Comprehensive Chart: Major Phases of Literary History (Middle Ages → Postmodernism)

A structural overview of dominant aesthetics, worldviews, and literary consciousness


1. MIDDLE AGES — Sacred Order and Allegorical Worldview

DimensionPosition
Core orientationTheocentric (God-centered universe)
Dominant worldviewFixed divine order (Great Chain of Being)
Literary functionDidactic, moral, religious instruction
FormAllegory, epic, mystery plays, morality plays
Language modelSymbolic + doctrinal
SelfhoodSubordinate to divine will
Time conceptionCyclical + eschatological (judgment-oriented)
Reality structureSpiritual reality dominates material world
Key genresEpic, saints’ lives, allegory
Representative textsThe Canterbury Tales, Piers Plowman, Everyman

Core structure:

Divine order → moral allegory → salvation framework


2. RENAISSANCE — Humanism and Discovery of the Self

DimensionPosition
Core orientationHuman-centered universe (anthropocentric shift)
Dominant worldviewBalance of divine + human reason
Literary functionExploration of identity, power, desire
FormDrama, sonnet, epic, metaphysical poetry
Language modelRhetorical, metaphorical, expressive
SelfhoodComplex, psychological, conflicted
Time conceptionLinear + historical awareness
Reality structureHuman agency within cosmic order
Key genresDrama, lyric poetry
Representative authorsShakespeare, Spenser, Donne

Core structure:

Divine order → human agency → psychological complexity


3. NEOCLASSICAL — Reason, Order, and Social Satire

DimensionPosition
Core orientationRationalism and classical imitation
Dominant worldviewOrdered, rule-based universe
Literary functionMoral instruction + satire
FormHeroic couplet, essay, satire
Language modelClear, balanced, controlled
SelfhoodRational, socially embedded
Time conceptionStable, cyclical moral order
Reality structureSocial hierarchy and rational design
Key genresSatire, mock-epic, essay
Representative authorsPope, Dryden, Swift

Core structure:

Reason → order → satire → moral correction


4. ROMANTIC — Imagination and the Sovereign Self

DimensionPosition
Core orientationImagination-centered worldview
Dominant worldviewOrganic unity of nature and mind
Literary functionExpression of emotion and inner truth
FormLyric poetry, reflective narrative
Language modelSymbolic, expressive, visionary
SelfhoodAutonomous, creative, emotional
Time conceptionSubjective, memory-driven
Reality structureNature as living consciousness
Key genresLyric, visionary poetry
Representative authorsWordsworth, Keats, Shelley, Byron

Core structure:

Imagination → nature → self → sublime experience


5. VICTORIAN — Social Reality and Moral Complexity

DimensionPosition
Core orientationSocial realism and moral inquiry
Dominant worldviewIndustrial, hierarchical, conflicted society
Literary functionSocial critique + psychological realism
FormNovel (dominant), serialized fiction
Language modelDetailed, descriptive, realist
SelfhoodSocially constructed moral subject
Time conceptionHistorical progress + anxiety
Reality structureIndustrial capitalism and social systems
Key genresNovel, essay, social narrative
Representative authorsDickens, Eliot, Hardy, Brontë

Core structure:

Society → morality → psychology → crisis of modern life


6. MODERN — Fragmentation and Consciousness

DimensionPosition
Core orientationCrisis of meaning and perception
Dominant worldviewFragmented, unstable reality
Literary functionExploration of consciousness
FormStream of consciousness, experimental poetry
Language modelFragmented, symbolic, nonlinear
SelfhoodDecentered, unstable subject
Time conceptionPsychological time
Reality structurePerception replaces stable reality
Key genresModernist novel, modernist poetry, drama
Representative authorsJoyce, Woolf, Eliot, Beckett

Core structure:

Fragmentation → consciousness → language → reconstruction attempts


7. POSTMODERN — Simulation, Instability, and Narrative Collapse

DimensionPosition
Core orientationAnti-foundational, skeptical worldview
Dominant worldviewReality as simulation or construct
Literary functionDeconstruction of meaning systems
FormFragmented, metafictional, nonlinear
Language modelSelf-referential, ironic, unstable
SelfhoodDispersed, performative identity
Time conceptionDiscontinuous, recursive
Reality structureSimulated or mediated reality
Key genresMetafiction, experimental novel
Representative authorsPynchon, Calvino, DeLillo, Rushdie

Core structure:

Fragment → simulation → instability → infinite interpretation


MASTER EVOLUTIONARY CHART OF LITERARY HISTORY

PeriodCore PrincipleDominant ConcernLiterary Form
Middle AgesDivine orderSalvationAllegory
RenaissanceHuman agencyIdentity & desireDrama & lyric
NeoclassicalReason & orderSocial correctionSatire & essay
RomanticImaginationSelf & natureLyric poetry
VictorianSocial realismIndustrial societyNovel
ModernFragmentationConsciousness crisisExperimental forms
PostmodernInstabilityMeaning collapseMetafiction

FINAL SYNTHESIS

Across literary history, there is a clear structural transformation:

Sacred certainty → Human agency → Rational order → Imaginative self → Social complexity → Fragmented consciousness → Simulated reality

Or more compactly:

Order → Self → Society → Fragment → Simulation