A. Primary Literary Forms
| Form | Definition | Core Features | Representative Writers |
|---|
| Poetry | Condensed literary expression emphasizing rhythm, imagery, and figurative language | Meter, symbolism, lyric voice | William Wordsworth, T. S. Eliot |
| Drama | Literary form written for performance | Dialogue-driven, stage direction, conflict | William Shakespeare, Henrik Ibsen |
| Novel | Extended fictional prose narrative | Character development, plot complexity, realism or experimentation | Charles Dickens, Virginia Woolf |
| Short Story | Concise prose fiction | Unity of effect, compressed narrative | Edgar Allan Poe, James Joyce |
| Essay | Nonfiction prose reflecting argument or reflection | Analytical, persuasive, or personal | Michel de Montaigne, George Orwell |
B. Sub-Genres within Major Forms
| Genre | Parent Form | Defining Trait |
|---|
| Tragedy | Drama | Fall of noble figure through flaw or fate |
| Comedy | Drama | Resolution through reconciliation |
| Epic | Poetry | Grand narrative of heroic deeds |
| Bildungsroman | Novel | Development of protagonist’s moral growth |
| Gothic | Novel/Drama | Supernatural, decay, psychological terror |
| Satire | Poetry/Prose | Social criticism through irony |
| Allegory | Multiple | Narrative with symbolic political/religious meaning |
II. Major Literary Movements (Chronological Overview)
Chronological Table of Literary Movements
| Movement | Period | Core Features | Representative Figures |
|---|
| Renaissance Humanism | 14th–17th c. | Classical revival, individual dignity | William Shakespeare |
| Neoclassicism | 17th–18th c. | Order, reason, decorum | Alexander Pope |
| Romanticism | Late 18th–mid 19th c. | Emotion, nature, imagination | William Wordsworth, John Keats |
| Realism | 19th c. | Social reality, everyday life | Gustave Flaubert |
| Naturalism | Late 19th c. | Determinism, environment shaping fate | Émile Zola |
| Symbolism | Late 19th c. | Suggestion, interiority | Charles Baudelaire |
| Modernism | Early 20th c. | Fragmentation, stream of consciousness | James Joyce, Virginia Woolf |
| Postmodernism | Mid–late 20th c. | Metafiction, irony, intertextuality | Thomas Pynchon |
| Postcolonial Literature | Mid 20th c.–present | Empire critique, hybridity | Chinua Achebe |
| Feminist Writing | 20th c.–present | Gender critique, patriarchy analysis | Virginia Woolf |
| Magic Realism | 20th c. | Blending reality with myth | Gabriel García Márquez |
| Existentialism | Mid 20th c. | Alienation, absurdity | Albert Camus |
| Harlem Renaissance | 1920s | Black identity and cultural assertion | Langston Hughes |
| Absurdism | Mid 20th c. | Meaninglessness, circular logic | Samuel Beckett |
III. Movement Classification by Intellectual Orientation
| Orientation | Movements Included |
|---|
| Classical/Order-Based | Renaissance, Neoclassicism |
| Emotion/Imagination-Based | Romanticism |
| Social-Scientific | Realism, Naturalism |
| Experimental/Aesthetic | Symbolism, Modernism |
| Skeptical/Fragmentary | Postmodernism |
| Resistance-Oriented | Postcolonialism, Feminism, Harlem Renaissance |
| Philosophical | Existentialism, Absurdism |
IV. Comparative Evolution Chart
| Period | Dominant Concern | Literary Shift |
|---|
| Classical | Order and harmony | Emphasis on reason |
| Romantic | Subjective emotion | Reaction against rationalism |
| Realist | Social observation | Scientific objectivity |
| Modernist | Crisis of meaning | Formal fragmentation |
| Postmodern | Collapse of grand narratives | Irony and metafiction |
| Postcolonial | Empire and identity | Decentering Europe |
V. Forms vs Movements (Conceptual Distinction)
| Literary Form | Literary Movement |
|---|
| Structural category (poetry, drama, novel) | Historical-intellectual trend |
| Stable across periods | Historically evolving |
| Defines medium | Defines ideological/aesthetic orientation |
| E.g., Novel | E.g., Modernism, Realism |
Final Synthesis
- Forms concern how literature is structured.
- Movements concern why and under what intellectual climate literature is produced.
Forms are relatively stable; movements are historically dynamic.