Avsnitt
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In this episode of Echoes of English Literature, we dive deeper into the heart of Romanticism through four of its most powerful and visionary voices: John Keats, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Lord Byron, and William Blake.
Together, we explore how these poets transformed emotion, imagination, and sensibility into the very center of human experience. From the haunting beauty of Ode to a Nightingale to the revolutionary energy of Ode to the West Wind, the dark magnetism of She Walks in Beauty, and the visionary intensity of The Tyger, this episode uncovers why the Romantic poets continue to speak so powerfully to modern readers.
🎧 Beauty, rebellion, imagination, and melancholy come together in one of the most passionate movements in English literature.
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In this episode of Echoes of English Literature, we dive into Romanticism, a movement that transformed literature by placing emotion, nature, and imagination at the center of human experience. Through the voices of William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, we explore how poetry moved away from the strict rationality of Neoclassicism to embrace the intimate, the subjective, and the spiritual. From Lyrical Ballads to iconic poems such as I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud and The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, this episode reveals why Romanticism continues to shape the way we feel, imagine, and understand the world.
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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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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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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In this episode of Echoes of English Literature, we explore the world of William Shakespeare—the writer who transformed literature by giving voice to the inner life. Moving through the different phases of his career, from comedies and histories to his great tragedies and late romances, we uncover how his works reflect both his personal journey and the shifting world of the Renaissance. Through plays like Hamlet, Macbeth, and Othello, this episode examines themes of identity, ambition, language, and the divided self—revealing why Shakespeare still speaks to us today.
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In this episode of Echoes of English Literature, we explore the Renaissance—a period of rebirth that transformed the way people thought about knowledge, power, and the human mind. From the psychological depth of William Shakespeare to the boundless ambition of Christopher Marlowe, and the poetic and philosophical reflections of John Donne and Philip Sidney, this episode uncovers how literature began to focus on the individual in new and powerful ways. Through works like Hamlet and Doctor Faustus, we examine themes of ambition, identity, and the limits of human knowledge—revealing why the Renaissance still speaks to us today.
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In this episode of Echoes of English Literature, we journey into the vibrant world of Geoffrey Chaucer and his The Canterbury Tales. Following a group of pilgrims on the road to Canterbury, we explore how storytelling becomes a space for humor, conflict, and social critique. Through voices like the Wife of Bath and the Pardoner, this episode uncovers themes of power, identity, and perspective—revealing how Chaucer’s work captures the complexity of human nature in ways that still feel strikingly modern.
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In this first episode of Echoes of English Literature, we journey into the world of Beowulf, one of the earliest masterpieces of English literature. Through storytelling and analysis, we explore the battles against Grendel, his vengeful mother, and the final confrontation with the dragon, while uncovering deeper themes of heroism, fate, and legacy. Blending historical context with modern connections, this episode invites you to see how an ancient epic still speaks to the questions we ask today about courage, identity, and what it means to be remembered.