which he has heard told by the fireside or at a country fair, from beggars to ballad singers near Dublin and from servant girls in the kitchen.

 

The major plays of Synge include: Deirdre of Sorrows, The Playboy of the Western World; and Riders to the Sea. Deirdre of Sorrows reflects adventurous youth with a hint of a time to come when youth is fled and man is left with only memories to comfort. The best known Synge play, 'The Play Boy of the Western World' is of Christine Mahon who left his father dead in the field and his relations with villagers and the landlord's daughter. Likewise, Riders to the Sea is a one-act tragedy which talks about a family destruction and is deeply impressive.

 

 

e) G.B. Shaw as a Dramatist of Social Phenomenon

 

He is one of the greatest dramatists of English literature. Shaw believed that drama should be concerned with politics, philosophy and social problems. The main purpose behind his writing was to cause shock and offence in the mind of the audience by presenting completely new ideas and outlook. He wanted to satirise not the invented characters in the plays but the audience.

 

George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950) was born in Ireland. He gave new points of view and way of looking at the people and the society they lived in. He delighted in showing the opposite of what his audiences expected. Several of his plays show in various ways the working of his theory of the Life Force', the power that drives people to value life as a great gift and fight for a better world, and that leads women, in particular, to want to have children so that life can be continued. He did not believe in t Christianity but believed in the life force. He used comedy to expose social evils. Shaw wrote more than 50 plays during his lifetime. Therefore, most of his dramas reflect the issues of the society.


Man and Superman: This drama shows that a woman's real aim in life is to find the man that nature tells her is the right father for her children.

 

The Apple Cart: This political play shows that he was in favour of monarchy rather than democratic leaders.

 

The Devil's Disciple: In this play, the man whom conventional society has thought of as evil and selfish is willing to sacrifice himself for others, while the minister of religion discovers that he should have been a soldier.


Major Barbara: In this play, the heroine, a woman of strong personality and ideals, exchanges her belief in Christianity for that in the Life Force.

 

Arms and the Man: In this novel, he presents a soldier as a sympathetic figure who does not want to fight.

 

 

f) George Orwell

 

He was a politically conscious novelist. He attacked all kinds of falsity, barbarism, and corruption in the British government. His major novels are:

 

Nineteen Eighty-Four: This book describes a future world where word and action are seen and controlled by the government. The government has developed a kind of television that can watch the people in their homes. The government changes the language and teaches them to talk about only the things the government wants them to do. This book provides a pessimistic picture of future government where people's feelings and emotions will be controlled by the government. Two terms in the novel "newspeak" (new language) and "thought police" (police who can make surveillance of people's thoughts) are very popular. The thought police punished the people who commit thought crimes.

 

Animal Farm: It is a political allegory, which tells the story of a political revolution that has gone wrong. The animals on the farm, led by pigs, drive out their master Jones and take control of the farm. Soon, the purity of their political ideas IS destroyed and they end by being just as greedy and dishonest as the farmer whom they had driven out. In the beginning, the animals make a slogan. "All animals are equal" but as the power mongers become corrupt, the slogan is changed as "Some animals are more equal than other animals."

 

 

 

g) Science Fiction

 

The stories which are based on developments in science technology are known as 'Science Fiction'. Because of the development in science many writers have turned to the subject 'of science in their writing. Their work includes either exciting developments or fictional developments of the future.

 

Early science fiction falls into three main areas:

 

• If the present scientific developments are carried further, it may be dangerous to man and destroy the human races.

 

• What may happen after man has defeated the problem of war, disease and poverty- perhaps he will be able to go beyond the limits of the human body and gain some of qualities of machines?

 

• Although man may have lost something of natural life on earth, he can explore the world of space.

 

Many writers who have been mentioned in term of their other work have also written science fiction. One of such writers is H.G. Wells. He was very interested in the scientific advances of his age and looked ahead to imagine what the result might be in the future. He was optimistic about the advantages of science. Many of his novels present a struggle between two ways of life, the human and the non-human. Like Wells there are other writers who have written in the area of science fiction such as, E.M. Forster, Aldous Huxley, Kingsley Amis and Doris Lessing. George Orwell and Anthony Burgess also give pictures of a future world in their work.

 

There is another group of writers who have mainly written science fiction. John Wyndham in 'The Day of the Triffids' and 'The Krakam Wakes' shows a different world after the destruction of present society. Brian Aldiss has written many books in this area. His 'Graybeard' presents a group of people trying to be alive even after the destruction of most of the world. Arthur C. Clarke has written much science fiction including 'The City and the Stars'. His '2001: A Space Odyssey' is about the exploration in space.

 

 

h) Doris Lessing

 

She is one of the most politically conscious women novelists the 20th century. Her characters are unable to distinguish between the way things appear to be and the way they really are. Much of her works are concerned with the everyday and inner lives of sensitive women. She wrote psychological novels exploring the madness of characters and their deeper self-analysis.

 

The Grass is Singing: This novel is set in Southern Africa. It explores the mind of the wife of a poor white farmer and her difficulties that lead to her destruction.

 

Children of Violence: This novel is about Martha Quest who tries to isolate herself from the old ideas of the society, politics and religion. She lives by her own beliefs and ideals.

 

The Golden Notebook: It is a powerful attempt to write honestly about women's lives and beliefs; and the pressures that political and social events in the 20th century life and society put on them. The male characters in the novel often try to hurt females because they themselves are weak.

 

 


i) Margaret Drabble

 

Her main characters are always women, and they are often studious and intelligent. Before joining literary career, she had been an actress in the theatre. She is often called the "women's novelists". She explores the theme of feminism, search for identity, equal rights, freedom and justice. Her characters are confused women who try to integrate the family life and their career. Her major novels are:

 

The Milestone: It is about a girl who has avoided any deep feelings or close relationships with other people. She finds that she is brought into the world of human feelings by her love for her child.

 

The Waterfall: It is about a poetess, who is unable at the beginning of the novel to connect body and mind. She is saved from the coldness of her life by sexual love, and is at last able to understand herself and her personality as a woman.

 

The Ice Age: This novel presents a wider picture of an unhappy world in which the coldness of the spirit and the feelings that come when people only live in one part of their personalities are shown as dangers to the whole society.

 

 

 

j) Virginia Woolf

 

Woolf is the leading figure of modern experimental novel. She used the stream of consciousness technique in her novels to reveal the true psyche of her characters. Her novels are about loneliness and love. She was the supporter of women's rights and her novels show the psyche of characters rather than sequences of events in the external world. Her famous novels are:

 

To the Lighthouse: This novel presents a family holiday in an island. In this novel, the youngest son James Ramsay, has an inordinate desire to go by boat to the lighthouse but is prevented by his father. The son becomes very sad but he is comforted by his mother. After 10 years, after the death of the mother, the same family goes to visit the lighthouse. This time also, he is sad and hates his father. This novel shows the conflict between factual and deeper truth.

 

Mrs. Dalloway: This is a novel written on the events of a single day. The novel starts in the morning when Clarissa Dalloway goes to buy the flower and ends at the same night after the party. The novel records the thoughts of various characters of the novel, Mrs. Clarissa Dalloay, Septimus Warren Smith, Lucrezia Smith, Richard Dalloway and others.

 

Orlando: This presents a main character who begins as a man in the 16th century and ends as a woman in 1928, still only thirty six years old. On the surface, the story is fanciful and amusing but it is highly symbolic.


The Waves: The novel is about the lives of six characters; three boys and three girls and records the waves of their thoughts from school life to the old age and death.

 

Woolf's other popular novels are: Jacob's Room, The Voyage Out, Between the Acts, Night and Day, and The Years. A Room of Her Own is a feminist treatise based on the rights and space for women. Besides, Woolf wrote diaries and essays too.

 

 

k) E. M. Forster

 

Forster is believed as the beginner of the modernism in twentieth century fiction. He presented new ideas about people and society. He was a humanist writer. Though he was a British, he made a critic on the British government for its inhuman treatment to Indians. He attacked the false and pretentious behaviour of people. He thought that society should be free from materialistic attitude to achieve harmony and understanding. His famous novels are: A Passage to India, Howard's Ends, The Longest Journey, A Room with a View and The Machine Stops.

 

A Passage to India: Set against the backdrop of British Rule in India about two decades before the Indian Independence, the novel deals with coincidence and misunderstanding between Indian national Dr. Aziz and his British friends Mr. Cyril Fielding, Mrs. Moore and Miss Adela Quested. The novel is based on Forster's experiences in India and the title is from American poet Walt Whitman's poem "Passage to India".

 

Howard's End: This novel shows the conflict between spirituality and materialism. He attacks the people who are running towards wealth and false appearance. The people judged by society as failure may indeed be more successful than others. Success is not marked by money and wealth but by goodliness, humanity, humbleness and spirituality.

 

l) D. H. Lawrence

 

His works express the inner qualities of human, nature. His novels influence the psychological theories of Sigmund Freud. His works analyze the human relationship in-depth particularly men-women relationships and men-men relationships in general. He shows how the relationship between people is always changing. He analyzes the relationship between man and his environment, the relationship between the generations, the relationship between man and woman, and the relationship between instinct and intellect. His major novels are: Sons and Lovers, Women in Love, The Rainbow, The White Peacock, The Lost Girl, Kangaroo, and Lady Chatterley's Lover.

 

Sons and Lovers: This is a thinly autobiographical novel. This novel deals with the conflict between Paul's working-class father and his middle-class mother. The mother turns towards her son for the emotional fulfilment denied to her by her husband. The novel ends with the death of the mother which gives relief to the son.

 

The Rainbow: This novel tells the story of a family through three couples who are of three generations:


First-generation (Lydia and Tom): They have a deep and loving understanding of each other. They also communicate with the outside world.

 

Second generation (Anna and Will): They have physical passion for each other but their souls remain separate.

 

Third generation (Ursula and Anton): They do not love each other but try to force their own wishes on the other.


D. H. Lawrence became controversial after the publication of his novel Lady Chatterley's Lover. A case was filed in the court blaming that the novel was spreading pornography and it was banned. Later, Lawrence won the case and the novel was circulated again.


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