Share:
  Guess poet | Poets | Poets timeline | Isles | Contacts

Poets with tag Realism: RUS

Literary realism is part of the realist art movement beginning with mid nineteenth-century French literature (Stendhal), and Russian literature (Alexander Pushkin) and extending to the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. Literary realism, in contrast to idealism, attempts to represent familiar things as they are. Realist authors chose to depict everyday and banal activities and experiences, instead of using a romanticized or similarly stylized presentation.

NameYearsCountryTagsWorksRank
Jane Austen1775-1817ENGGothic, Realism13336
Alexander Pushkin1799-1837RUSAgnosticism, Bipolar disorder, Blank verse, Fantasy, Freemasons, Golden age, National, Realism, Romanticism7334
Charles Dickens1812-1870ENGChildren, Didactism, Fantasy, Gothic, Realism, Satire, Victorian10112
Mikhail Lermontov1814-1841RUSGolden age, Romanticism, Realism1371
Walt Whitman1819-1892USAHumanism, Realism, Transcendentalism, Free verse, Didactism, Deism, Pantheism, Bipolar disorder, War, Slavery, National, Fantasy, Expressionism, Homoerotism33111
George Eliot1819-1880ENGAtheism, Realism, Victorian1362
Anne Bronte1820-1849ENGChristian, Feminism, Realism, Victorian69136
Mark Twain1835-1910USAChildren, Deism, Didactism, Humour, Realism, Satire, Vernacular, Victorian7212
Thomas Hardy1840-1928ENGAgnosticism, Pessimism, Realism, Romanticism, The Movement, Victorian, War25020
Ambrose Bierce1842-1914USAAgnosticism, Gothic, Realism, Satire, Speculative44124
Henry Lawson1867-1922AUSRealism, Slavery, National49959
Paul Laurence Dunbar1872-1906AFR/USAFantasy, Realism, Slavery, Vernacular43019
Robert Frost1874-1963USABlank verse, Didactism, Dymock poets, Formalism, Laureate, Modernism, National, Optimism, Realism, Sonnet, Vernacular1441
Boris Pasternak1890-1960RUSBipolar disorder, Futurism, Realism, Silver age122154
Vladimir Mayakovsky1893-1930RUSSilver age, Futurism, Realism, Free verse, Fantasy1372
Jacques Prevert1900-1977FRARealism, Surrealism, Symbolism9231

The script ran 0.011 seconds.