Echos of English Literature

Neoclassicism

12 min · 4 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Neoclassicism

Descripción

In this episode of Echoes of English Literature, we explore the Age of Neoclassicism—a period defined by reason, order, and razor-sharp wit. Through the works of Alexander Pope, John Dryden, and Oliver Goldsmith, we uncover how literature became a tool for moral reflection and social critique. From the precision of heroic couplets to the power of satire, this episode examines how writers used elegance and intellect to expose human folly—and ask a timeless question: how should we live?

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9 episodios

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In this episode of Echoes of English Literature, we step into the Victorian era — a period of enormous social change, industrial growth, moral conflict, and literary innovation. From the rise of the British Empire to the crisis of faith brought on by science and modernity, we explore how Victorian writers turned their attention toward the realities of everyday life and transformed the novel into the dominant literary form of the age. Through the works of George Eliot and Thomas Hardy, we examine the emotional and moral complexity of Victorian Realism: class inequality, the role of women, industrialization, faith and doubt, and the quiet struggles of ordinary people. Featuring discussions of Middlemarch and Tess of the d'Urbervilles, this episode uncovers why Victorian literature remains one of the most powerful explorations of society and the human condition ever written. 🎧 A journey through realism, morality, social criticism, and the rise of the modern novel.

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episode Jonathan Swift artwork

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In this episode, we explore the life and work of one of the most brilliant, savage, and misunderstood writers in the English literary tradition — Jonathan Swift. Born in Dublin in 1667, Swift lived through political turmoil, personal disappointment, and social injustice — and transformed all of it into some of the sharpest, most uncompromising satire ever written in the English language. We trace his life story and the experiences that shaped his furious, unflinching vision of humanity. We explore his place within the Neoclassical tradition — and how he pushed its tools of reason and satire to their absolute extreme. And we dive deep into his greatest works: Gulliver's Travels, that deceptively simple adventure story that is really a devastating critique of human pride and political corruption, and A Modest Proposal, one of the most chilling and brilliant pieces of ironic writing ever produced. Swift holds a mirror up to society — and what he shows us is not always comfortable. But that, perhaps, is exactly the point. 🎧 Echoes of English Literature is a podcast about the books, writers, and ideas that shaped the English literary tradition — from Beowulf to the modern day.

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