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Literature Portal | Britannica
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Literature
With the development of language, the human imagination has found a way to create and communicate through the written word. A literary work can transport us into a fictional, fantastic new world, describe a fleeting feeling, or simply give us a picture of the past through novels, poems, tragedies, epic works, and other genres. Through literature, communication becomes an art, and it can bridge and bond people and cultures of different languages and backgrounds.
Browse Subcategories
Featured content, October 07, 2025
Australian literature
Australian literature, the body of literatures, both oral and written, produced in Australia. Perhaps more so than in other...
Canadian literature
Canadian literature, the body of written works produced by Canadians. Reflecting the country’s dual origin and its official...
Celtic literature
Celtic literature, the body of writings composed in Irish and the languages derived from it, Scottish Gaelic and Manx, and...
romance
Romance, literary form, usually characterized by its treatment of chivalry, that came into being in France in the mid-12th...
Irish literature
Irish literature, the body of written works produced in Ireland or by Irish writers. This article discusses Irish literature...
Latin American literature
Latin American literature, the national literatures of the Spanish-speaking countries of the Western Hemisphere. Historically,...
short story
Short story, brief fictional prose narrative that is shorter than a novel and that usually deals with only a few characters....
Brazilian literature
Brazilian literature, the body of written works produced in the Portuguese language in Brazil. Brazil was claimed for Portugal...
Literature Quizzes
2010s Music Quiz
Match the popular song to its artist.
27 True-or-False Questions from Britannica’s Most Difficult Science Quizzes
How much do you know about Mars? How about energy? Think it’ll be easier if you have to pick only true or false? Find out...
36 Questions from Britannica’s Most Popular Science Quizzes
How well do you know astronomy? How about quantum mechanics? This quiz will take you through 36 of the hardest questions...
39 of the Most Challenging World Capitals Across History
Paris, Bujumbura, Pierre, and Nuuk all have something in common: they are all capital cities. And there are thousands more....
41 Questions from Britannica’s Most Popular World History Quizzes
This quiz collects 41 of the toughest questions from Britannica’s most popular quizzes on world history. If you want to ace...
43 Questions About Politics (Mostly in the United States) Compiled from Britannica’s Quizzes
This quiz gathers together questions from Britannica’s quizzes about politics, law, and government. It includes a lot of...
44 Questions from Britannica’s Most Popular Health and Medicine Quizzes
How much do you know about human anatomy? How about medical conditions? The brain? You’ll need to know a lot to answer 44...
47 Questions from Britannica’s Most Popular Geography Quizzes
Only the best and most determined quizmasters should tackle this quiz. It consists of questions taken from Britannica’s most...
49 Questions from Britannica’s Most Popular Literature Quizzes
Literature is a broad term that—among Britannica’s quizzes, at least—can include everything from American novels...
50 Capital Cities at Random Quiz
How well do you know seats of power around the world? We’ll give you a capital, you name the country, state, province.
Literature Videos
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Literature Subcategories

Step into the world of folklore, fables, legends, tall tales, and epics, in which heroes are known to undertake arduous journeys and dragons, fairies, and giants abound. Stories such as these circulated long before systems of writing were developed; ballads, folktales, poems, and the like were transmitted exclusively by word of mouth before written languages took over, and they continue to captivate listeners and readers to this day.
Articles
- folk literature
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Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
Norwegian author
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The Thousand and One Nights
collection of Middle Eastern and Indian stories

Here you'll find some of your favorite fictional characters from literature, film, television, and the like, whether it's the analytical mastermind Sherlock Holmes and his endearing associate Dr. Watson or the menacing and helmeted Darth Vader, the ill-tempered Donald Duck, or the teenage sleuth Nancy Drew.
Articles
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Black Panther
fictional character
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Doctor Strange
fictional character
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Spider-Man
fictional character

Extra, extra! Although the content and style of journalism and the medium through which it is delivered have varied significantly over the years, journalism has always given us a way to keep up with current events, so that we always have our fingers on the pulse.
Articles
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Bob Woodward
American journalist and author
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Ida B. Wells-Barnett
American journalist and social reformer
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Seymour Hersh
American journalist

Looking to impress your friends with your expansive knowledge of historical events, philosophical concepts, obscure words, and more? We may be biased, but it seems fair enough to say that reference works such as dictionaries, encyclopedias, and textbooks have provided such a service for years (in some cases, hundreds or even thousands of years). You can look for them at your local public library, which likely stores books, manuscripts, journals, CDs, movies, and other sources of information and entertainment.
Articles
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Albrecht von Haller
Swiss biologist
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John James Audubon
American artist
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Athanasius Kircher
German Jesuit priest and scholar

Literature knows no geographical bounds; authors can be found in nearly all corners of the globe. Find out more about regional literary styles and forms.
Articles

Everyone's a critic. But not all literary criticism involves judging the quality of a text; it can also focus on interpreting the meaning of a work or evaluating an author's place in literary history.
Articles
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Edward Said
American professor and literary critic
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Harold Bloom
American literary critic and author
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Charles Baudelaire
French author

Want to be able to distinguish your limericks from your haikus and your paeans from your panegyrics? Dive deep into literary terms and forms.
Articles

The truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth! Or that's the idea, at least. Nonfiction works center on facts and real events. Although there is some debate about which kinds of literature qualify as nonfiction, the genre typically includes books in the categories of biography, memoir, science, history, self-help, cooking, health and fitness, business, and more.
Articles
- nonfictional prose
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blog
Internet
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essay
literature

novels and short stories have been enchanting and transporting readers for a great many years. There's a little something for everyone: within these two genres of literature, a wealth of types and styles can be found, including historical, epistolary, romantic, Gothic, and realist works, along with many more.
Articles
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The Great Gatsby
novel by Fitzgerald
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The Book of Negroes
novel by Hill
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Dracula
novel by Stoker

speech and Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, quoted above, are two iconic examples of successful oratory, as are Elizabeth I's speech to the troops at Tilbury and Winston Churchill's first speech as prime minister to the House of Commons.
Articles
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Honoré-Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau
French politician and orator
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Daniel Webster
American politician
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Cicero
Roman statesman, scholar, and writer

; and the stage is where you'll find performances of works by such famed playwrights as Anton Chekhov, Eugene O'Neill, and the Bard himself, among many others.
Articles
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Pygmalion
play by Shaw
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A Raisin in the Sun
play by Hansberry
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Our Town
play by Wilder

; sonnets, haikus, nursery rhymes, epics, and more are included.
Articles
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The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
work by Coleridge
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Mahabharata
Indian epic
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Symbolism
literary and artistic movement

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