翻訳と辞書
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・ The Mouths of Madness
・ The Move
・ The Move (album)
・ The Move (Sam Fife)
・ The Move (XM)
・ The Move of The Penguin
・ The Moved and the Shaken
・ The Moved-Outers
・ The Movement
・ The Movement (comics)
・ The Movement (dance band)
・ The Movement (Diggin' in the Crates Crew album)
・ The Movement (Harlem World album)
・ The Movement (Iceland)
・ The Movement (Inspectah Deck album)
The Movement (literature)
・ The Movement (Mo Thugs album)
・ The Movement (production team)
・ The Movement (reggae band)
・ The Movement (Sharlok Poems album)
・ The Movement (theatre company)
・ The Movement Disorder Society
・ The Movement For a Democracy of Content
・ The Movement of the Free Spirit
・ The Movement Snowboards
・ The Moves Make the Man
・ The Movie
・ The Movie (song)
・ The Movie Album
・ The Movie Album (Ramsey Lewis album)


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The Movement (literature) : ウィキペディア英語版
The Movement (literature)

''The Movement'' was a term coined in 1954 by Jay D. Scott, literary editor of ''The Spectator'', to describe a group of writers including Philip Larkin, Kingsley Amis, Donald Davie, D.J. Enright, John Wain, Elizabeth Jennings, Thom Gunn, and Robert Conquest. The Movement was essentially English in character, as poets from other parts of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland were not actively involved.
== Description ==

Although considered a literary group, members of The Movement saw themselves more as an actual movement, with each writer sharing a common purpose.
The Movement poets were considered anti-romantic, but Larkin and Hughes featured romantic elements. To these poets, good poetry meant simple, sensuous content and traditional, conventional and dignified form.
The Movement's importance is its worldview that took into account Britain’s reduced dominance in world politics. The group's objective was to prove the importance of English poetry over the new modernist poetry. The members of The Movement were not anti-modernists; they were opposed to modernism, which was reflected in the Englishness of their poetry.〔
The Movement sparked the divisions among different types of British poetry. Their poems were nostalgic for the earlier Britain and filled with pastoral images of the decaying way of life as Britain moved farther from the rural and more towards the urban.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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