English literature
English literature,
the body of written works produced in the English language by inhabitants of the British Isles (including
Ireland) from the 7th century to the present day. The major literatures written
in English outside the British Isles are treated separately under American literature, Australian literature, Canadian literature, and New Zealand literature.
English literature has sometimes been stigmatized as
insular. It can be argued that no single English novel attains the
universality of the Russian writer Leo Tolstoy’s War and Peace or the French writer Gustave Flaubert’s Madame Bovary. Yet in the Middle Ages the Old English literature of the subjugated Saxons was leavened by
the Latin and Anglo-Norman writings, eminently foreign in origin, in which the churchmen
and the Norman conquerors expressed themselves. From this combination emerged a
flexible and subtle linguistic instrument exploited by Geoffrey Chaucer and brought to supreme application by William Shakespeare. During the Renaissance the
renewed interest in Classical learning and values had an important effect on
English literature, as on all the arts; and ideas of Augustan literary
propriety in the 18th century and reverence in the 19th century for a less
specific, though still selectively viewed, Classical antiquity continued to
shape the literature. All three of these impulses derived from a foreign
source, namely the Mediterranean basin. The Decadents of the late 19th century and the Modernists of
the early 20th looked to continental European individuals and movements for
inspiration. Nor was attraction toward European intellectualism dead in the
late 20th century, for by the mid-1980s the approach known as structuralism, a
phenomenon predominantly French and German in origin, infused the very study of
English literature itself in a host of published critical studies and
university departments. Additional influence was exercised by deconstructionist
analysis, based largely on the work of French philosopher Jacques Derrida.
Further, Britain’s past
imperial activities around the globe continued to inspire literature—in some
cases wistful, in other cases hostile. Finally, English literature has enjoyed a
certain diffusion abroad, not only in predominantly
English-speaking countries but also in all those others where English is the
first choice of study as a second language.

English literature is therefore not so much insular as
detached from the continental European tradition across the Channel. It is
strong in all the conventional categories of the bookseller’s list: in
Shakespeare it has a dramatist of world renown; in poetry, a genre notoriously
resistant to adequate translation and therefore difficult to compare with the
poetry of other literatures, it is so peculiarly rich as to merit inclusion in
the front rank; English literature’s humour has been found as hard to convey to
foreigners as poetry, if not more so—a fact at any rate permitting bestowal of
the label “idiosyncratic”; English literature’s remarkable body of travel writings constitutes another counterthrust to the charge of
insularity; in autobiography, biography, and historical writing, English literature compares
with the best of any culture; and children’s literature, fantasy, essays, and journals, which tend to be considered minor genres, are all fields of exceptional achievement as regards English
literature. Even in philosophical writings, popularly thought of as hard to
combine with literary value, thinkers such as Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, David Hume, John Stuart Mill, and Bertrand Russell stand comparison for lucidity and grace with the
best of the French philosophers and the masters of Classical antiquity.
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Some of English literature’s most distinguished
practitioners in the 20th century—from Joseph Conrad at its beginning to V.S. Naipaul and Tom Stoppard at its end—were born outside the British Isles.
What is more, none of the aforementioned had as much in common with his
adoptive country as did, for instance, Doris Lessing and Peter Porter (two other distinguished writer-immigrants to
Britain), both having been born into a British family and having been brought
up on British Commonwealth soil.
On the other hand, during the same period in the 20th
century, many notable practitioners of English literature left the British
Isles to live abroad: James Joyce, D.H. Lawrence, Aldous Huxley, Christopher Isherwood, Robert Graves, Graham Greene, Muriel Spark, and Anthony Burgess. In one case, that of Samuel Beckett, this process was carried to the extent of writing
works first in French and then translating them into English.
Even English literature considered purely as a product
of the British Isles is extraordinarily heterogeneous, however. Literature actually written in those Celtic
tongues once prevalent in Cornwall, Ireland, Scotland, and
Wales—called the “Celtic Fringe”—is treated separately (see Celtic literature).
Yet Irish, Scots, and Welsh writers have contributed enormously to English
literature even when they have written in dialect, as the 18th-century poet Robert Burns and the 20th-century Scots writer Alasdair Gray have done. In the latter half of the 20th
century, interest began also to focus on writings in English or English dialect
by recent settlers in Britain, such as Afro-Caribbeans and people from Africa
proper, the Indian subcontinent, and East Asia.
Even within England, culturally
and historically the dominant partner in the union of territories comprising Britain, literature has been as enriched by
strongly provincial writers as by metropolitan ones. Another contrast more
fruitful than not for English letters has been that between social milieus, however much observers of Britain in their own writings may have
deplored the survival of class distinctions. As far back as medieval times, a courtly tradition in literature cross-fertilized with an
earthier demotic one. Shakespeare’s frequent juxtaposition of royalty in one scene with plebeians in the
next reflects a very British way of looking at society. This awareness of
differences between high life and low, a state of affairs fertile in creative
tensions, is observable throughout the history of English literature.
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