The Enlightenment (Neoclassical) Period (1660-1790 CE)

IV. The Enlightenment (Neoclassical) Period (1660-1790 CE)

"Neoclassical" refers to the increased influence of Classical literature upon these centuries. The Neoclassical Period is also called the "Enlightenment" due to the increased reverence for logic and disdain for superstition. The period is marked by the rise of Deism, intellectual backlash against earlier Puritanism, and America's revolution against England.
John Dryden's adaptation of VirgilI. Restoration Period
    (1660-1700)
This period marks the British king's restoration to the throne after a long period of Puritan domination in England. Its symptoms include the dominance of French and Classical influences on poetry and drama. Sample writers include John DrydenJohn LockeSir William Temple, and Samuel Pepys, and Aphra Behn in England. Abroad, representative authors include Jean Racine and Molière.

II. The Augustan Age
      (1700-1750)Works of Alexander Pope
This period is marked by the imitation of Virgil and Horace's literature in English letters. The principal English writers include AddisonSteeleSwift, and Alexander Pope. Abroad, Voltaire was the dominant French writer.
 
Edward Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman EmpireIII. The Age of Johnson
       (1750-1790)
This period marks the transition toward the upcoming Romanticism though the period is still largely Neoclassical. Major writers include Dr. Samuel JohnsonBoswell, and Edward Gibbon who represent the Neoclassical tendencies, while writers like Robert BurnsThomas GrayCowper, and Crabbe show movement away from the Neoclassical ideal. In America, this period is called the Colonial Period. It includes colonial and revolutionary writers like Ben FranklinThomas Jefferson, and Thomas Paine.

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