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1、精選優(yōu)質(zhì)文檔-傾情為你奉上Part One: 英國文學(xué)考點(diǎn)全景圖中古時(shí)期的英國文學(xué)Literary termsBrief descriptionBallad (民謠)(1) Ballad is a story in poetic form to be sung or recited. (2) Ballads were passed down from generation to generation. (3) Robin Hood is a famous ballad singing the goods of Robin Hood. Coleridges The Rime of the Anc

2、ient Mariner is a 19th century English ballad. Epic (史詩)(1) Epic, in poetry, refers to a long work dealing with the actions of gods and heroes. (2) Beowulf is the greatest national epic of the Anglo-Saxons, John Milton wrote three great epics: Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained and Samson Agonistes.Ro

3、mance(羅曼史/騎士文學(xué))(1) Romance is a popular literary form in the medieval England. (2) It sings knightly adventures or other heroic deeds. (3)Chivalry (such as bravery, honor, generosity, loyalty and kindness to the weak and poor) is the spirit of romance.Alliteration(押頭韻)(1) Alliteration means a repeti

4、tion of the initial sounds of several words in a line or group. (2) Alliteration is a traditional poetic device in English literature. (3) Robert Frosts poem Acquainted with the Night is a case in point:“I have stood still and stopped the sound of feet ”.Name of the WriterWorksBrief Descriptionunkno

5、wnBeowulf貝奧武甫(1) Beowulf, a typical example of Old English poetry, is regarded as the greatest national epic of the Anglo-Saxons. (2)The epic describes the heroic deeds of a Scandinavian hero, Beowulf, in fighting against the monster Grendel, his revengeful mother, and a fire-breathing dragon. (3)Th

6、e poem conveys a hope that the righteous will triumph over the evil.Geoffrey Chaucer (喬叟)(1) He is regarded as the father of English poetry.(2) The Canterbury Tales is his masterpiece. (3)He presents, for the first time in English literature, a comprehensive realistic picture of the medieval English

7、 society and creates a whole . of life. (5) Chaucer introduced from France rhymed stanzas of various types (heroic couplet) into English poetry to replace the Old English alliterative verse. (6) It was Chaucer who made London dialect the foundation for modern English speech. (7) His characterization

8、 is vivid.The Canterbury Tales 坎特伯雷故事集Troilus and Criseyde 特羅勒斯和科麗西德Rose 玫瑰羅曼史The House of Fame 聲譽(yù)之堂(1) The Canterbury Tales is Chaucers monumental success. (2) It is a collection of stories told by a group of pilgrims on their way to Canterbury. (3) It was influenced by Boccaccios (薄伽丘) Decameron (

9、十日談). (4) In the poem, Chaucer presents, for the first time in English literature, . medieval English society and creates a whole gallery of vivid characters from all works of life. (5) The poem shows Chaucers humanism and anticipates a new era to come. William Langland(威廉·蘭格倫)Piers Plowman農(nóng)夫皮爾

10、斯(1) Piers Plowman is a poem that gives a picture of the life in feudal England. (2) It is a protest against the then social injustice.文藝復(fù)興時(shí)期的英國文學(xué)Literary TermsBrief DescriptionRenaissance (文藝復(fù)興)(3) The real mainstream of the English Renaissance is the Elizabethan drama with William Shakespeare bein

11、g the leading dramatist.(1) The word “Renaissance” means “rebirth”. It meant the reintroduction into Western Europe of the full cultural heritage of Greece and Rome. (2) The essence of the Renaissance is humanism. Attitudes and feelings which had been characteristic of the 14th and 15th centuries pe

12、rsisted well down into the era of Humanism and Reformation. Humanism (人文主義)(1) Humanism is the essence of the Renaissance. (2) It emphasized the dignity of human beings and the importance of the present life. Humanists voiced their beliefs that man was the center of the universe and man did not only

13、 have the right to enjoy the beauty of the present life, but had the ability to perfect himself and to perform wonders.Spenserian stanza (斯賓塞詩節(jié))(3) Spensers The Faerie Queene was written in this kind of stanza.(1) Spenserian stanza in the creation of Edmund Spenser. (2) It refers to a stanza of nine

14、 lines, with the first eight lines in iambic pentameter and the last line in iambic hexameter(六音步), rhyming ababbcbcc. Conceit (奇特的比喻)(2) Conceit is extensively employed in John Donnes poetry.(1) Conceit is a far-fetched simile or metaphor, a literary conceit occurs when the speaker compares two hig

15、hly dissimilar things. Metaphysical poetry (玄學(xué)派詩歌)(3) The diction is simple as compared with that of the Elizabethan or the Neoclassical periods, and echos the words and cadences of common speech. (4) The imagery is drawn from actual life.(1) Metaphysical poetry is commonly used to name the work of

16、the 17th century writers who wrote under the influence of John Donne. (2) With the rebellious spirit, the metaphysical poets tried to break away from the conventional fashion of the Elizabethan love poetry. Name of the WriterWorksBrief DescriptionPhilip Sidney (菲利普·錫尼爵士) (1) He stands for the s

17、pirit of the Elizabethan Age.(2)In many ways he represents the Renaissance ideal of “ the complete man ”.Arcadia 阿卡狄亞Astrophel and Stella 阿斯特羅菲爾與斯特拉Defense of Poetry為詩歌辯護(hù)(1) Arcadia is a prose romance filled with lyrics.(2) It is regarded as a forerunner of the modern world.Edmund Spenser (埃德蒙·

18、斯賓塞)(1) He is acclaimed as “ the poets poet ” in English literature. (2)His poetry is noted for such qualities as a perfect melody, a rare sense of beauty, a splendid imagination, a lofty moral purity and seriousness, and a dedicated idealism. (3)He created the Spenserian stanza. (4)His masterpiece

19、is The Faerie Queene.The Faerie Queene仙后The Shepherd Calendar牧羊人日記(1) The Faerie Queene is Spensers masterpiece, a great poem of its age. (2)The fairy queen in the poem stands for both the Queen Elizabeth and glory. (3) In the poem Spenser speaks of 12 virtues of a perfect gentleman. (4) This allego

20、rical poem is distinguished for its rich content and exquisite style. (5)The poem is written in the form of the Spenserian Stanza.(6)The Red-cross Knight in the poem represents the Church of England.(7)The Shepherd Calendar records and expresses the poets laments over the loss of Rosalind.Thomas Mor

21、e (托馬斯·莫爾)(1) He is the greatest of the English humanist. (2)He authored Utopia (烏托邦).Christopher Marlowe (克里斯托弗·馬洛)(1)He is the most gifted of University Wits.(2.1) Dr. Faustus is a play based on the German legend of a magician aspiring for knowledge and finally meeting his tragic end as

22、a result of selling his soul to the Devil. (2.2) It celebrates the human passion for knowledge and happiness.(2.3) It also reveals mans frustration in realizing the high aspirations in a hostile moral order. Tamburlaine貼木兒大帝Dr. Faustus浮士德的悲劇The Jew of Malta馬耳他的猶太人The Passionate Shepherd to His Love多

23、情的牧羊人致情人(2.4) And the confinement to time is the cruelest fact of mans condition.(1.1) Tamburlaine is a play about an ambitious and cruel Tartar conqueror in the 14th century who rose from a shepherd to an overpowering king.(1.2) It voiced the supreme desire of the man of the Renaissance for infinit

24、e power and authority.(3)The Jew of Malta expresses mans desire for wealth.William Shakespeare(威廉·莎士比亞)(1) He is the greatest of all Elizabethan dramatist. (2)His literary career falls into four periods. He wrote 37 plays and 154 sonnets. (3)His sonnets represent the finest poetic crafts manshi

25、p of Elizabethan poetry. (4) The themes of sonnets are about love, friendship, the destructive effects of time, the quickness of physical decay, and the loss of beauty, vigor and love. (5.1)The Merchant of Venice is a play eulogizing the friendship between Antonio and Bassanio, idealizing Portia as

26、a heroine of great beauty, wit and loyalty, and exposing the insatiable greed and brutality of the Jew represented by Shylock. (5.2)But people today tend to regard the play as a satire of the Christians hypocrisy and their false standards, their cunning ways of pursing worldliness and their unreason

27、ing prejudice against Jews. (5.3)The allusion “ pound of flesh ” comes from this comedy.Richard III理查德三世Henry IV 亨利四世Henry V 亨利五世Henry VI 亨利六世Henry VIII 亨利八世A Midsummer Nights Dream 仲夏夜之夢(mèng)The Merchant of Venice威尼斯商人As You Like It皆大歡喜Twelfth Night 第十二夜Hamlet 哈姆雷特Othello 奧賽羅King Lear 李爾王Macbeth 麥克白R(shí)ome

28、o and Juliet羅密歐與朱麗葉The Tempest 暴風(fēng)雨Sonnet 18 十四行詩 18(6.1)Sonnet 18 is one of Shakespeares most beautiful sonnets. In the poem he has a profound mediation on the destructive power of time and the eternal beauty brought forth by poetry to the one he loves. A nice summers day is usually transient, but t

29、he beauty in poetry can last for ever. Thus Shakespeare has a faith in the permanence of poetry. (6.2)The rhyme of the poem is abab cdcd efef gg.(1) Hamlet is the greatest tragedy of Shakespeares. Hamlet, the melancholic scholar-prince, faces the dilemma between action and mind. (2) Othello is a tra

30、gedy of humanism. Othellos inner weakness is made use of by the outside evil force. (3)Macbeth is a tragedy of all ambitious adventures who become the prey of their ambition. Macbeths lust for power stirs up his ambition and drives him to incessant crimes.(4.1)King Lear is based on an old British le

31、gend.(4.2)The old King Lear is a self- ruler who suffers from t andInfidelity on account of his irresponsibility and vanity. (4.3)In King Lear, Shakespeare has not only made a profound analysis of the social crisis in which the evils can be seen everywhere, but also criticized the bourgeois egoism.

32、(4.4)Shakespeare points out that a king or ruler must be responsible for his people.Francis Bacon (弗朗西斯·培根)(1) He is a philosopher, a scientist and the first English essayist. (2)He lays the foundation of modern science with his insistence on scientific way of thinking and fresh observation rat

33、her than authority as a basis for obtaining knowledge. (3)He is best known for his Essays that is the first example of that genre in English literature.(3.3)Forceful and persuasive, compact and precise, the assay reveals to us Bacons mature attitude towards learning. Essay 論說文集The Advancement of Lea

34、rning論學(xué)問的進(jìn)步Novum Organum ( The New Instrument )新工具 Of Studies 談讀書(3.1)Of Studies is the most popular of Bacons essays. (3.2)It analyzes what studies chiefly serve for, the different ways adopted by different people to pursue studies, and how studies exert influence over human character.(1.1)The Adva

35、ncement of Learning is a great tract on education. (1.2)Here Bacon highly praises knowledge, refuting the objections to learning and outlining the problems with which his plan is to deal. (1.3)Also he answers the charge that learning is against religion.(2.1)Novum Organum is a successful treatise wr

36、itten in Latin on methodology. (2.2)The argument is for the use ofinductive method of reasoning in scientific study. John Donne (約翰·鄧恩)(1) He is the leading figure of the “ metaphysical school ”.(2) The most striking feature of Donnes poetry is his frequent use of conceit.(3)He is a religious p

37、oet obsessed with death. (4)The Songs and Sonnets is probably his best-known lyrics. Love is the basic theme. Donne holds that the nature of love is the union of soul and body.The Sun Rising升起的太陽The Holy Sonnets神圣體十四行詩The Songs and Sonnets歌謠與十四行詩Death, Be Not Proud死亡,你別驕傲或死神莫驕妄The Flea跳蚤之歌A Valedict

38、ion: Forbidding Mourning分別:莫憂傷the center. (2.3)In a word, John Donne seems to emphasize the importance of Platonic love. (1.1)The Song and Sonnets is probably his best-known lyrics. (1.2)Love is the basic theme. John Donne holds that the nature of love is the union of soul and body.(2.1)In A Valedic

39、tion: Forbidding Mourning Donne resents too much display of emotion when two lovers part. In this poem we are familiarized with Donnes famous conceit: the two lovers ( he and his wife ) are likened to the two points of a compass. The wife stays at home. She is the Fixed foot and the husband “roams”

40、around, but never deviates from John Milton(約翰·彌爾頓)(1) As a real revolutionary, a master poet and a great prose writer, Milton holds an important place in the history of English literature. (2)He produced three epics: Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained and Samson Agonistes.(3.1)Samson Agonistes i

41、s the most perfect example of the verse drama after the Greek style in English. (3.2)In this epic Milton presents to us a picture of how Samson, the Israels mighty champion, brings destruction down upon the enemy at the cost of his own life.Paradise Lost失樂園Paradise Regained復(fù)樂園Samson Agonistes力士參孫(3.

42、3)The whole poem strongly suggests Miltons passionate longing like Samsons that he too could bring destruction down upon the enemy at the cost of his own life. In this sense, Samson is Milton.(1.1)Paradise Lost is the greatest of Miltons epics. (1.2)It is the only generally acknowledged epic in Engl

43、ish literature since Beowulf. (1.3)The story is taken from the Bible. Theme of the epic is mans disobedience and the loss of Paradise, with its prime cause - Satan who rebels against Gods authority and tyranny.(2) Paradise Regained is a long narrative poem telling how man, in the person of Christ, w

44、ithstands the tempter and is established once more in the divine favor.John Bunyan (約翰·班揚(yáng))(1) He is a religious novelist whose style was modeled after that of the English Bible.(2) His language is concrete and vivid.(3) His masterpiece, The Pilgrims Progress, is the most successful religious al

45、legory.The Pilgrims Progress天路歷程(5)Its predominant metaphor is the metaphor of life as a journey. (6)The most famous scene in the novel is Vanity Fair.(1) The Pilgrims Progress is John Bunyans masterpiece. It is the most successful religious allegory. (2) It tells the experience of a devout Christia

46、n the Pilgrim with a neighbor named Faithful in a world full of vice and wickedness.(3)It is a prose allegory depicting the pilgrimage of a human soul in search for salvation.(4)The novel is not only about something spiritual but bears much relevance to the time. 啟蒙主義時(shí)期的英國文學(xué)Literary TermsBrief Descr

47、iptionThe Enlightenment Movement (啟蒙運(yùn)動(dòng))(5)Famous among the great enlighteners in England were those great writers like John Dryden, Alexander Pope, Joseph Addison and Sir Richard Steele, the two pioneers of familiar essays, Jonathan Swift, Richard Bringsley Sheridan, Daniel Defoe, Henry Fielding and

48、 Samuel Johnson,etc.(1) Enlightenment Movement was a progressive intellectual movement which flourished in France and swept through Western Europe in the 18th century. (2) The movement was a furtherance of the Renaissance from 14th century to the mid-17th century. (3)Its purpose was to enlighten the

49、 whole world with the light of modern philosophical and artistic ideas. (4)It celebrated reason or rationality, equality and science. It advocated universal education. Literature at that time became a very popular means of public education. Neoclassicism (新古典主義)(3)They believed that the artistic ide

50、als should be order, logic, restrained and emotion and accuracy, and that literature should be judged in terms of its service to humanity.(1)In the field of literature, the Enlightenment Movement brought about a revival of interest in the old classical works. (2)This tendency is known as neoclassici

51、sm. The neoclassicists held that forms of literature were to be modeled after the classical works of the ancient Greek and Roman writers such as Homer and Virgil and those of the contemporary French ones. The Graveyard School (墓地派詩歌)(1) The Graveyard School refers to a school of poets of the 18th ce

52、ntury whose poems are mostly devoted to a sentimental lamentation or medication on life, past and present,with death and graveyard as themes. (2) Thomas Gray is considered to be the leading figure of this school and his Elegy Written in A County Churchyard is its most representative work.The Heroic

53、Couplet(英雄對(duì)偶句)The Heroic Couplet means a pair of lines of a type once common in English poetry, in other words, it means iambic pentameter rhymed in two lines.Elegy(挽歌)(1) Elegy has typically been used to refer to reflective poems that lament the loss of something or someone.(2) In Memoriam by Alfre

54、d Tennyson is a famous elegy.Satire(諷刺)(3)Swifts Gullivers Travels is a great satire of the then English society from different aspects.(1) Satire means a kind of writing that holds up to ridicule or contempt the weakness and wrongdoings of individuals, groups, institutions, or humanity in general(2

55、) The aim of satirists is to set a moral standard for society, and they attempt to persuade the reader to see their point of view through the force of laughter.Sentimentalism(感傷主義文學(xué))(3)The Vicar of Wakefield by Oliver Goldsmith is a case in point.(1) Sentimentalism is a pejorative term to describe f

56、alse or superficial emotion, assumed feeling, self-regarding postures of grief and pain.(2) In literature it denotes overmuch use of pathetic effects and attempts to arouse feeling by “pathetic” indulgence.Didactic(說教的)(1) Didactic literature is said to be didactic if it deliberately teaches some moral lesson. The use of literature for such teaching is one of its traditional justifications.(2) Most modern literary works during the Enlightenment period tended to be didactic.Farce(鬧劇/滑稽?。〧arce refers to a play full of ridiculous happenings

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