3. Renaissance literature
• It is characterized by the
study of the classic
Greco-Roman antiquity.
• There is a new
anthropocentric vision of
the world, a racionalist
attitude before the life
and a conception opened
before this life.
• The man gets excited and
also the human being.
4. Baroque literature
• It tends to be
depressive and
embitters, there is a
disenchantment for
the man and the
human being.
• The most used topic is
the fleetingness of the
life
5. Neoclassic Literature
• It is outlined by the
return of the Greco-
Roman roots.
• There is a
predominance of the
reason before the
emotive things.
• The perfection of the
forms is looked, and
the art has a principally
didactic function.
Leandro Fernández de Moratín, “El Si de las niñas”
6. Romantic Literature
• It is born as an
answer to the
Neoclassicism.
• It predominates
the emotive thing
over the reason.
• Exotic places
appear.
• The individual “ I ”
takes importance
before “ the
others “.
José Zorrilla, “Don Juan Tenorio”
7. Natural Literature
• It arises as
response to the
romanticism.
• There is preference
on the topics that
develop in low
environment.
ÉMILE ZOLA, “Naná”