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  2. American realism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_realism

    American realism was a movement in art, music and literature that depicted contemporary social realities and the lives and everyday activities of ordinary people. The movement began in literature in the mid-19th century, and became an important tendency in visual art in the early 20th century.

  3. Literary realism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literary_realism

    Literary realism is a literary genre, part of the broader realism in arts, that attempts to represent subject-matter truthfully, avoiding speculative fiction and supernatural elements. It originated with the realist art movement that began with mid- nineteenth-century French literature ( Stendhal ) and Russian literature ( Alexander Pushkin ...

  4. List of literary movements - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_literary_movements

    Magical realism: A literary style and movement in which magical elements appear in otherwise realistic circumstances. Most often associated with the Latin American literary boom of the 20th century [50] Gabriel García Márquez, Octavio Paz, Günter Grass, Julio Cortázar, Sadegh Hedayat, Nina Sadur, Mo Yan, Olga Tokarczuk: Neo-Romanticism

  5. American literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_literature

    American writers had long looked to European models for inspiration, but whereas the literary breakthroughs of the mid-19th century came from finding distinctly American styles and themes, writers from this period were finding ways of contributing to a flourishing international literary scene, not as imitators but as equals.

  6. Realism (arts) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Realism_(arts)

    The rigidities, conventions, and other limitations of "bourgeois realism" prompted in their turn the revolt later labeled as modernism; starting around 1900, the driving motive of modernist literature was the criticism of the 19th-century bourgeois social order and world view, which was countered with an anti-rationalist, anti-realist and anti ...

  7. American literary regionalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_literary_regionalism

    American literary regionalism, often used interchangeably with the term "local color", is a style or genre of writing in the United States that gained popularity in the mid-to-late 19th century and early 20th century.

  8. Magical realism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magical_realism

    Fantasy – Literary genre; Latin American Boom – Late 20th-century global proliferation of Latin American literature; Hallucinatory realism – Term used by critics in describing works of art; Hysterical realism – Pejorative term to describe certain realist-genre books; Low fantasy – Subgenre of fantasy fiction defined by a "mundane" setting

  9. Realism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Realism

    American Realism; Classical Realism; Literary realism, a movement from the mid-19th to the early 20th century; Magical realism, a genre of fiction and art that blurs the line between speculation and reality; Neorealism (art) Italian neorealism (film) Indian neorealism (film) New realism, a movement founded in 1960