5 Part V The 17th Century

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英国文学史及选读1,2册复习大纲

英国文学史及选读1,2册复习大纲

英国文学史及选读1,2册复习大纲Part 1 The Anglo―Saxon Period(449-1066)秧格鲁-撒克逊时期1.H istorical BackgroundCelts 400B.C. Romans 50B.C. Anglo―Saxons 450A.D Norman Invasion 1066A.D. Roman empire从albion撤军,teutonic tribes(包括angles, Saxons,jutes)(条顿人or日耳曼人)陆续登陆此地2. Literature 1,pagan异教徒文学2 christian基督徒文学alliterative verse头韵诗Epic: Beowulf贝奥武甫(Denmark背景)(the hall heorot 鹿兀grendel:a monster half-human)1) Oral origin, recited in court, handed down in generations until finally it was recorded by certain poet.上下部分由pagan写,插入由christian写2) a mixture of history and legend.,england’s national epic 民国史诗Part II The Anglo-Norman Period(1066-1350)秧格鲁-诺曼时期11.H istorical BackgroundRoman conquest,接着是english conquest,最后是normanconquest。

The Norman Conquest in 1066Duke William of Normandy claimed himself William I, King of England.(the battle of hastings希斯廷战役)Kings―Barons男爵―Knights, a feudal system of hierarchy统治集团was formed2.T he languageUpper classes: French, Latin The mon people: Old EnglishThree languages co-existed in England. French became the official language used by the king and the Norman lords; Latin became the principal tongue of church affairs and in universities; and Old English was spoken only by the mon English people.3.The literatureRomance was a type of literature that was very popular2in the Middle Ages. It is about the life and adventures undertaken by a knight.It reflected the spirit of chivalry骑士制度. The content of romance: love, chivalry and religion. It involves fighting, adventures.Subject matter:Geoffrey’s His tory杰弗里《史记》,riming chronicles押韵编年史,metricalverse格律诗体,doggerel verse打油诗体1)t he Matter of France eg. Charlemagne and his peers查理曼大帝和他的骑士2)M atter of Greece and Rome eg Akexabder亚历山大大帝3)M atter of Britain tales having for their heroes Arthurand his knights of the Round Table3.m ain literatureSir Gawain and the green knight.高文爵士和绿衣骑士(arthur,gawain,green knight, morgain the fay-woman3妖精摩根, the green girdle绿腰带)Part III Geoffrey Chaucer (1340―1400)杰弗里.乔叟时期1.H istorical BackgroundHe was living at the same time as the writer of Sir Gawain. In 1350 AD, 100 Years' War between England and France.The English won, they controlled large French territory领土. The Henry VI lost it all. He is father of English poetry War of the Roses 1455-1485 AD2.W hat's middle ages like?1). The medieval society: hierarchy 等级制度social system.2). Another important thing in the medieval society is Christianity基督God-centered thinking, mind ideology 思想体系3.L ife and work of ChaucerChaucer lived between (1340-1400). His life is closely41. French 1360-1370 translate French poetry2. Italian 1372-13863.English The Canterbury tales4.The Canterbury talesHe got his stories from various sources, Greek authors, Roman authors, Italian, French, but there is no doubt about Chaucer's originality. He retells the stories in his own way.5The stories are told by a group of people on their way to and back from Canterbury. Pilgrims 朝圣者tell stories to pass the time. The journey is used as a kind of device to unite the various tales Nun修女:Her enthusiasm for grace, trying to e someone that she is not, she cannot possibly be. --Pretentiousness, pretending伪装too much Chaucer has different attitude to different characters第一句:as soon as april pierces to the root, the drought of march, and bathes each bud and shootThe significance of his writing1)it gives a prehensive广泛的picture of Chaucer’s time2)the dramatic structure3)Chaucer’s humor4)Chaucer’s contribution to the English language. Ever since the Norman Conquest the French language was the language at the court and the upper classes, and Latin was the language of the learned and the church. Chaucer6used the native language English and proved that the English language is a beautiful language. He increased the prestige 威信of the English language.5.Popular ballads大众民谣A ballad is a narrative叙述poem that tells a story. It is about particular incidents, usually dramatic. Ballets tell stories-about tragic悲剧的incidents. They are written in a special musical pattern, ballad meter-four meters, couplets(相连并押韵的两行诗)―two line in a unit or quatrain 四行诗__ ababcdcd Characteristics:1)The beginning is often abrupt突然地. No introductionof the characters and the background of the tale2)There are strong dramatic elements. A ballad deals witha single episode插曲3)the story is often told through dialogue and action4)the theme is often tragic悲剧的5)The ballad meter is used. It contains four-line stanza7节,段在英国把民谣当文学形式研究的第一人是托马斯.帕西主教Bishop Thomas Percy,他将民谣收录到《英诗辑古》Reliques of Ancient English Poetry中。

智慧树知到《英国文学漫谈》章节测试答案

智慧树知到《英国文学漫谈》章节测试答案

鏅烘収鏍戠煡鍒般€婅嫳鍥芥枃瀛︽极璋堛€嬬珷鑺傛祴璇曠瓟妗?绗竴绔?1銆?English literature began with the ( ) settlement in England.A:RomanB:CelticC:EnglishD:Anglo-Saxon绛旀: Anglo-Saxon2銆?Beowulf, written about the life of England in the ( ) society,is said to bethe national epicof the English people.A:primitiveB:feudalC:medievalD:agricultural绛旀: feudal3銆?Beowulfis written in the form of ( ), a popular form of poetry in Anglo-Saxon literature.A:balladB:blank verseC:coupletD:alliterative verse绛旀: alliterative verse绗簩绔?1銆?The medieval period is often called the Dark Age for the dominating power of ( ) over everything in the society.A:the KingB:feudal lordsC:the ChurchD:the knights绛旀: the Church2銆?The central character of a romance is ( ), who follows the code of behavior calledchivalry.A:the knightB:the warriorC:the GladiatorD:a soldier绛旀: the knight3銆?The stories of ( ) are the most well-known ballads, songs of stories told orally in 4-line stanzas.A:the green knightsB:King ArthurC:Robin HoodD:the Vikings绛旀: Robin Hood4銆? Piers the Plowmanwritten by William Langland in the form of ( ) represents the achievements of popular literature of Medieval England.A:allegoryB:symbolismC:a dreamD:epic绛旀: allegory5銆?( ) is considered the father of English poetry, whose most representative work isThe Canterbury Tales.A:William LanglandB:Edmund SpenserC:John MiltonD:Geoffrey Chaucer绛旀: Geoffrey Chaucer6銆?The Canterbury Tales,a collection of stories strung together and told by 30 pilgrims on their way to pilgrimage, is written in the form of ( ).A:blank verseB:alliterative verseC:heroic couopletD:ballad绛旀: heroic couoplet7銆?The key-note of the Renaissance is ( ).A:humanismB:realismC:romanticismD:asceticism绛旀: humanism绗笁绔?1銆?It was ( ) who first introduced and reformed the English drama which reached its climax in the hands of William Shakespeare.A:JohnWycliffB:University WitsC:Christopher MarloweD:Ben Johnson绛旀:B2銆?Great writers of the English Renaissance who are known for humanism, took ( ) as the centre of the world and voiced the human aspirations for freedom and equality.A:the worldB:GodC:powerD:man绛旀:D3銆?Shakespeare is hailed by ( ), contemporary with Shakespeare, as 鈥渘ot of an age, but for all time鈥?A:Christopher MarloweB:Ben JonsonC:Robert GreeneD:Thomas Nash绛旀:B4銆?Hamlet is characterized as a(an) ( ) on that, he loves good and hates evil;he is a man free from prejudice and superstition; he has unbounded love for the world and firm belief in the power of man.A:idealistB:PuritanC:humanistD:patriot绛旀:C5銆? Edmund Spenser was considered the ( ) for his achievements in poetry.A:鈥渢he Poets鈥?Poet鈥?B:鈥渇ather of English poetry鈥?C:鈥渢he saint of English poetry鈥?D:鈥渢he greatest English poet鈥?绛旀:A6銆?( ) is a distinctive verse form adopted by Edmund Spenser in his works incluiding his masterpieceThe Faerie Queene. It has 9-line stanzas, rhyming in ababbcbcc.A:鈥淭he mighty lines鈥?B:sonnetC:鈥淭he Spenserian Stanza鈥?D:blank verse绛旀:C7銆?Francis Bacon won for himself the first English ( ) for his achievements in English literature of the Renaissance.A:dramatistB:poetC:prose writerD:essayist绛旀:D8銆?The most representative work of Francis Bacon is ( ), which is the first collection of English essays.A:Advancement of LearningB:EssaysC:The Interpretation of NatureD:Novum Organum绛旀:B绗洓绔?1銆? ( )is regarded as the greatest prose writer in theEnglish literature of the17th century, who is best known for his workThe Pilgrim鈥檚 Progress.A:John DrydenB:Francis BaconC:George HerbertD:John Bunyan绛旀:D2銆?The Pilgrim鈥檚 Progressis written in the form of ( ) .A:symbolsB:allegoryC:allusionsD:aggressions绛旀:3銆? 鈥淭he Metaphysical Poets鈥?refer to theloose group of17th-century English poets whose work was characterized by the inventive use of( )A:metaphorB:imaginationC:conceitD:symbols绛旀:C4銆? In his 鈥淎 Valediction: Forbidding Mourning鈥? John Donne makes a most impressive comparison between love and ( ) as the dominant conceit of the poem.A:a pair of compassesB:an earthquakeC:a farewell to a dying personD:a piece of gold绛旀:A5銆?The 17th century of English history was marked mainly by the English Bourgeois Revolution which ended with the establishment of ( ) as a compromise between the bourgeoisie and the monarchy.A:the United KingdomB:institutional monarchyC:the Whig PartyD:the Tory Party绛旀:B6銆?(聽聽聽聽) was the religious cloak of the English Bourgeois Revolution which advocated God's supreme authority over human beings.A:HumanismB:RepublicanismC:CalvinismD:Puritanism绛旀:D7銆? Puritan poetry in the 17th-century English literature is represented best by ( ), who producedParadise Lostas his representative work.A:John MiltionB:John DonneC:Robert HerrickD:John Dryden绛旀:A8銆?Throughout his life, Milton showed strong rebellious spirit agaisnt many things he thought unjust and acted as the voice of ( ) of England under Oliver Cromwell.A:the ParliamentB:the CommonwealthC:the MonarchD:the Royalists绛旀:B9銆? 鈥淥n his Blindness鈥?and 鈥淥n his Deceased Wife鈥?are the two best-known of Milton鈥檚 ( ).A:elegiesB:blank versesC:sonnetsD:alliterative verses绛旀:C10銆? Milton鈥檚Paradise Lostemploysthe themes taken from ( )of the Christian Bible.A:GenesisB:MatthewC:ExodusD:Luke绛旀:A11銆? The central theme ofParadise Lostis ( ).A:the creation of manB:the fall of manC:resurrectionD:final judgment绛旀:绗簲绔?1銆?The Enlightenment was an intellectualmovement throughout Western Europe in the18thcenturywhich was an expression of the struggle of bourgeoisie against ( ).A:puritanismB:feudalismC:humanismD:classicism绛旀:B2銆? Among the English Enlighteners of the 18th century,there were chiefly two groups: the ( ) group and the radical group.A:conservativeB:revolutionaryC:royalistD:moderate绛旀:D3銆? The Tatler,a British literary and society journal begun byRichard Steelein 1709,featured cultivated essays on( ).A:contemporary mannersB:social evilsC:class strugglesD:cultural state绛旀:A4銆?As a distinctive way, ( ) are adopted by the neo-classicist playwrights in the 18th-century English literature.A:realistic techniquesB:three unitiesC:heroic coupletsD:satires绛旀:B5銆?( ) writers in the 18th-century English literature modelled themselves ontheGreek and Romanwritersin their dramatic writings.A:Pre-romanticistB:RealistC:Neo-classicistD:Enlightenment绛旀:C6銆? AlexanerPope was a masterof poetryinheroic couplet.He strongly advocated ( ), emphasizing that literary works should be judged by classical rules.A:realismB:naturalismC:aestheticismD:classicism绛旀:D7銆? Daniel Defoe is an early proponent of the ( ) novel whose masterpieceRobinson Crusoetells about the adventures of a sailor on the sea and on an island.A:sentimentalistB:epistolaryC:realistD:Gothic绛旀:C8銆丄s one of the greatest satirists in the 18th century,(聽聽聽聽)made use of satire to attacksocial evilsand call for social changes in hisGulliver's Travels.A:Johnathan SwiftB:Daniel DefoeC:Samuel RichardsonD:Henry Fielding绛旀:A9銆?Gulliver鈥?s Travelstells about the adventures of Gullliver through the fairy tale of fantasy which is a great satire on ( ).A:human mindB:human heartC:human spiritD:human nature绛旀:D10銆?( ), the greatest realist novelist of the 18th-century English literature, is also considered the father of the English novel.A:Jonathan SwiftB:Henry FieldingC:Daniel DefoeD:Oliver Goldsmith绛旀:B11銆?Tom Jonesshows Fielding鈥檚 philosophical view of 鈥渞eturn to ( )鈥? Thus, in characterization, a contrast is made between Tom Jones, the good-nautured though flawed man, and Bilfil, the hypocritical villain.A:natureB:childhoodC:countrysideD:motherland绛旀:A12銆?Sentimentalism of English literature got its name from Lawrence Stern's novel (聽聽聽聽) in which Sterne tries to catch the actual flow of human mind and sentiment.A:Tristram ShandyB:The Vicar of WakefieldC:PamelaD:A Sentimental Journey绛旀:D13銆? Sentimetalism is also found in Samuel Richardson鈥檚 ( ) novels which convey female characters鈥?feelings and sentiments.A:realistB:adventureC:epistolaryD:historical绛旀:C14銆? The only poet of the sentimentalist school of literature is Thomas Gray, whose well-known 鈥淓legy Written in a Country Churchyard鈥?earned for him the name of a 鈥? ) Poet鈥?A:LakeB:NationalC:LocalD:Graveyard绛旀:D15銆? Oliver Goldsmith鈥檚The Vicar of Wakefieldconveys his reflections on the relations between sentimentalism and ( ) in the 18th-century English literature.A:satireB:realismC:romanticismD:localism绛旀:16銆? The latter half of the 18th century English literaturewas marked by a strong protest against the bondage ofclassicismanda recognition of the claims of passionand emotion which is later known as ( ).A:sentimentalismB:realismC:pre-romanticismD:neo-classicism绛旀:C17銆? Robert Burnsis the best known of the poets who have written in the( )dialect.A:IrishB:ScottishC:LondonD:Celtic绛旀:B绗叚绔?1銆? Romanticism preferred ( ) to reason and rationalism. To William Wordsworth,poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings.A:emotionB:devicesC:rhetoricD:art绛旀:A2銆乀he joint publication of聽聽(聽聽聽聽) in 1798 by Wordsworth and Coleridge marked the beginning of the Romantic movement in England.A:'Lines Composed upon Tinten Abbey'B:'Rime of Ancient Mariner'C:Lyrical BalladsD:'Preface to Lyrical Ballads'绛旀:C3銆?To Wordsworth, the theme of poetry should be concerned with ( ), the language of peotry should be plain, and the people poetry should deal with are country folk.A:country lifeB:common lifeC:city lifeD:fantastic life绛旀:B4銆?In鈥淚 Wandered Lonely as a Cloud鈥? 鈥渢he inward eye鈥?refers to ( ), which is a metaphor to appeal to the reader鈥檚 imagination of the author鈥檚 inner feelings.A:鈥渉eart鈥?B:鈥渆motians鈥?C:鈥渞eason鈥?D:鈥渕ind鈥?绛旀:D5銆? In鈥淭he Solitary Reaper鈥? the feeling of ( ) is clearly conveyed to the reader, especially in the first stanza.A:lonelinessB:melancholyC:homesicknessD:disillusionment绛旀:B6銆? Percy Bysshe Shelley belongs to the school of ( ) romantic poets, whose masterpiecePrometheus Unboundowes much to the Greek tragedyPrometheus Bound.A:revolutionaryB:passiveC:activeD:lyrical绛旀:C7銆? ( ) is Shelley鈥檚 bestknown lyric in which he calls forth the overthrowing of the old social system and bringing destruction to it.A:鈥淥de to the West Wind鈥?B:鈥淭o a Skylark鈥?C:鈥淭he Cloud鈥?D:鈥淪ong to the Man of England鈥?绛旀:A8銆?Walter Scott is the only novelist of the romantic literature of the 19th-century England and his novels are mainly ( ) novels as far as genre is concerned.A:realistB:historicalC:sentimentalistD:psychoanalytical绛旀:B9銆? Scott鈥檚 historical novels touch uponthe subject matters ofthe history of( ), thehistory of Englandand the history of European countries.A:IrelandB:WalesC:FranceD:Scotland绛旀:D绗竷绔?1銆? JaneAusten鈥檚 novels mainly concern such issues as the ( ) of young women. Because of the use of satire and criticism of social prejudices, she is considered as a realist novelist rather than a romantic writer.A:mannersB:moralsC:ethicsD:feminism绛旀:A2銆? The Bronte sisters refer to Charlotte, Emily and Anne Bronte, with the elder two represented byJane Eyreand ( ) respectively.A:The ProfessorB:Agnes GreyC:Wuthering HeightsD:Villette绛旀:C3銆?Of the women writers in the 19th century English literature, ( ) is the only one that deals with the life of the working-class people, represented by her novelMary Barton.A:Mrs. GaskellB:Charlotte BronteC:George EliotD:Jane Austen绛旀:A4銆?The novels of George Eliot mostly deal with ( ) problems and contain psychological studies of the characters.A:socialB:moralC:culturalD:psychological绛旀:B绗叓绔?1銆? In response to the social, political and economic problems associated withindustrialisation,() novel becomes the leading genre of the Victorian literature.A:critial realistB:psychoanalyticalC:aestheticistD:new romanticist绛旀:A2銆乀he first period of Charles Dickens鈥檚 literary careeris characterized mainly by (聽聽聽聽) and the novels are filled with moral teachings.A:mysticismB:pessimismC:fatalismD:optimism绛旀:D3銆? Thomas Hardyis the most representativerealist in the later decades of the Victorian era,whose principal works are the ( ) novels, i.e., the novels describing the characters and environment of his native countryside.A:realistB:character and environmentC:modernistD:Bildungsroman绛旀:B4銆?In the aesthetic movement of the 19th century, 鈥淎rt for Art鈥檚 Sake鈥?can simply mean the focus on ( ) rather than on deep meaning of literary works.A:formB:techniqueC:impressionD:beauty绛旀:D5銆? ( ) is a type of poetry written in the form of a speech of an individual character whose spiritual world is conveyed to the reader through the author鈥檚 subtle psychological analysis.A:Interior monologueB:Free associationC:Dramatic monologueD:Psycho-analysis绛旀:C6銆?鈥淏reak, Break, Break鈥? is a short lyric poem written by Alfred Tennyson which is a(n) ( ) for the poet to reveal his grief over the death of his friend.A:elegyB:lyricC:sonnetD:ode绛旀:A7銆?Thomas Carlyle's non-fiction The French Revolution: A Historywas the inspiration for Charles Dickens' s novel(聽聽 ).A:Hard TimesB:Great ExpectationsC:A Tale of Two CitiesD:Oliver Twist绛旀:C8銆?John Ruskin was the leading English artcritic of the Victorian era. In hisModern Painters, he argued that the principal role of the artist is ( ).A:鈥渁rt for art鈥檚 sake鈥?B:鈥渢ruth to nature鈥?C:innovationD:creativity绛旀:B9銆?In hisCulture and Anarchy, ( ) showed his deepest contempt for and most frequent attack on the middle-class Philistines who he thought lacked culture.A:Thomas CarlyleB:John RuskinC:Charles KinsleyD:Matthew Arnold绛旀:D绗節绔?1銆?Writers, artists and composers we consider 鈥渕odern鈥?had their roots in the ( ) era which produced such writers as Joseph Conrad, E. M. Forster, W. S. Maugham, etc.A:EdwardianB:VictorianC:ElizabethanD:Georgian绛旀:A2銆? A Passage to Indiais set on Joseph Conrad鈥檚 own experience in India which deals with the theme of ( ) in addition to persoal relationships.A:patriotismB:culturalismC:fatalismD:colonialism绛旀:D3銆? ( )is admittedlyan autobiographicalnovel which draws much onMaugham鈥檚own experience.A:The Moon and SixpenceB:The Razor鈥檚 EdgeC:Of Human BondageD:Howard鈥檚 End绛旀:C绗崄绔?1銆?鈥淭he Waste Land鈥?is written by T. S. Eliot in which the theme of the ( ) of the post-World War I generation is declared to the reader.A:dreamB:disillusionmentC:enlightenmentD:radicalism绛旀:B2銆? Because of his Irish background, ( ) is thought to be the driving force of the Irish Literary Revival.A:William Butler YeatsB:AlfredTennysonC:Matthew ArnoldD:Robert Browning绛旀:A3銆?Ulysses, written by James Joyce and considered the most representative of the Egnlish stream-of-consciousness novels, is set in ( ), Ireleand .A:LondonB:EdinburghC:ManchesterD:Dublin绛旀:D4銆? The only female writer of the stream-of-consciousness novel is ( ), who produced such novels asTo the Lighthouse, Mrs. Dalloway, The Waves, etc. .A:Catherine MansfieldB:George EliotC:Virginia WoolfD:Elizabeth Bowen绛旀:C5銆?D. H. Lawrence is a modernist novelist who makesreflectionsupon thedehumanizingeffects of( ) in his representative workSons and Lovers.A:modernizationB:industrialisation C:urbanizationD:mechanization。

Chapter 5 The 17th century (The period of revolution)

Chapter 5 The 17th century (The period of revolution)

John Donne (1571 – 1631)
Life experience: (P74) His literary career: Donne’s literary career can be divided into two periods. 1. 1st period: Most of The Elegies and Satires and a good many of the Songs and Sonnets were written. 2. In the later period: he mainly wrote religious poems and prose works, esp. sermons, which reveal his spiritual devotion to God as a passionate preacher.
Βιβλιοθήκη Parliament felt insecure and invited his brother-in-law, William Orange, in 1688 to come with an army to protect the English people. This was the “Glorious Revolution”, glorious because bloodless. The Bill of Rights which the new king signed with Parliament endowed Parliament as the de facto ruler of the nation and the king became a titular head. Now the struggle between king and Parliament came to an end, and no king or queen has ever again thought of competing with Parliament.

17世纪英国文学改革与复辟

17世纪英国文学改革与复辟

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王政复辟时期最受人欢迎 的作家是约翰 约翰•班扬 的作家是约翰 班扬 (John Bunyan)。查理 ) 二世复辟后, 二世复辟后,被清教徒关 闭的剧院重新开放, 闭的剧院重新开放,英国 戏剧获得新生。 戏剧获得新生。这一时期 出现的风俗喜剧是当时戏 剧的最高成就,威廉•康格 剧的最高成就,威廉 康格 里夫( 里夫(William Congreve, 1670-1729)的《以爱还 ) 爱》(Love for Love)、 )、 如此世道》 《如此世道》(The Way of the World)等剧作是 ) 风俗喜剧的代表作品。 风俗喜剧的代表作品。
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“全体人类就是一本书。 全体人类就是一本书。
17世纪英国诗歌另外的一 17世纪英国诗歌另外的一 支是玄学派诗歌, 支是玄学派诗歌,代表诗 人有约翰•邓恩 邓恩( 人有约翰 邓恩(John Donne, 1572-1631)和安 1572-1631) 德鲁•马韦尔 马韦尔( 德鲁 马韦尔(Andrew 1621-1678)。 Marvell, 1621-1678)。 他们才智过人。 他们才智过人。喜欢使用 玄学奇喻” “玄学奇喻”,被称为玄 学派诗人。其中,约翰邓 学派诗人。其中, 恩为领导者。 恩为领导者。 玄学派诗歌在18和19世纪 玄学派诗歌在18和19世纪 18 一直为世人所忽视, 一直为世人所忽视,直到 20世纪初,才从历史的尘 20世纪初, 世纪初 封中重见天日, 封中重见天日,对现代主 义诗风产生很大影响。 义诗风产生很大影响。
•1649年1月国王查理一世被送上 年 月国王查理一世被送上 断头台,同年5月 断头台,同年 月,英国宣布为 共和国。因为资产阶级势力弱小, 共和国。因为资产阶级势力弱小, 在当时无法保证英国社会的稳定 和安全,为了他们自己的利益, 和安全,为了他们自己的利益, 他们只好和封建主义想妥协, 他们只好和封建主义想妥协,但 是1660年,查理二世回国复辟王 年 朝想置资产阶级于死地, 朝想置资产阶级于死地,为了自 身的利益, 身的利益,于是又发生了光荣革 期间,约翰·弥尔顿 弥尔顿( 命,期间,约翰 弥尔顿(John Milton)积极投入资产阶级革命, 积极投入资产阶级革命, 积极投入资产阶级革命 曾任共和国政府拉丁秘书, 曾任共和国政府拉丁秘书,写了 不少文章捍卫共和国。 不少文章捍卫共和国。

欧洲文化史--The-Seventeenth-Century

欧洲文化史--The-Seventeenth-Century

The Seventeenth CenturyGeneral IntroductionIn the 17th century, Europe advanced from the Middle Ages to the modern times."The modern world, so far as mental outlook is concerned, begins in the seventeenth century".----Bertrand Russell: A History of Western PhilosophyThis advance began in science, in astronomy, physics and pure mathematics, owing to the work of Galileo, Kepler, Newton and Descartes. Their work helped to create modern science and in a sense the modern world.These scientists abandoned the traditional reliance on authority and the accepted method of deductive reasoning. Instead, they attached great importance to direct observation of nature and experimentation.Numerous revolutionary concepts and inventions were developed during this period."Almost everything that distinguishes the modern world from earlier centuries is attributable to science, which achieved its most spectacular triumphs in the seventeenth century".----Bertrand Russell: A History of Western PhilosophyThe outlook of educated men was transformed. There was a profound change in the conception of men's place in the universe which revived human pride.This new outlook shattered the deeply established Scholasticism and brought about modern philosophy, which was materialist in nature.The new science and philosophy gave a great push to the political struggle waged by the newly emerged class, the bourgeoisie, and other classes.The 17th century saw the intense political struggle, shown in revolution in England and the end of absolute monarchy in France, which marked the growth of modern state power.ScienceThe sciences advanced in logical progression through modern history.First, a breakthrough in physics and mathematics in the 17th century, followed by rapid developments in the field of chemistry in the 18th century and then advances in biology in the 19th century and psychology in the 20th century.From Copernicus to KeplerThe first major advance of modern science occurred in astronomy and Italy was the scene with Copernicus(1473-1543) as the leading figure.Although he did not belong to the 17th century,Nicolaus Copernicus was the immediate forerunner of modern science.The Revolutions of Heavenly Orbs (1543)Copernicus put forward his theory that the sun, not the earth, is the center of the universe."In the middle of all sits the Sun enthroned. In this most beautiful temple, could we place this luminary in any better position from which he can illuminate the whole at once? He is rightly called the Lamp, the Mind, the Ruler of the Universe, ... So the Sun sits as upon a royal throne, ruling his children, the planets which circle round him."By this time, the Ptolematic system had been accepted by almost all learned men, which said that the earth was the center of the universe, which was in agreement with religious doctrines.Using logic and mathematics, Copernicus concluded that Ptolemy's system was wrong. Copernicus's hypothesis was regarded as heresy, for according to Scripture, Joshua had caused the sun to stand still in heaven.Copernicus had no wish to quarrel with the church. It was only at the urging of other scholars and scientists that he allowed his book to be published.The publication of the Copernican theory was the first serious irruption of science. It laid the foundation for many future scientific discoveries."The revolutionary act by which nature science declared its independence ... was the publication of the immortal work by which Copernicus threw down the gauntlet to ecclesiastical authority in the affairs of nature. The emancipation of natural science from theology dates from this act."----Engles, Dialectics of NatureHowever, Copernicus's heliocentric theory was put forward only as a hypothesis.No doubt, it was the boldest one in his own time, but Copernicus was not in a position to give any conclusive evidence in favor of his hypothesis.German scientist Johannes Kepler (1571-1630)Kepler is best known for his discovery of the three laws of planetary motion, the three laws being called Kepler's Law published in 1609 and 1619.Each planet moves in an ellipse, not a perfect circle, with the sun at one focus;Each planet moves more rapidly when near the sun than farther from it.The distance of each planet from the sun bears a definite relation to the time period the planet took to complete a revolution around the sun.A mathematical formula: the square of the period of revolution of a planet about the sun is proportional to the cube of the mean distance of the planet from the sun.Kepler's laws supported, clarified and amended the Copernican system and turned the system from a general description of the sun and the planets into a precise mathematical formula.These three laws formed the basis of all modern planetary astronomy and led to Newton's discovery of the laws of gravitation.Galileo Galilei (1564-1642)Galileo is the greates name in the field of physics of this period.His father, a Florentine, taught him Latin, Greek, mathematics and music. He also liked to draw and paint.At 17, he was sent to study medicine at the University of Pisa, but soon his interest was drawn to physics and mathematics.A convinced Copernican, Galileo was eager to use newly invented instruments to observe heavenly bodies.He was the first to apply the telescope to the study of the skies.His telescope magnified objects a thousand times.Sidereus Nuncius (The Starry Messenger), 1610"By the aid of a telescope anyone may behold this in a manner which so distinctly appeals to the senses that all the disputers which have tormented philosophers through so many ages are exploded aat once by the irrefragable evidence of our eyes, and we are freed from wordy disputesupon this subject, for the Galaxly is nothing else but a mass of innumerable stars planted together in cluster...""Upon whatever part of it you direct the telescope straightway a vast crowd of stars presents itself to views; many of them are tolerably large and extremely bright, but the number of small ones is quite beyond determination".Proved that Ptolemy's geocentric system would not work and that Copernicus's powerful hypothesis had been right.Discovered the importance of acceleration in dynamics.Every body, if left alone, will continue to move in a straight line with uniform velocity; any change, either in the rapidity or the direction of motion, requires to be explained as due to the action of some "force".This principle is called the law of inertia.The first to establish the law of falling bodies.When a body is falling freely, its acceleration is constant, except in so far as the resistance of the air may interfere, and the acceleration is the same for all bodies, heavy or light, great or small. The acceleration of a falling body does not depend on its mass.Galileo's discoveries proved the validity of the Copernican theory and struck a frightening blow at the holy establishment.Many theologians felt that Copernican astronomy was sharply incompatible with the Bible and that if this theory was widely accepted, the Bible would lose authority and Christianity would suffer.Galileo's disputes with the church finally led to his trial by the Inquisition.He was forced to give up his view in public declaration but later published a book about the Copernican and anti-Copernican systems.Put in prison, allowed to return home after falling ill, technically remained a prisoner.Died in the arms of his pupils, blind and deaf and still a prisoner.His findings had an unsettling and disturbing effect on the conventional thinking, but his impact on the thoughtful mind was overwhelming.Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727)As a school boy, "idle" and "inattentive".Took his degree from Tirinity College, Cambridge and became a mathematics teacher (not successful).Few students went to his lectures and fewer could understand him, sometimes he had so few auditors that he read his lectures to the wall.As a mathematician, he invented calculus.In optics, he discovered that white light is composed of all the colors of the spectrum.(red, orange, yellow, green, indigo, blue, violet)It was in the field of physics that Newton established his name as one of the most outstanding and influential figure in the history of natural science.The law of the universal gravitationEvery body attracts every other with a force directly proportional to their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them.To put it simply, all bodies in the universe move in accordance with the same basic force, which is called gravitation.From this law, Newton was able to deduce the orbits of comets, the tides, and even the minute departures from elliptical orbits on the part of the planet.The law of universal gravitation is considered to be one of the most important discoveries in the history of science.Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy (1687)His analytical method, the way he approached natural laws by observation, experiment and calculation, began to be applied to human society, to all branches of knowledge and thought.For centuries, Newton had been regarded as a perfect scientist, the greatest one that ever lived in the entire history of science."Nature and Nature's laws lay hid in night,God said, "Let Newton be," and all was light."____ Alexander Pope However, since Einstein discovered the law of relativity, the Newtonian system has been questioned.As a matter of fact, modern theoretical physics has abandoned Newton's absolute space and time. As explained by Einstein, motion and space are relative too.Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz (1646-1716)German philosopher, scientist, mathematician, historian and diplomat.Early university studies made him familiar with the Aristotelian tradition and the ideas from the Scholastics, but later decided in favor of the modern thought.He and Newton invented independently the differential and integral calculus.he describes space and time as merely system of relationship or order, and calls Newton's treatment of time and space as absolute entities a reversion to medieval notions.In his book New Essays Concerning Human Understanding (1704), he refutes John Locke's major premise that the senses are the source of all understanding.He distinguishes three levels of understanding: the self-conscious, the conscious and the unconscious or subconscious.Many of his theories have given rise of important developments of modern science, ranging from Freudian psychology and Einsteinian physics.Discourse and Metaphysics (1686)New System of Nature (1695)Invention of New InstrumentsThe microscope was invented in 1590.the telescope in 1608 by a DutchmanGalileo invented the thermometer and one of his pupils made the barometer.The pendulum clock in 1656.Scientific observation became immensely more exact and more extensiveMerits Shared by ScientistsFirst, they showed boldness in framing hypotheses. They had the courage to challenge the deep-rooted beliefs and assume that what had been accepted as true since ancient times might be false.Second, they all had immense patience in observation. They put their hypotheses to tests and drew conclusions on the basis of patient observation and careful collection of facts. Modern scientific method emphasized observation and experimentation before formulating a final explanation or generalization.Philosophy and PoliticsFrancis Bacon (1561-1626)The whole basis of his philosophy was practical: to give mankind mastery over the forces of nature by means of scientific discoveries and inventions.He held that philosophy should be kept separate from theology, not intimately be blended with it as in Scholasticism.In his Novum Organum, Bacon begins by declaring that "Man, being the servant and interpreter of Nature, can do and understand so much and so much only as he has observed in fact or in thought of the course of nature; beyond this he neither knows anything nor can do anything.""Nature to be commanded must be obeyed."Man can command and conquer nature, the power to do so is knowledge, therefore knowledge is power.He examined the contemporary logic and method and founded modern inductive method.He argued that the contemporary syllogism started by Aristotle did more harm than good. Induction means reasoning from particular facts or individual cases to a general conclusion.The deductive method emphasizes reasoning from a known principle to the unkown and from the general to the specific.The Great InstaurationTo expect any great advancement in science, we must begin anew. The fresh start required the mind to overcome all the preconception, prejudices and assumptions, sweep away all the fallacies and false beliefs, in a word, to break with the past, and to restore man to his lost mastery of the natural world.Baconian Materialism"To Bacon, natural philosophy is the only true philosophy, and physics based upon the experience of the senses is the chiefest part of natural philosophy."___ Marx & Engels, The Holy FamilyThomas Hobbes (1588-1679)Author of Leviathan(1651), one of the most celebrated political treatises in European literature. During the English Revolution, he took refuge in France and wrote Leviathan on account of his royalist convictions.He argues that our knowledge comes from experience."The cause of sense is the external body, or object, which presseth the organ proper to each sense either immediately, as in the taste and touch; or mediately, as in seeing, hearing and smelling."He believes that only material things are perceptible, and knowable to us. Our own experience alone is ceratin.He said men could not know anything about the existence of God because they could not have any idea of Him in their minds answerable to His nature.Concerning motion, Hobbes said that when a thing lies still, unless sth. else stirs it, it will lie still for ever. When a body is once in motion, it moves (unless sth. else hinders it) eternally.Hobbes systematized Baconian materialism, but basically he was a mechanical materialist.The Natural State of WarHobbes held that men are by nature equal in bodily and mental capacity.From this equality of ability arises equality of hope in the attaining of their ends.If any two men desire the same thing, which they can not both enjoy, they become enemies.The fact that every individual seeks his own conservation and his own enjoyment leads to competition and mistrust of others. So, Hobbes believed that man is selfish by nature.Unless such times as men live under a common power, they are in a state of war with one another. This natural state of war, therefore, is the state of affairs in which the individual is dependent for his own security on his own strength and his own wits, and where "every man is enemy to every man."The Laws of NatureBecause the condition of man is a condition of war of every man against every man, it is obviously in man's interest to emerge from this natural state of war.The possibility of doing so is provided by nature itself; for by nature men have their passions and their reasons.It is human passions that bring about the state of war; the fear of death and need for security drive man to accept certain laws of nature.Reason tells men that peace is necessary for survival and also suggests certain articles of peace, upon which men may be drawn to agreement. These articles are called the Laws of nature.In Leviatha n, Hobbes stated nineteen laws of nature.According to Hobbes, the fundamental law of nature is the general rule of reason that every man ought to endeavor for peace.The Theory of Social ContractHobbes maintained that in order to get men out of the miserable condition of war, keep them in awe, and tie them by fear of punishment to the performance of their agreements, and observation of the laws of nature, it is necessary that there should be a common power or government backed by force and able to punish.Individuals should "confer all their power and strength upon one man or upon one assembly of men, that may reduce all their wills by plurality of voices, unto one will."The transfer of rights takes place "by covenant of every man with every man, in such manner, as if every man should say to every man, I authorize and give up my right of governing myself to this man, or to this assembly of men, on this condition that thou give gup thy right to him andauthorize all his actions in like manner. This done, the multitude so united in one person, is called a Commonwealth, in Latin, Civitas. This is the generation of that great Laviathan".To escape anarchy, men enter into a social contract, by which they submit to the sovereign. in return for conferring all their powers and strength to the sovereign, men attain peace and security. In Hobbes' s thoery, the powers of the sovereign must be absolute, and it is only the centralization of authority in one person that the evil can be avoided.The sovereign is not a party himself to the social contract.The subjects cannot either change the form of government or repudiate the authority of the sovereign. Rebellion is wrong, which will lead men back to the natural state of war.As to the form of government, monarchy.Hobbes believed that government was not created by God, but by men themselves."The merits of Hobbes appear most clearly when he is contrasted with earlier political theorists. He is completely free from superstition; he does not argue from what happened to Adam and Eve at the time of the Fall."____Russell, A History of Western PhilosophyJohn Locke (1632-1704)Oxford, philosophyDisliked Scholasticism and regarded it as perplexed with obscure terms and useless questions. Locke inherited and developed the materialist views expounded by Bacon and Hobbes.Materialist ViewsEssay Concerning Human Understanding (1690)All our ideas are ultimately derived from sensation or from reflection, that these two make up experience and that all our knowledge springs from experience.Locke argued against Plato, Descartes and the scholastics, that neither principles nor ideas are innate.Political PhilosophyTreatises of Civil Government (1690)Rejected the theory of divine right of king.Ridiculed the theory of transmission of royal authority by saying that there was no evidence that Adam possessed a divinely granted royal authority, nor is there any evidence that his heirs had it. “All men are naturally free and equal in the state of nature.”“Men living together according to reason without a common superior on earth, with no authority to judge between them, is properly the state of nature”“The state of nature has a law of nature to govern it, which obliges everyone, and reason, which is that law, teaches all mankind who will but consult it, that being all equal and independent, no one ought to harm another in his life, health, liberty of possession”.The Social ContractLocke believed that society is out of necessity, convenience and man’s own interest, therefore, society is natural to man. Political society and government should rest on a rational foundation.The institution of political society and government must proceed from the consent of those who are incorporated into political society and subject themselves to government.Locke emphasized that the social contract must be understood as involving the individual’s consent to submit to the will of the majority and that the will of the majority must prevail.The absolute monarchy is contrary to the original social contract and the danger to liberty comes mainly from absolute monarchy.Locke believed that the ruler of government is one partner of the social contract. If he violates the social contract, then government is effectively dissolved. In this case, rebellion is justified.As to who is to judge when circumstances render rebellion legitimate, Locke replied, “The people shall be judge”, which is welcomed by the Americans during the American Revolution.Question?Both Thomas Hobbes and John Locke used the term “social contract”, what is the difference between them?Hobbes argued men enter a social contract to escape the state of war, for, in his view, men are enemies and at war with each other. Locke argued men are equal and that they enter a social contract by reason.Hobbes argued that individuals surrender their rights to one man, the sovereign whose power is absolute. Locke argued that the individuals surrender their rights to the community as a whole. According to Locke, by majority vote, a representative is chosen, but his power is not absolute. If the fails to implement the people’s will, the people have the right to ovethrow him.The English Revolutionin the middle of the 17th century.The causes:1) the growth of capitalism2) the break-up of serfdom3) the Puritan movementThe Growth of CapitalismCapitalism had started growing in England much earlier and faster than any other European country.The leading industry in the early development was textile, which pushed the development of coal-mining and other industries.The English bourgeoisie was not only economically powerful, but also politically strong.The English bourgeoisie had a political body, the parliament, to speak for them.SerfdomThe serfdom in the English countryside had begun breaking up from the 15th century as a result of the Enclosure Movement.Many serfs and poor peasants were driven out of their farm lands and homes, who went to the cities and became the source of cheap labor for the early capitalists.PuritansBy the end of the 16th century, Calvinism had spread to England. As a result,the Puritan Movement started in England.The Puritan principle emphasized the liberty of the individual soul before God, which reflected the desire of the early rising bourgeoisie for free development of capitalism.The Puritans were subjected to the suppression and persecution by the feudal monarchy. This was the religious cause of the English Revolution.MayflowerThe Land of the FreeThanksgivingThe English RevolutionIn 1642, Civil War broke out between the king and the Parliament.With the support of the people and the leadership of Oliver Cromwell, the English bourgeoisie won the victory.Charles I was captured and beheaded in front of his own palace in 1649.A republic was born, Cromwell became the head of the government known as the Protector. Oliver CromwellAfter the death of Cromwell in 1658, the country was in confusion and revolutionary movement was again on the rise.Fearing that the people might take over power, the upper bourgeoisie and feudal nobles collaborated and staged the restoration of the Stuart.In 1660, Charles II returned from France and was put on the throne.During the restoration, many revolutionary leaders were persecuted.Charles II was planning to turn England into a Catholic country.In 1688, the representatives of the parliament went to Holland to negotiate withe Dutch King William and his wife Mary, a member of the English royal family and yet a Protestant.William and Mary were invited to be the joint ruler of England. Thus, the shortlived restoration ended.The Glorious RevolutionIn December, 1689, the Bill of Rights was enacted by the Parliament.It established the supremacy of the parliament and put an end to divine monarchy in England. The Bill of RightsThe power of suspending the laws by royal authority was declared to be illegal; Parliament was responsible for all the law making;The king levy no money except by grant of parliament;The king should not keep a standing army in time of peace without consent of Parliament.No Roman Catholic, nor anyone marrying a Roman Catholic should succeed to the throne.The Bill of Rights is the foundation on which the constitutional monarchy of England rests."The bourgeoisie was victorious in these revolutions, but the victory of the bourgeoisie was at thattime the victory of a new social order, the victory of bourgeois ownership over feudal ownership... These revolutions reflected the need of the world at that time rather than the needs of those parts of the world where they occurred, that is England and France".___ Collected Works of Marx and EnglesRene Descartes (1596-1650)Philosopher, physicist and mathematicianIt is generally believed that modern philosophy begins with Francis Bacon in England and with Rene Descartes in France.He enlisted in the Dutch army and spent years of undisturbed quiet in Holland where he worked at geometry and philosophy.After serving in the army, he continued to live in Holland for twenty years as some of his contemporaries also found Holland a country of freedom of thought.Rules for the Direction of the Mind (1628)Discourse on Method(1637)Meditations Concerning First Philosophy and Objections and Replies (1642)His method of doubt is known as the method of Cartesian doubt.He believed that the overthrow of the present opinion and the break-up with the past philosophy, Scholasticism included, are necessary condition of establishing sth. first and lasting in eh science. "It is now some years since I detected how many were the false beliefs that I had from my earliest youth and admitted as true, and how doubtful was everything I had since constructed on this basis; and from that time I was convinced that I must once for all seriously undertake to rid myself of all the opinion which I had formerly accepted, and commence to build anew from the foundation, if i want to establish any firm and permanent structure in the science".In Discourse on Method, Descartes formulated four rules in expressing his method:The first was to accept nothing as true which i did not clearly recognize to be so.Carefully avoid precipitation and prejudice in judgments, and to accept in them nothing more than what was presented to my mind so clearly and distinctly that I could have no occasion to doubt it. The second was to divide up each of the difficulties which I examined into as many parts as possible, and as seemed requisite in order that it might be resolved in the best manner possible. The third was to carry on my reflections in due order, commencing with objects that were the most simple and easy to understand, in order to rise little by little, or by degrees, to knowledge of the most complex.The last was in all cases to make enumerations so complete and reviews so general that i should be ceratin of having omitted nothing.Theory of KnowledgeDescartes employed methodic doubt with a view to discovering whether there was any indubitable truth.He found his truth in this motto: "dubito ergo cogito; cogito ergo sum".I doubt, therefore I think; I think, therefore I am.This Cartesian doubt is the most important point in his philosophy.He believed that a thing that is thinking is one that doubts, understands, conceives, affirms, denies, wills, imagines, and feels.Doubting is thinking, thinking is the essence of the mind.All things that we conceive very clearly and distinctly are true, and theat knowledge of things must be by the mind.As to the senses, Descartes believed that they are not dependable.Innate IdeasDescartes believed that some ideas are innate.He claimed he discovered the first principles or first causes of everything which can be in the world without "deriving them from any other source than certain germs of truth which exist naturally in our souls".___ Discourse on MethodWe can construct metaphysics and physics by logic deduction from a number of innate ideas implanted in the mind by nature ,or by God.All clear and distinct ideas are innate. All scientific knowledge is knowledge of or by means of innate ideas.Knowledge of the universe and certain principles and laws of physics is innate.DualismDescartes turned his back on theological controversy and instead set out to apply the techniques of mathematical reasoning to questions of philosophy, attempting to build up a rigorous philosophy on the basis of reason alone.He argued that thought was the foundation of all knowledge while senses might deceive. (idealist) He believed that the external world existed, which is independent of the human mind. (materialist) In the Cartesian system, mind and matter are completely apart from one another.Descartes thus brought to completion the dualism of mind and matter which began with Plato.In mathematics, Descartes culminated in inventing analytical geometry.American linguist Noam Chomsky: "innate grammar".Pierre GassendiIn his early years, he began attacking Aristotelianism, and in 1641 he wrote his objections to Descartes's Meditation.He tried to show that the Cartesian criterion of true knowledge was useless, and insisted that our knowledge comes only from sensory experience."ambulo ergo sum" (I walk, therefore I am)French ClassicismSocial backgroundAfter the Hundred Years War between French and English invaders, France entered a period of comparatively steady development. In the latter half of the 17th century, Henry IV started a。

英国文学史及作品选读教学大纲

英国文学史及作品选读教学大纲

《英国文学史及作品选读》教学大纲一、课程说明1.课程代码:1070138212.总学时数:36 ,其中理论环节学时数:363.学分: 24.适用专业(注明本科、专科、高职):本科5.本课程的性质、地位和作用本课程是面向英语专业高年级学生开设的专业基础课,在学科体系中居重要地位。

它既巩固提高学生的英语基础功,又能拓展和延伸其对深层语言和文化的理解表达能力。

二、教学基本要求1.本课程的目的、任务英国文学史及文学作品包含着历史的记忆和哲学的睿智,是英语语言艺术的结晶。

本课程的任务将介绍英国文学各个时期的主要文化思潮,文学流派,主要作家及其代表作,使学生对英国文学的发展脉络有一个大概的了解和认识,提高他们对文学作品的阅读鉴赏能力,并能掌握文学批评的基本知识和方法。

该课程的目的是通过阅读和分析英国文学作品,使学生了解英国的历史、社会、政治等方面的情况及传统,促进学生对西方文学及文化的了解,提高学生对文化差异的敏感性、宽容性,培养对作品的洞察批判能力,从而丰富提升学生人文素养。

2.本课程的教学要求:⑴.了解英国文学的发展概况,熟悉发展过程中出现历史事件,文学思潮,文学流派;⑵.熟悉具体作家的文学生涯,创作思想,艺术特色和所属流派;⑶.能读懂代表作家的经典作品,并能分析评介作品的主题思想,人物形象,篇章结构、语言特点、修辞手法、文体风格;⑷.能掌握文学批评的基本知识和方法,对重要的文学术语有相当的了解并能在文学批评中加以运用;3. 教学方法:本课程教学以课堂讲授、问答,讨论为主,并辅以口头报告,课后作业和原版电影欣赏。

课堂讲授力求以启发式教学培养学生对作品的感悟领受能力。

口头报告要求学生从相关文献和网络查寻英国文学知识,整理成文并在课堂陈述,课后作业以作品的赏析评介为主,以小论文形式完成。

三、学时分配四、大纲内容(一)教学大纲内容Part I Anglo-Saxon Period Beowulf (450-1066)【本章教学目的、要求】:帮助学生了解古英语诗歌的源泉及其韵律特点。

2024上海松江区高三英语二模

2024上海松江区高三英语二模

松江区2023学年度第二学期模拟考质量监控试卷高三英语(满分140分,完卷时间120分钟)2024.4 考生注意:1.本考试设试卷和答题纸两部分,试卷包括试题与答题要求,所有答题必须涂(选择题)或写(非选择题)在答题纸上,做在试卷上一律不得分。

2.答题前,务必在答题纸上填写学校、班级、姓名和考号。

3.答题纸与试卷在试题编号上是一一对应的,答题时应特别注意,不能错位。

Ⅰ.Listening ComprehensionSection ADirections: In Section A, you will hear ten short conversations between two speakers. At the end of each conversation, a question will be asked about what was said. The conversations and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a conversation and the question about it, read the four possible answers on your paper, and decide which one is the best answer to the question you have heard.1.A.At 8:00. B.At 8:15. C.At 8:30. D.At 8:45.2.A.A professor. B.A coach. C.An engineer. D.A nurse.3.A.In a restaurant. B.In a hairdres ser’s.C.At a cinema. D.At a tailor’s. 4.A.Ways to visit a university. B.Two student tour guides.C.A tour of Fudan University. D.The campus of Fudan University.5.A.They did not make it there finally.B.They were not well received there.C.They experienced something unpleasant on the way.D.They had a wonderful time before they arrived there.6.A.Excited. B.Interested. C.Confused. D.Annoyed. 7.A.Practice the presentation in front of him. B.Watch how he makes a presentation. C.Reduce the time spent in practicing. D.Find out who her audience will be.8.A.She is always absent-minded. B.She forgot to tell the man about it.C.She is unclear about Sophie’s plan.D.She slipped in the neighboring town. 9.A.Because it took him much time to go to work.B.Because he had to save money for his journey.C.Because the job arranged many business journeys.D.Because he considered it unlucky to have that job.10.A.Buy a new printer with less noise. B.Ask the man to borrow a printer.C.Read a book on how to fix the printer. D.Get someone to repair the printer.Section BDirections: In Section B, you will hear two passages and one longer conversation. After each passage or conversation, you will be asked several questions. The passages and the conversation will be read twice, but the questions will be spoken only once. When you hear a question, read the four possible answers on your paper, and decide which one is the best answer to the question you have heard.Questions 11 through 13 are based on the following passage.11.A.How encores came into existence. B.How bands perform encores properly.C.Why audiences used to need encores. D.Why encores are part of a performance. 12.A.The 17th century. B.The 18th century. C.The 19th century. D.The 20th century. 13.A.French people were more interested in encores than others.B.Bands usually prepare more than two encores for each show.C.Recording technology boosted audiences’ needs for encores.D.Musicians can get recharged during the break before encores.Questions 14 through 16 are based on the following passage.14.A.Because of the rule for the class. B.Because of the course materials.C.Because the speaker changed his topics. D.Because the speaker disliked technology. 15.A.The students do not assess the speaker’s class fairly.B.The students are satisfied with the class environment.C.The speaker did not favor leaving technology at the door.D.The speaker were worried about students’ evaluation on him.16.A.It will stop students getting on well together.B.It may help students better understand themes.C.It will improve teaching effect by giving students more help.D.It may distract students from digging deep within themselves.Questions 17 through 20 are based on the following conversation.17.A.Doctor and patient. B.Salesman and customer.C.Teacher and student. D.Employer and employee.18.A.Fishing industry. B.Statistics. C.Computer modeling. D.Note-taking. 19.A.She is good at making model computers. B.She has decided on the title of the essay. C.She is uninterested in coping with statistics. D.She has always been weak at note-taking. 20.A.Learn to take notes immediately. B.Find out possible strategies alone.C.Read for more useful information. D.Work on her weaknesses by herself. Ⅱ.Grammar and VocabularySection ADirections: After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passage coherent and grammatically correct. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word; for the other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank.Remote Work Slows Senior Housing Market RecoveryWith the rise of remote work, the market for senior housing has met with problems in its recovery. Only a few old people choose to live in senior-living communities (21)______the growing senior population and the cancelation of COVID-19 restrictions once making family visits difficult.(22)______ this trend suggests is that people’s shift to remote work contributes to the slow rebound of the senior housing market. That is, remote work is keeping many older Americans from moving into senior-living communities once warmly (23)______(welcome).When more adults began working remotely during the pandemic(流行病), they were able to check in on aging parents easily —they (24)______ take care of their parents’ issues on short notice.Experts have been analyzing the phenomenon in different ways. Some found that the greater flexibility to care for parents (25)______(mean)people’s delay in sending aged parents to expensive senior-housing accommodations. Therefore, markets with high levels of people working from home usually have lower senior-housing occupancy rates. Others said remote work might have some effect but also pointed to different factors. For instance, many seniors think that their family wallets are getting thinner, making some of them reluctant (26)______(send)to senior-living communities.The age at which people enter senior housing is also increasing, (27)______serves as another sign that shows people are choosing to delay transitioning. The rising cost of senior living weighs heavily on that decision. The CPI (consumer-price index)for nursing homes and adult day services rose 4.5% last May compared with (28)______in May, 2022.Still, many senior-housing operators are optimistic. When (29)______(illustrate)their point, they showed an increase in the number of people turning 80 years old over the following years and the actual wealth they have collected. Moreover, they find remote work arrangements are decreasing in some parts of the country, (30)______ employees there have seen their lowered productivity while working from home.Section BDirections: After reading the passage below, fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.A.accompanied B.allowed C.feasibly D.fueled E.intensity F.option G.prompting H.routine I.surgically J.underlying K.variedBrain Signals for Lasting PainBrain signals that reveal how much pain a person is in have been discovered by scientists who say the work is a step towards new treatments for people living with lasting pain.It is the first time researchers have decoded the brain activity 31 patients’ lasting pain. That has raised the hope that brain stimulation treatment alre ady used for Parkinson’s and major depression can help those running out of any other 32 . “We’ve learned that lasting pain can be tracked and predicted in the real world,” said Prasad Shirvalkar, lead researcher on the project at the University of California.Lasting pain affects nearly 28 million adults in the UK alone, and the causes are 33 . ranging from cancer to back problems. That being the case, lasting pain has 34 a rise in taking powerful painkillers. But nomedical treatments work well for the condition, 35 experts to call for a complete rethink in how health services handle patients with lasting pain.For the latest study, Shirvalkar and his colleagues 36 implanted electrodes(电极)into four patients with lasting pain hard to deal with after the loss of legs. The devices 37 the patients to record activity and collect data in two brain regions—the ACC and the OFC—at the press of one button on a remote handset. Several times a day, the volunteers were asked to complete short surveys on the 38 of pain, meaning how strong the pain was, and then record their brain activity. These scientists, armed with the survey responses and brain recordings, found they could use computers to predict a person’s pa in based on the electrical signals in their OFC. “We found very different brain activity 39 severe pain and have developed an objective biomarker for that kind of pain,” said Shirvalkar. The finding may explain, at least in part, why 40 painkillers are less effective for lasting pain. “The hope is that we can use the information to develop personalized brain stimulation treatment for the most severe forms of pain.”Ⅲ.Reading ComprehensionSection ADirections: For each blank in the following passage there are four words or phrases marked A, B, C and D. Fill in each blank with the word or phrase that best fits the context.The way of recording things has never ceased to develop. In the 1980s, as sales of video recorders went up, old 8mm home movies were gradually replaced by VHS (video home system)tapes. Later, video tapes of family holidays lost their appeal and the use of DVDs 41 . Those, too, have had their day. Even those holding their childhood memories in digital files on their laptops now know these files face the risk of 42 .Digitising historical documents brings huge benefits—files can be 43 and distributed, reducing the risk of their entire loss through physical damage caused by fire or flooding. And developing digital versions reduces44 on the original items. The International Dunhuang Project, 45 , has digitised items like manuscripts(手稿)from the Mogao caves in China, enabling scholars from around the world to access records easily without touching the real items.But the news that the Ministry of Justice of the UK is proposing to scan the 110 million people’s wills it holds and then destroy a handful of 46 after 25 years has shocked historians. The ministry cites this as a way of providing easier access for researchers. But that only justifies digitisation, not the 47 of the paper copies. The officials note the change will be economically efficient (saving around £4.5m a year)while keeping all the essential information.Scholars 48 . Most significantly, physical records can themselves carry important information — the kind of ink or paper used may be part of the history that historians are 49 . and error s are often made in scanning. Besides, digital copies are arguably more 50 than the material items, just in different ways. The attack from the Internet on the British Library last October has prevented scholars from 51 digitised materials it holds: imagine if researchers could not return to the originals. Some even think digitised information can easily be lost within decades no matter what 52 are put in place.The government says that it will save the original wills of “famous people for historic record”, such as that of Princess Diana’s. However, assuming that we know who will 53 to future generations is extraordinarilyproud. Mary Seacole, a pioneering nurse who now appears on the national school course in the UK, was largely54 for almost a century.The digitisation of old documents is a valuable, even essential measure. But to destroy the originals once they have been scanned, is not a matter of great 55 , but of huge damage.41.A.paused B.boomed C.recovered D.disappeared 42.A.getting outdated B.coming into style C.being fined D.making an error 43.A.deleted B.named C.copied D.altered 44.A.fight or flight B.life or death C.wear and tear D.awe and wonder 45.A.unfortunately B.additionally C.in summary D.for example 46.A.the originals B.the essentials C.the visualised D.the digitised 47.A.preservation B.classification C.publication D.destruction 48.A.applaud B.disagree C.discriminate D.withdraw 49.A.revising B.abandoning C.uncovering D.enduring 50.A.meaningful B.favourable C.resistant D.delicate 51.A.inventing B.adjusting C.accessing D.damaging 52.A.outcomes B.safeguards C.deadlines D.byproducts 53.A.matter B.respond C.lose D.live 54.A.spared B.discussed C.forgotten D.protected 55.A.sacrifice B.courage C.efficiency D.admirationSection BDirections: Read the following three passages. Each passage is followed by several questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that fits best according to the information given in the passage you have just read.(A)Charles Robert Darwin was born on 12 February 1809 in Shropshire, England. Darwin’s childhood passion was science, and his interest in chemistry, however, was clear; he was even nicknamed ‘Gas’ by his classmates.In 1825, his father sent him to study medicine at Edinburgh University, where he learned how to classify plants. Darwin became passionate about natural history and this became his focus while he studied at Cambridge. Darwin went on a voyage together with Robert Fitzroy, the captain of HMS Beagle, to South America to facilitate British trade in Patagonia. The journey was life-changing. Darwin spent much of the trip on land collecting samples of plants, animals and rocks, which helped him to develop an understanding of the processes that shape the Earth’s surface. Darwin’s analysis of the plants and animals that he gathered led him to express doubts on former explanations about how species formed and evolved over time.Darwin’s work convinced him that natural selection was key to understanding the development of the natural world. The theory of natural selection says that individuals of a species are more likely to survive when they inherit (经遗传获得)characteristics best suited for that specific environment. These features then become more widespread and can lead eventually to the development of a new species. With natural selection, Darwin argued how a wide variety of life forms developed over time from a single common ancestor.Darwin married his cousin, Emma Wedgwood, in 1839. When Darwin’s eldest daughter, Annie, died from a sudden illness in 1851, he lost his belief in God. His tenth and final child, Charles Waring Darwin, was born in 1856.Significantly for Darwin, this baby was disabled, altering how Darwin thought about the human species. Darwin had previously thought that species remained adapted until the environment changed; he now believed that every new variation was imperfect and that a struggle to survive was what drove species to adapt.Though rejected at the beginning, Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection is nowadays well acc epted by the scientific community as the best evidence-based explanation for the diversity and complexity of life on Earth. The Natural History Museum’s library alone has 478 editions of his On the Origin of Species in 38 languages.56.What made Darwin reconsider the origin and development of species?A.Examining plants and animals collected.B.His desire for a voyage to different continents.C.Classifying samples in a journey to South America.D.His passion for natural history at Edinburgh University.57.We can learn from paragraphs 1 to 3 that Darwin ______.A.used natural selection to develop new speciesB.enjoyed being called nicknames related to scienceC.learned some knowledge about plants when studying medicineD.argued with others over the diversity of life forms for a long period58.Which of the following changed Darwin’s view on the human species?A.That he had ten children in all. B.His youngest son’s being disabled.C.That he lost his eldest daughter. D.His marriage with Emma Wedgwood.59.This passage is mainly about ______.A.Darwin’s passion for medical science B.Darwin’s theory and experimentsC.Charles Darwin’s changing interest D.Charles Darwin’s life and work(B)Welcome to Muir Woods! This rare ancient forest is a kingdom of coast redwoods, many over 600 years old. How to get here?People using personal vehicles must have reservations before arriving at the park. (Details at.)Muir Woods National Monument is open daily, 8 a. m. to sunset. Stop by Visitor Center to get trails(路线)and program information, and to take in exhibits.What’s your path?Enjoy a walk on the paved Redwood Creek Trail (also called Main Trail). Choose short, medium, or long loops(环线). Other trails go deep into Muir Woods and Mount Tamalpais State Park.(Refer to the map of Muir Woods on the right for details.)Ready to explore more?Muir Woods is part of Golden Gate National Recreation Area, which includes Marin Headlands, Alcatraz, the Presidio, and Ocean Beach. Download the app at /goga.Stay safe and protect your park.Wi-Fi and cell service are not available. ·Watch for poisonous plants and falling branches. ·Do not feed or disturb animals. ·Fishing is prohibited in the park. ·Do not mark or remove trees, flowers, or other natural features. ·Go to the park website for more safety tips and regulations.AccessibilityWe make a great effort to make facilities, services, and programs accessible to all. For information, go to Visitor Center, ask a ranger, call, or check our website.More InformationMuir Woods National Monument /muwo Mill Valley, CA 94941-269660.Muir Woods will probably attract ______.①redwood lovers ②hunting lovers ③fishing lovers ④hiking loversA.①②B.③④C.①④D.②③61.What can be learned from the passage?A.Muir woods is surrounded by highland and ocean beaches.B.Visitors can read electronic maps using Wi-Fi in Muir Woods.C.Visitors are advised to call Visitor Center for safety tips and regulations.D.Reservations should be made if visitors drive private cars to Muir Woods.62.According to the map of Muir Woods, ______.A.Bridge 4 is the farthest from the parking lots of all bridgesB.Mill Valley is located on the southwest side of Muir BeachC.Bootjack Trail can lead one to Visitor Center from Bridge 3D.food and gifts can be bought on various sites in Muir Woods(C)Precognitive dreams are dreams that seemingly predict the future which cannot be inferred from actually available information. Former US President Abraham Lincoln once revealed the frightening dream to his law partner and friend Ward Hill Lamon, “…Then I heard people weep… ‘Who is dead in the White House?’ I demanded. ‘The President,’ ‘he was killed!’…” The killing did happen later.Christopher French, Professor in the Department of Psychology at Goldsmiths, stated the most likely explanation for such a phenomenon was coincidence(巧合). “In addition to pure coincidences we must also consider the unreliability of memory”, he added. Asked what criteria would have to be met for him to accept that precognitive dreams were a reality, he said, “The primary problem with tests of the claim is that the subjects are unable to tell when the event(s)they’ve dreamed about will happen.”However, some claimed to make such tests practicable. Professor Caroline Watt at the University of Edinburgh, has conducted studies into precognitive dreaming. She stated that knowing future through dreams challenged the basic assumption of science — causality (relationship of cause and effect).Dick Bierman, a retired physicist and psychologist, who has worked at the Universities of Amsterdam, Utrecht and Groningen, has put forward a theory that may explain precognitive dreams. It is based on the fact that when scientists use certain mathematical descriptions to talk about things like electromagnetism(电磁学), these descriptions favour the belief that time only moves in one direction. However, in practice the wave that is running backwards in time does exist. This concept is called the time symmetry, meaning that the laws of physics look the same when time runs forward or backward. But he believes that time symmetry breaks down due to external conditions. “The key of the theory is that it assumes that there is a special context that restores th e broken time-symmetry, if the waves running backwards are ‘absorbed’ by a consistent multi-particle(多粒子)system. The brain under a dream state may be such a system where broken time-symmetry is partially restored. This is still not a full explanation for precognitive dreams but it shows where physics might be adjusted to accommodate the phenomenon,” he explains.Although Bierman’s explanation is still based on guesses and has not accepted by mainstream science, Watt does think it is worth considering. For now, believing that it’s possible to predict future with dreams remains an act of faith. Yet, it’s possible that one day we’ll wake up to a true understanding of this fascinating phenomenon. 63.According to French, what makes it difficult to test precognitive dreams?A.Unavailability of people’s dreams.B.That coincidences happen a lot in reality.C.That criteria for dream reliability are not trustworthy.D.People’s inability to tell when dreamt events will happen.64.Believers in precognitive dreams may question the truth of ______.A.the assumption of causality B.the time symmetryC.memories of ordinary people D.modern scientific tests65.We can infer from the passage that ______.A.Lincoln was warned of the killing by his friendB.Watt carried out several experiments on causalityC.researches on electromagnetism are based on the time symmetryD.time’s moving in two directions may justify precognitive dreams66.Which might be the best title of the passage?A.Should Dreams Be Assessed?B.Can Dreams Predict the Future?C.How Can Physics Be Changed to Explain Dreams?D.Why Should Scientists Study Precognitive Dreams?Section CDirections: Read the following passage. Fill in each blank with a proper sentence given in the box. Each sentence can only be used once. Note that there are two sentences more than you need.A.Labeling poses even more of a problem when it comes to kids.B.It can be helpful for those not quite able to understand why they feel the way they do.C.There seems to be a desire to see negative emotions as something requiring intervention or diagnosis. D.Labeling leads to children’s overcoming their addiction to what is posted online.E.Someone has had only a certain experience and judges all behavior with that experience.F.The basic function of a diagnosis is to give you a name for those behaviors once felt unusual.Addiction to LabelingMaybe you’ve noticed it in the comments section of popular social media posts about anxiety. depression or things alike, with a number of people claiming to pick these labels for themselves.These days, labeling is everywhere. (67)______ However, the negative part is that it’s easy for someone to identify with the characteristics without truly recognizing the context in which these characteristics would require diagnosis, according to Charlotte Armitage, a registered integrative psychotherapist and psychologist.If you have done your research and genuinely feel that you have some form of mental health concern, then finally having a name for your behaviors can be great. But the risk is that many people will seek labels and intervention for any behavior, pattern or emotion that is outside of the permanent happy group that society has set as the norm. “(68)______ Then the saying ‘a little bit of knowledge is dangerous’ springs to my mind,” Armitage adds.(69)______“Children are still developing and evolving, and many childhood behavioral features may seem like those of a disorder when there’re other potential explanations for that behavior,” Armitage notes. Ideally, a diagnosis for a child should be carried out by a qualified mental health professional. So it is with an adult.Nevertheless, the most important thing to bear in mind is that diagnosis doesn’t mean to indicate that you are broken or less capable.(70)______ And if you go deeper, it can alert you to the fact that you are not alone, and that many people experience life in the same way as you do.Ⅳ.Summary WritingDirections: Read the following passage. Summarize the main idea and the main point(s)of the passage in no more than 60 words. Use your own words as far as possible.71.Why Willing to Wait?First it was the fried chicken. Then a variety of fancy milkshakes. No matter what time it is or how bad the streets smell, there are plenty of people waiting in line for hours to get their hands on the food that everyone’s talking about. If you are not the type of person crazy for trendy foods, you probably wonder why someone would like to wait in a long line just to get a taste of a popular cream tea. There is a bit of psychology behind the craze of waiting before getting one’s chopsticks on a trendy food.People are born curiosity hunters, especially for fresh ideas, according to some experts. At the sight of a long waiting line, they just can’t help having a try. And when the trendy foods are novel in looks and favors, even innovative in their sales environment, the desire for them is upgraded. All those stimulate people to investigate more—to deal with their curiosity.In addition, having access to something that is sought out but hard to possess equips people with a feeling that improves their self-definitions. When someone is envied due to something he gained with efforts, his self-worth gets enhanced. Although it is yet to be determined whether the number of likes he receives on the photos of foods he’s posted online is connected with the level of envy from on-lookers, that feeling automatically becomes stronger.Even more, “mob psychology” comes into play: when many people are doing something—waiting in line for the sought-after milkshakes, for instance —others are eager to be part of the group and share such a type of social familiarity, kind of like the natural pursuit of a sense of belonging. Tasting the same wait-worthy food has something in common.Ⅴ.TranslationDirections: Translate the following sentences into English, using the words given in the brackets.72.大多数中国人喜欢在生日的时候吃碗面。

大学英语三级A级试题四2016年

大学英语三级A级试题四2016年

大学英语三级A级试题四2016年(总分:100.00,做题时间:120分钟)一、{{B}}Part Ⅰ Listening Comprehensionm{{/B}}(总题数:1,分数:5.00)(分数:5.00)A.At a bank.B.At a restaurant. √C.At a friend' s house.D.At a hotel.解析:【解析】根据文中“order soup”,“vegetablesoup”等关键词可知,两个人是在餐馆里,故选B。

A.Get some changes fromJane.B.Go to look for a payphone.e the woman' sphone, √D.Pay for the phone call.解析:【解析】根据女士的回答“why not use my mobile phone?”可知,女士建议男士用她的手机打电话,故选C。

A.Five. √B.Four.C.Six.D.Seven.解析:【解析】根据文中“ten copies”,“Five would be enough”等关键词句可知,多了五份,故选A。

A.10: 30, √B.10: 00.C.10: 50.D.10: 40.解析:【解析】根据文中“10:50”,“10:40”和“stilltwenty minutes left”等关键词句可计算出现在是十点半,故选A。

A.Because Henry has no time. √B.Because someone else decorated the house.C.Because there was no instruments in thehouse.D.Because Henry decorated the house himself.解析:【解析】根据女士的回答“because he has no time”可知,Henry是由于没时间才请人装修的,故选A。

英史讲义 the 17th century

英史讲义 the 17th century

Chapter 3 The 17th Century (1625-1688)The Period ofI. Historical Background:1. Elizabeth died leaving no heirs, thus ending the .2. became the new king in 1603, starting the .3. James I believed in the .4. (1625-1649): Conflict with Parliament: Taxes; Religion5. The English Civil War: a result of the long conflict between over power⏹The King‟s supporters: Mostly Anglican, Catholic; Mostly landed nobility⏹The Parliament‟s supporters: Mostly Puritan; Mostly middle class–was tried and beheaded by an all-Puritan Parliament in 16496. The Commonwealth⏹became Lord Protector–Came to disband the Parliament and rule as a military dictator (1649-1658)–Puritan rule became harsh as English could no longer drink, gamble or go to the theater.7.⏹With Cromwell‟s death, Parliament had had enough of Puritan rule and ask ed Prince Charles, son of Charles I, to become the new king⏹Charles II became known as the “Merry Monarch” because he gave in to Parl iament and restored the theater and dancing.8.in 1688, daughter of James and her husband , took the throne (1688)English government became a .Ⅱ. Major writers and their worksJohn Donne (1572-1631)His life:Two collections:Songs and SonnetsDevotions upon Emergent OccasionsHis most famous poems: The CanonizationA Valediction: Forbidding MourningHis importance: the founder of the Metaphysical school of poetryIn his poems, Donne frequently applies .conceit: an elaborate metaphor comparing two apparently dissimilar objects or emotions, often with an effect of surprise.Selective Reading:Death, Be Not ProudDeath, be not proud, though some have called theeMighty and dreadful, for thou art not so;For those whom thou think‟st thou dost overthrow,Die not, poor Death, nor yet canst thou kill me.From rest and sleep, which but thy pictures be,Much pleasure; then from thee much more must flow,And soonest our best men with thee do go,Rest of their bones, and soul‟s deliver y.Thou art slave to Fate, chance, kings, and desperate men,And dost with poison, war, and sickness dwell,And poppy or charms can make us sleep as well,And better than thy stroake; why swell‟st thou then?One short sleep past, we wake eternally,And death shall be no more; Death, thou shalt die.The FleaMark but this flea, and mark in this,How little that which thou deniest me is;Me it sucked first, and now sucks thee,And in this flea our two bloods mingled be;Thou know‟st that his cannot be saidA sin, or shame, or loss of maidenhead,Yet this enjoys before it woo,And pampered swells with one blood made of two,And this, alas, is more than we would do.Oh stay, three lives in one flea spare,Where we almost, nay more than married are.This flea is you and I and thisOur marriage bed and marriage temple is;Though parents grudge, and you, we are met,And cloisered in these living walls of jet.Though use make you apt to kill meLet not to that, self-murder added be,and sacrilege, three sins in killing three.Cruel and sudden, hast thou sincePurpled thy nail in blood of innocence?Wherein could this flea guilty be,Except in that drop which it sucked from thee?Yet thou triumph‟st, and say‟st that thouFind‟st not thy self nor me the weaker now;…Tis true; then learn how false fears be:Just so much honor, when thou yield‟st to me,Will waste, as this flea‟s death look life from thee.John Milton (1608-1674)1. Life and CareerJohn Milton is the third greatest English poet after Chaucer and Shakespeare, and the greatest to emerge in the 17th century.- served as for the Commonwealth and wrote many pamphlets defending the English Revolution.- devoted almost twenty years of his best life to the fight for political, religious and personal liberty as a writer- went blind in 1652- spent his last years writing poetry, finishing three important poems,2. Literary Achievements⏹Short poems: L’Allegro and Penseroso,Lycidas (1637)⏹Prose work: Areopagitica (1644)⏹Long poems: Paradise Lost (1667), Paradise Regained (1671), and Samson Agonistes (1671)Paradise LostImportance:Genre:Poetic Form:Source:Main Plot:Themes and Characterization:3. Brief Summary of Milton–He was in both his life and his art.–He wrote the greatest in English literature. He and have always been regarded as two pattern s of English verse.–He is a master of the blank verse. He first used blank verse in works.–He is a great . He is famous for his grand style, which is the result of his lifelong classical and biblical study.–He has always been admired for his aublimity of thought and majesty of expressio n.John Bunyan (1628-1688)His life:His masterpiece:The Pilgrim’s Progress1. the most successful in the English language;2. to urge people to abide by Christian doctrines and seek salvation through constant struggles with their own weaknesses and all kinds of social evils;3. its most famous scene is .John Dryden (1631-1700)His life:His major works:An Essay of Dramatic Poesy (1668): a piece of literary criticism in the form of a dialogueAll for Love(1678): a tragedy in blank verse imitating Shakespeare‟s Antony and CleopatraComments on Dryden:。

[整理版]英国文学史及选读知识要点I

[整理版]英国文学史及选读知识要点I

Part I The Anglo-Saxon Period(449-1066)I Background449 the Teutons ( the Jutes, the Anglos, the Saxons)II LiteratureThe literature of this period falls into two divisions—pagan and ChristianTwo Anglo-saxon Christian poets:Caedmon (凯德蒙,公元7世纪盎各鲁-萨克逊基督教诗人)who lived in the latter half of the 7th century and who wrote a poetic Paraphrase of the Bible.Cynewulf(基涅武甫,盎各鲁――萨克逊诗人,生活在公元9世纪,其古英语诗稿于10世纪被发现,有《埃琳娜》,《使徒们的命运》,《基督升天》和《朱莉安娜》), the author of poems on religious subjectsIII The Song of Beowulf( Beowulf, 公元7-8世纪之交开始流传于民间的同名史诗中的主人公,曾与水怪,火龙搏斗)Status: England’s national epicWritten at the beginning of the tenth centuryComposed much earlierLength:3182The whole song is essentially pagan in spirit and matter.Features : alliteration; metaphors; understatementSubject matterPart II The Anglo-Norman Period (1066—1350)I historical background: The Norman ConquestII. The LiteratureThe literature which they brought to England is remarkable for its bright, romantic tales of love and adventure.III. Romance1. Romance was the prevailing form of literature in feudal England.2. Definition and features(理解)IV. Sir Gawain and the Green Knighta late-14th century middle-English outlining an adventure of Sir Gawain, a knight of King Arthur’s Round Table.It was a verse romance of 2530 lines, considered as the best of Arthurian roman ces.Part III Geoffrey Chaucer(1340?-1400)I Major worksThe Romaunt of the Rose《玫瑰传奇》is a translation from a French poem.His masterpiece: The Canterbury TalesII Contributions1. Chaucer—the forerunner of Renaissanc e2. Chaucer –a master of realism3 Chaucer—“father of English poetry”①In contradistinction to the alliterative verse of the Anglo-Saxon poetry, Chaucer chose the metrical form which laid the foundation of the English tonic-syllabic verse.②He introduced from France the rhymed couplet (two successive lines of verse equal in length and with thyme) of iambic pentameter which is to be called later the heroic coupletIII the Canterbury tales1. statusThe Canterbury Tales is Chaucer's masterpiece and one of the monumental works in English literature2. It contains(1) a general prologue (over 800 lines)(2) 24 tales(3) separate prologues and “the links that accompany some of the tales‖Part IV The RenaissanceI.The RenaissanceFeatures① A thirsting curiosity for the classical literature.②The keen interest in the activities of humanity.Essence: humanismII. The 16th century EnglandIII. The Renaissance Literature in EnglandFigures1/ Thomas More (1478-1535, 托马斯·莫尔)—the Forerunner of utopian socialismUtopia《乌托邦》(1516)2/ France Bacon (1561-1626,弗朗西斯·培根)--the scientist, philosopher and essayist3/ Thomas Wyatt (1503?-1542, 托玛斯·维亚特)--a poet, the first to introduce the sonnet into English literature4/. Edmund Spenser (1552-1599,埃德蒙·斯宾塞),a great poetThe Faerie Queene《仙后》(1590)5/ Christopher Marlowe(1564-1593)—the greatest pioneer of English dramaContributions:He reformed the genre of drama in England and perfected the language and verse of dramatic works.He made blank verse the principal vehicle of expression in drama6/ Prose writersJohn Lily(1553-1606,约翰·黎利) Eupheus(尤弗伊斯)gives the term of euphuismThomas Loge (1558-1625,托马斯·洛奇)Thomas Deloney (1543-1600,托马斯·德罗尼)Thomas Nashe(1567-1601,托马斯·纳西)William Shakespeare (1564-1616)I. status: the greatest of all English authors; one of those rare geniuses of mankind; landmark in the history of world culture; one of the first founders of realism; a masterhand at realistic portrayal of human characters and relations the greatest dramatist in human history and the supreme poet of the English language—he wrote poems and playsII works①Poemssonnets: 1542 narrative poemsVenus and Adonis 《维纳斯和阿多尼斯》The Rape of Lucrece《鲁克莉斯受辱记》②plays(38)tragediesRomeo and Juliet4 great tragedies (Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, Macbeth )comediesMid- Summer’ Night’s DreamhistoriesIII.Selected reading①Hamlet②Sonnet 18Francis Bacon (1561-1626)I title:Philosopher, scientist(the inventor of scientific method); Statesman Jurist(法学家); essayistII. worksBacon’s works may be divided into three classes:a. the philosophical works:Advancement of Learning (1605, in English)Novum Organum (1620, in Latin)De Augmentis (1623, in latin)b. the literary works:Essays( 1597,1612, 1625)c. the professional works:Maxism of the LawReading on the Statute of Uses 用益权法Part V The 17th Century The period of Revolution and RestorationI. Social Background1. The 17th century was one of the most tempestuous[动荡的] periods inEnglish history.2.In 1642, the civil war (English revolution/ Puritan revolution) broke outbetween Charles I and the parliament.3. The restoration (1660)4.The glorious revolution(1688)II. Puritan and PuritanismIII. Literature of the 17th century1.The revolution periodGeneral Characteristics①The Revolution Period was one of confusion in literature due to the breakingup of the old ideals. The Puritans believed in simplicity of life. They disapproved of the sonnets and the love poetry written in the previous period.②The Puritan influence in general tended to suppress literary art. Y et this hard,stern sect produced a great poet, John Milton, and a great prose writer, John Bunyan.③Literature in the Puritan Age expressed sadness. Even its brightest hourswere followed by gloom and pessimism.④John Milton, whose work would glorify any age and people, and in his workthe indomitable(不屈服的)revolutionary spirit found its noblest expression.For this reason, this period is also called Age of Milton.⑤The main literary form of the period was poetry. Besides Milton, there weretwo other groups of poets, the Metaphysical Poets and the Cavalier Poets.2. Literature of the Restorationgeneral characteristics① a sudden breaking away from old standards②Restoration literature is deeply influenced by French classical taste. It is a period of French influence.rimed couplets-blank verseThe unitiesA more regular constructionThe presentations of types rather than individuals③restoration comediesRestoration created a literature of its own that was often witty and clever, but on the whole immoral and cynical. The most popular genre was that of comedy whose chief aim was to entertain the licentious aristocrats. The comedies are coarse in language and their view of the relations between men and women is immoral and dishonest.④John Dryden (1631-1670)critic, poet, and playwrightthe most distinguished literary figure of the time(一)John Donne (1573-1631)I ①The founder of the Metaphysical School and very influential upon modern writers②a preacher famous for his magnificent sermons at his timeIII Major W orksEarly works: Songs and Sonnets( written before 1600, 55 love poems)The Flea 《跳蚤》Song: Go and Catch a Falling StarWoman’s Consta ncy 《女人的忠贞》A Valediction : of Weeping《别离辞:哭泣》A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning《别离辞:节哀》late works: Religious poems and sermons(二) John Milton(1608-1674)I status ①A great puritan poet②his work would glorify any age or people, and in him the indomitable puritan spirit finds the noblest expression.II Milton’s WorksThree literary periods:①early period: poems written in Cambridge and at Horton②middle-aged period: prose pamphletsAreopagitica(Speech for the Liberty of UnlicensedPrinting,1644 )Eikonoklaste s ( Image Breaker, 1649)Defense for the English People (1650)③the period of his old age :great poemsParadise Lost (1658-1664)Paradise Regained (1671)Samson Agonistes (1671)III Paradise Lost①status:•the only great epic since Beowulf•one of the greatest poems of the English language②ThemeThe theme is ― the fall of man,‖ i.e. man's disobedience and the loss of paradise , with its cause–Satan .(三) John Bunyan1628—1688I status•He received spiritual independence from the Reformation•the chief Puritan writer of prose•He gave us the only great allegory ——The Pilgrim’s ProgressII The Pilg rim’s Progress (1678)①It is about Christian’s journey from his hometown ―the city of Destruction‖ to the ―Celestial City‖, and his experiences and adventures on his journey.It depicts the pilgrimage of a human soul in search of Salvation.②It was written in the form of allegory and dream.③Christian’s journey in 10 stages (scenes)Slough of DespondThe House of InterpreterThe Hill of DifficultyHouse BeautifulV alley of HumiliationThe valley of the Shadow of DeathV anity FairDoubting CastleThe Delectable MountainsCelestial City④vanity fair•V anity Fair is one of the most remarkable passages of The Pilgrim’s Progress•―V anity‖ means ―emptiness‖ or ―worthless‖, hence•the fair is an allegory of worldliness & the corruption of the religious life through the attractions of the world•the great critical realist of the 19th century, W. M. Thackeray, employed ―Vanity Fair‖ as the title for his masterpiece that gives a comprehensive satirical picture of the aristocratic bourgeois society of 19th century EnglandPart VI The 18th century The Age of Enlightenment in England(the age of reason)I. Historical backgroundThe EnlightenmentV ersion 1: p 165-166II. Literature1. NeoclassicismwritersJohn Dryden(1631-1700)Alexander Pope(1660-1744)散文《论批评》An Essay on Criticism讽刺史诗《夺发记》The Rape of the LockSamuel Johnson (1709-1784)《英文大词典》A Dictionary of the English Language2. Essays•Joseph Addison (1672-1719)•Richard Steele (1667-1745)The TatlerThe Spectator3.modern English novelWritersDaniel Defoe (1661-1731) Robinson CrusoeHenry Fielding (1707-1754) The History of Tom Jones, A FoundlingT. G. Smollet (1721-1771) satirical novelsSamuel Richardson (1689-1761) PamelaOliver Goldsmith (1728-1774) The Vicar of WakefieldJonathan Swift (1667-1745) Gulliver's TravelsLawrence Sterne (1713-1768) Sentimental JourneyRobinson Crusoe was one of the forerunners of the English 18th century realistic novel. But it was Henry fielding and Tobias George Smollet who became the real founders of the genre of the bourgeois realistic novel in England and Europe.4. Drama•Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)She stoops to Conquer•Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816)the Rivalsthe School for Scandal5. SentimentalismNovelistsSamuel Richardson Pamela帕米拉Laurence Sterne Sentimental JourneyPoetsThomas Gray (1716-1771) Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774) The Deserted VillageGeorge Crabbe (1754-1832) The Village6 Gothic novelwritersHorace Walpole (1727-1797)The Castle of Otranto奥特伦托城堡Ann Radcliff (1764-1823)The Mysteries of Udolpho 尤道弗之谜7. pre-romanticismthe poets•William Blake (1757-1821)•Robert Burns (1759-1796)(一)Daniel Defoe (1661-1731)works1.PamphletThe Shortest Way with the Dissenters2. Fiction (picaresque novel)Robin Crusoe (1719)Captain Singleton (1720)Duncan Campbell (1720)Memoirs of Cavalier (1720)Colonel Jack (1722)Moll Flanders (1722)Journal of the Plague Year (1722)Account of Jonathan Wild (1725)The History of the Devil (1726)(二)Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)I ①A satirist②The supreme prose master in the first part of the 18th century is Swift.II The works of Swift:The Battle of the Books书的战争(1704)A Tale of A Tub一只桶的故事(1704)The Journal to Stella斯特拉日记(1710-1713)A Modest Proposal一个温和的建议(1729)Drapier’s Letters布商的信(1724,1725)Gulliver’s Travels格列佛游记(1726)III Gulliver’s Travelsfour voyages of Lemuel GulliverThe first part : LilliputThe second part: BrobdingnagThe last part: the land of HouyhnhnmsThe third part: LaputaIV A Modest Proposal (1729)A Modest Proposal is the best and most famous political satire of Swift.(三)Joseph Addison(1672-1719)Richard Steele (1672-1729)1. The Tatlerstarted by_______containing: news,gossip,stories and jokespublished ______times a week_______small pagesrun about ______years2.The SpectatorPublished every morningContaining only familiar essaysform: The spectator was supposed to be edited by a small club run by Mr Spectator, including mainly Sir Roger de Coverley and several others.Content: comment on books; earnest efforts after reform; Character sketches of si r Roger3. The purpose4. the meaning and influence of the T and the S5. The style of AddisonP 2306. The literary genre of essayp228 L7-L13(四)Henry Fielding(1707-1754)I chiefly a novelistthen a dramatistthe founder of English realistic novel― Father of English novel‖II works①The History of the Adventure of Joseph Andrews and His Friend Mr. Adams1742《约瑟夫·安德鲁斯》 a parody of Richardson’s Pamela②Jonathan Wild, the Great 1743《大伟人乔纳森·威尔德传》the story of a rogue③The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling 1749《弃儿汤姆琼斯的历史》masterpiece④The History of Amelia 1751《艾米利亚》(五)Thomas Gray(1716-1771)Elegy written in a Country Churchyard①T ype: elegy (a somber poem or song that praises or laments the dead)②Key dates: Gray began writing the poem in 1742, put it aside for a while, and finished it in 1750. He was meticulous: everything he wrote had to be just right. He believed that one imprecise word could ruin an entire work. Consequently, In ―Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard,‖ he labored on until all the words were right③setting: Churchyard at Stoke Poges in Buckinghamshire, England. Gray was buried in that churchyard.④format: four-line stanzas in iambic pentameter.In each stanza, the first line rhymes with the third and the second rhymes with the fourth.⑤status: one of the greatest poems in the English language.It knits structure, rhyme scheme, imagery and message into a brilliant work that confers on Gray everlasting fame.⑥school: sentimental poetrythe graveyard school(六)Oliver Goldsmith(1728-1774)I ①an Irish Writer②a representative of Sentimentalism③One of the most versatile of authors and made distinguished contributions in several literary forms.II Works•A novelThe vicar of Wakefield 1761-1762威克菲尔德的牧师/威克菲牧师传•comediesShe stoops to Conquer 1773 委曲求全Good-natured Man 1768 好性情的人•A series of essaysThe Citizen of the World 1762世界公民•Poems:The Traveler 1764 旅行者The Deserted Villiage1770 荒村(七)Richard Brinsley Sheridan(1751-1816)I①the most important English playwright of the 18th century.②His plays, especially The Rivals and The School for Scandal, are generally regarded as important links between the masterpieces of Shakespeare and those of B ernard Shaw.II. Dramas of Sheridan•The Rivals情敌1775•The School for Scandal造谣学校1777•The Critic1779(七)William Blake (1757-1827)I the most independent and the most original romantic poetThe poet of inspirationThe mystic and transcendental poetThe most extraordinary literary geniusII works1. Poetical Sketches (1783)a collection of youthful poems.Joy, laughter, love and harmony are the prevailing notes.2. Songs of Innocence (1789)3. Songs of Experience (1794)III selected reading(八)Robert Burns(1759-1796)I①the greatest of Scottish poetMost of his poems and songs were written in Scotch dialect.Burns had a deep knowledge and an excellent mastery of theold Scotch song tradition.② a farmer poet.Burns was a plowman. He came from the people and wrote for the people. He was the people’s poet.③ a pre-romantic poetIIselectedreading。

The Seventeenth Century

The Seventeenth Century
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• John Bunyan occupies the most important place in the field of prose writing of the puritan age .his most famous work is The Pilgrim’s Progress .Bunya n is know for his simple and lively prose style .
The 17th century
In England the seventeenth century was a time of political and religous turmoil punctuated with violence that suprised and shocked England‘s neighbors on the Continent. Two powers ------ Parliament and Throne
Literature of the Revolution Period
The main literary form of the period was poetry. Among the poets Milton was the greatest . Besides him ,there was two other groups of poets ,the metaphysical and the cavalier poets .
• Paradise lost is Milton’s masterpiece and the greatest English epic . The poem was written in 12books . In the poem god is no better than a selfish despot ,who is cruel and unjust in punishing Satan ,the rebel .Adam and Eve embody Milton’s belief in the powers of man . Satan is the real hero of the poem .

外研社英国文学史及选读_第二版__第一册教学课件Chapter 20 John Bunyan

外研社英国文学史及选读_第二版__第一册教学课件Chapter 20 John Bunyan
• 正文
Life and Works
Selections
Notes
For Study and Discussion
Chapter 20 John Bunyan
Life and Works John Bunyan (1628–1688)
a poor, uneducated tinker who inherited nothing from Renaissance, but from the reformation received the spiritual independence which had caused the English Bourgeois Revolution, a Puritan struggle for liberty
Content
Part V The 17th Century: Revolution, Restoration and New Poetic Expression
Chapter 19 Andrew Marvell Chapter 20 John Bunyan
Part 1
Chapter 20 John Bunyan
Chapter 20 John Bห้องสมุดไป่ตู้nyan
Selections
The Pilgrim’s Progress
Outline “As I walked through the wilderness of this world, I lighted on a certain place
where was a den (Bedford jail), and I laid me down in that place to sleep; and, as I slept, I dreamed a dream.” So the story begins. He sees a man called Christian setting out with a book in his hand and a great load on his back from the City of Destruction. Christian has two objects—to get rid of his burden, which holds the sins and fears of his life, and to make his way to the Holy City. At the outset Evangelist finds him weeping, because he does not know where to go, and points him to a wicket-gate on a hill far away. As Christian goes forward his neighbours, friends, wife and children call to him to come back; but he puts his

2023年大学_《英国文学史及选读》(吴伟仁著)课后答案

2023年大学_《英国文学史及选读》(吴伟仁著)课后答案

2023年《英国文学史及选读》(吴伟仁著)课后答

《英国文学史及选读》(吴伟仁著)内容简介
PART I THE ANGLO-SAXON PERIOD
Beowulf
PART II THE ANGLO-NORMAN PERIOD
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
PART III GEOFFREY CHAUCER
The Canterbury Tales
(General Prologue)
Popular Ballads
Robin Hood and Allin-a-Dale
Get Up and Bar the Door
Sir Patrick Spens
PART IV THE RENAISSANCE
PART V THE 17TH CENTURY
PART VI THE 18TH CENTURY
《英国文学史及选读》(吴伟仁著)目录
本书是作者根据英国文学历史的`顺序结合作品选读所编写的一套适合我国高等教院校英语专业使用的教材。

由于课时有限,历史部分只作了简明扼要的概述,作品选读部分,尽可能遴选了文学史上的重要作家和重要作品。

这部“史”、“选”结合的教材,分为两册出版,第一册是古代至18世纪英国文学,第二册是19划纪至20世纪英国文学。

教材内容丰富,观点正确,选文具有代表性,可作高校外文系英语专业英国文学史和文学作品选读课程的课本或参考书,也是广大中学英语教师及具有一定程度的英语自学者和英美文学爱好者进修的理想读物。

英国文学史及选读第一册

英国文学史及选读第一册

英国文学史选读第一册Part I The Anglo-Saxon Period(449-1066)The literature: The literature of this period falls naturally into two divisions: pagan(异教徒文学) and Christian(基督徒文学)Form: Alliterative verseThe coming of Christianity meant not simply a new life and leader for England; it meant also the wealth of a new language.Caedmon(开德蒙) wrote a poetic Paraphrase of the Bible.The great epic—The Song of Beowulf : The Song of Beowulf can be justly termed England’s national epic and its hero Beowulf—one of the national heroes of the English people.Part II THE ANGLO-NORMAN PERIOD (1066-1350) Background: the Normans headed by William, defeated the Anglo-Saxon.The literature:The literature is remarkable for its bright, romantic tales of love and adventure. English literature is also a combination of French and Saxon language.Literary work:Sir Gawain and the Green KnightTerm explanation:Romance(传奇): Romance was a type of literature that was very popular in the Middle Ages. It is about the life and adventures undertaken by aknight. It reflected the spirit of chivalry. The content of romance: love, religion, chivalry. It involves fighting and adventures.Part III GEOFFREY CHAUCER (1340?-1400)Geoffrey Chaucer, the “father of English poetry” and one of the greatest narrative poets of England. Chaucer’s creative work vividly reflected the changes which had taken root in English culture of the second half of the 14th century.Chaucer chose the metrical form(格律诗) which laid the foundation of the English tonico-syllabic verse. And also found the London dialect as the English literary language.Works:The Canterbury TalesTerm explanation:Popular Ballads:The most important department of English folk literature is the ballad. Ballads are anonymous narrative songs that have been preserved by oral transmission, usually in 4-line stanzas, with the second and fourth line rhymed. The subjects of ballads are various, as the struggle of young lovers against their feudal-minded families. Bishop Thomas was among the first to take a literary interest in ballads. There are various kinds of ballads: historical, legendary, fantastical, lyrical and humorous. The paramount ballad is Robin Hood and Allin-a-Dale .Comments on Robin Hood: Robin Hood is a partly historical and partlylegendary character. The first mention of Robin Hood in literature is in William Langland’s The Vision of Piers, the Plowman.The character of Robin Hood is many-sided. Strong, brave and clever, he is at the same time tender-hearted and affectionate. His hatred for the cruel oppressors is the result of his love for the poor and downtrodden.Works:Robin Hood and Allin-a-DaleGet up and Bar the DoorSir Patrick SpensPART IV THE RENAISSANCE(1485-1603) an age of drama and lyrical poetryThe 16th century in England was a period of the breaking up of feudal relations and the establishing of the foundations of capitalism.Term explanation:Renaissance:1)renaissance was a cultural movement that spanned roughly the14th century to the 17th century. With the development ofbourgeois relationships and formation of the English national statethis period is marked by a flourishing of nation culture known asthe Renaissance. The term renaissance originally indicated arevival of classical(Greek and Roman) arts and sciences after thedark ages of medieval obscurantism(蒙昧主义). The greatest ofthe English humanists were Thomas More and William Shakespeare.2)Theme: the expression of secular values with man instead of Godas the center of the universe. It emphasizes the dignity of man, values of man.3)Two major types: drama and lyrical poetry.It affirms the earthly achievement, man’s desire for happiness and pleasure.Works:1.Thomas More: humanist,utopia (give a profound and truthful picture of the people’s sufferings and put forward his ideal of a future happy society.2.Francis Bacon: scientist and philosopher;his works may be divided onto three classes: the philosophical, the literary, and the professionalessays3.Thomas Wyatt: the first to introduce the sonnet into Englishliterature.4.Edmund Spenser: The Fairy Queen5.John Lyly:Eupheus; gave rise to the term “euphuism”,designating an affected style of court speech.6.Christopher Marlowe: the greatest pioneers of English drama;made bland verse the principal vehicle expression in drama.7.Robert Greene: George Green, the Pinner of Wakefield8.William Shakespeare: one of the first founders of realism, amaster hand at realistic portrayal of human characters andrelations.Hamlet(Hamlet is considered to be the summit of Shakespeare’s art. The whole tragedy is permeated withthe spirit of Shakespeare’s own time. Hamlet is the profoundestexpression of Shakespeare’s humanism and his criticism ofcontemporary life.)PART V THE 17TH CENTURYTHE PERIOD OF REVOLUTION AND RESTORATION Literary characteristics in this period:The 17th century was one of the most tempestuous periods in English history. The contradictions between the feudal system and the bourgeoisie had reached its peak and resulted in a revolutionary outburst.(1)The Puritan influence:medieval standard of chivalry, the impossible love and romances perished. The Puritans believed in simplicity of life. They disapproved of the sonnets and love poetry. The Bible became now the one book of thepeople.(2) the exaggeration of the “metaphysical” poetsPoetry took new and startling forms. Prose became somber. The spiritual gloom sooner or later fastens upon all the writers of this age. This so-called gloomy age produced some minor poems of exquisite workmanship, and one great master of verse whose work would glorify any age or people---John Milton.(3) The French influence is most marked in the drama.Rimed couplets instead of blank verse;The unities, a more regular construction, and the presentation rather than individual;The comedies are coarse in language and their view of the relations between men and women is immoral and dishonest.(4) restoration created a literature of its own, that was often witty and clever, but on the whole immoral and cynical. The most popular genre was that of comedy those chief aim was to entertain the licentious aristocrats. John Dryden, critic, poet and playwright was the most distinguished literary figure of that time.John Donne:His prose style, involuted and ornate, cumulative and Ciceronian, is one of the more glorious monuments to the spirit of the early seventeenth century.Song (“ Go and Catch a Falling Star”)A Valediction: Forbidding MourningSonnet: Death be not proudJohn Milton: poet, Puritan, fight for human rights; in 1652 became totally blind.Paradise Lost:it is based on the biblical legend of the imaginary progenitors of the human race---Adam and Eve, and involves God and his eternal adversary, Satan in its plot.It presents the author’s views in an allegoric religious form, and the reader will easily discern its basic idea---the exposure of reactionary forces of his time and passionate appeal for freedom.Sonnet: On His Blindness\Sonnet: On His Deceased WifeJohn Bunyan: spiritual independence, gave us the only great allegory. He was imprisoned for preaching without a license.The Pilgrim’s Progress: written in old-fashioned, medieval form of allegory and dream.Bunyan speaks in terse, idiomatic prose, and his characters are living men and women.PART VI THE 18TH CENTURY ( an age of prose and novel)THE AGE OF ENLIGHTENMENT IN ENGLANDThe theme: social reality, common people’s life.The enormous amount of eighteenth century writing devoted to transient affairs, to politics, fashions, gossip.Enlightenment: on the whole, was an expression of struggle of the then progressive class of bourgeoisie against feudalism. The enlighteners fought against class inequality, stagnation, prejudices and other survivals of feudalism. They attempted to place all branches of science at the service of mankind by connecting them with the actual deeds and requirements of the people. The problem of man comes to the fore, superseding all other problems in literature.1.J oseph Addison, Richard Steele: the publishers of a moralistic journal The Tatler and The SpectatorThese two magazines are the first important recognitions by literature of the special of the special interests of women readers, and also brought literature down to everyday life and kept it clean and wholesome.The essays and stories of Addison and Steele, devoted not only to social problems, but also to private life and adventures, gave an impetus to the development of the 18th century novel.Sir Roger是Joseph Addison塑造的经典形象。

The 17th Century

The 17th Century

Gross exaggeration (hyperbole).
Presentation of a logical argument.
Expression of personal, private feelings,
跳蚤 约翰· 邓恩 多么残忍,你毫无犹豫 用无辜的鲜血染红自己 的指甲? 它不过吸了你一滴血 罪不至死啊? 你却以胜利者的口吻说 你我并没有因失血而有 些虚弱; 的确,担心不过是虚惊 一场: 接受我的爱, 你的名誉不会有丝毫损 失, 就象跳蚤之死不会让你 的生命有所损失。
2nd son of Charles I
1685--1688
1688--1702
James II
Mary II & William III
Brother of Charles II, dethroned after
the Glorious Revolution 1st daughter of James II William of Orange, Holland
Those things which elemented it.
The
th 17
Century
Social background
The 17th century was one of the most tempestuous period in English history. Conflicts and clashes appeared between the King and the Parliament, which represented the bourgeois class. In 1642, a civil war (Enlish Revolution) broke out between Charles I and the parliament. At last, the royalists were defeated by the parliament army led by Oliver Cromwell. In 1649 Charles I was beheaded, and England was declared to be a commonwealth. After the death of cromwell, the parliament recalled Charles II to England in 1660 and monarchy was restored, then follow the Restoration Period. In 1688, the bourgeoisie invite William, Prince of Orange, from Holland to be the king of England. This is called the ―Glorious Revolution‖. This bloodless event completed the bourgeoisie revolution and modern England was firmly established.

美国文学考试模拟题

美国文学考试模拟题

第一章殖民地时期的美国文学填空题1. Theterm “Puritan”was applied to those settlers who originally were devout membersof the Church of ______.【答案】England查看答案【解析】清教徒(Puritan),是指要求清除英国国教Church of England中天主教残余的改革派。

其字词于16世纪60年代开始使用,源于拉丁文的Purus,意为“清洁”。

2. Themost enduring shaping influence in American thought and American literature was______.【答案】American Puritanism查看答案【解析】美国文化源于清教文化,由清教徒移民时传入北美。

美国主流价值观都可以追溯到殖民地时期一统天下的清教主义,并且清教思想对美国文学有着根深蒂固的影响。

3. Hard work, thrift,piety and sobriety, these were the ______ values that dominated much of theearly American writing.【答案】Puritan查看答案【解析】清教主义,起源于英国,在北美殖民地得以实践与发展。

清教徒强调艰苦奋斗、勤俭节约、虔诚和淡泊。

这些价值观也影响了早期的美国文学。

4. Many Puritans wroteverse, but the works of two writers, Anne Bradstreet and ______, rose to thelevel of real poetry.【答案】EdwardTaylor查看答案【解析】美国殖民时期最著名的诗人是安·布莱德斯特和爱德华·泰勒。

5. TheTenth Muse Lately Sprung Up in America is a collection of poems composed by______.【答案】AnneBradstreet查看答案【解析】安·布莱德斯特律是美国殖民时期著名的诗人。

the 17th century

the 17th century

The 17th CenturyGeneral IntroductionIn the 17th century Europe advanced from the Middle Ages to the modern times.✓“Almost everything that distinguishes the modern world from earlier centuries is attributable to science, which achieved its most spectacular triumphs in the 17th century.” ---By Bertrand Russell, an English philosopher✓The 17th century saw the intense political struggle, shown in revolution in England and absolute monarchy君主制in France, which marked the growth of modern state power.✓The triumphs of science revived human pride. This new outlook shattered the deeply established Scholasticism and brought about modern philosophy, which was materialist in nature.✓“The modern wor ld, so far as mental outlook is concerned, begins in the 17th century.”--- Bertrand RussellScientific Revolution----A period of major scientific changeBegan with the discoveries of Kepler, Galileo, and others at the dawn of the 17th century Ended with the publication of the Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica (Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy) in 1687 by Isaac Newton.At the beginning of the century, science was highly Aristotelian; at its end, science was mathematical, mechanical, and empirical.Forerunner of Modern Science----Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543)Polish astronomerMastered all the knowledge of the day in mathematics, astronomy, medicine and theology His financial security allowed him to begin his astronomical observationsDisrupted the Ptolemaic system of astronomy (Earth is at the center of the universe with the sun, moon, planets, and stars revolving about it in circular orbits.)Put forward the theory that the sun is the centre of the universeHis hypothesis was regarded as heresy. It contradicted not only the religious doctrines, but also common sense.He did not belong to the 17th century, but Copernicus was the immediate forerunner of modern science.Johannes KeplerGeneral introductionGerman astronomer, mathematician and astrologerKey figure in the scientific revolution.Best known for his laws of planetary motionHe is sometimes referred to as "the first theoretical astrophysicist"Discovery of elliptical orbitsSent his theory to T. Bracheused the very accurate observations of Tycho Braherealized that the planets move around the sun not in circular orbits, but in elliptical ones. Best known discovery by Kepler1.Each planet moves in an ellipse, not a perfect circle, with the sun at one focus2.Each planet moves more rapidly when near the sun than farther from it3.The distance of each planet from the sun bears a definite relation to the time period theplanet took to complete a revolution around the sun.Kepler’s LawSupported, clarified and amended the Copernican systemTurned the system from a general description into a precise mathematical formulaThe three laws formed the basis of all modern planetary astronomyLed to Newton‟s discovery of the laws of gravitationOther achievements: Explain accurately how eye sees; How eyeglasses improve visionGalileo Galilei (1564—1642)“Father of Modern Astronomy "“Father of Modern Physics"“Father of Science"Italian astronomer, philosopher, and physicistLeaned Latin, Greek, mathematics, music and medicineConvinced CopernicanFirst to apply telescope to the study of the skyAchievementsImproved the telescope, applied it to a variety of astronomical observationsExperimental work facilitated establishing the modern scientific method.The work of Galileo is considered to be a significant break from that of Aristotle .Law of inertiaLaw of falling bodiesprecursor of the Classical mechanicsGalileo…s theoretical and experimental work on the motions of bodiespioneerin performing rigorous 严格的experiments and insisting on a mathematical description of the laws of nature.1610, Sidereus Nuncius (The Starry Messenger) was publishedHis discoveries provided evidences for Copernicus‟s hypothesisBible‟s authority and Christianity were threatene d by the theoryIsaac Newton (1643—1727)English physicist, mathematician, astronomer, philosopher, and alchemist 炼金术士the Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica (published 1687)universal gravitationAchievementsKepler's laws of planetary motion and Galileo's mechanics culminated in the work of Isaac NewtonIn mathematics- invented calculusIn optics 光学- discovered white light is composed of all the colors of the spectrum 光谱 In physics- his discovery of the law of the universal gravitation is the most important.His laws of motion ---- the solid foundation of mechanics;his law of universal gravitation----combined terrestrial (陆地的地球的)and celestial (天上的天体的) mechanics into one great system (seemed to be able to describe the whole world in mathematical formulae)Life in other occupationsMathematics teachera member of Parliamentwarden 皇家官员of the Royal Mint皇室制币厂 in 1696Chancellor of the Exchequer 财政大臣His knighthoodknighted by Queen Anne in 1705not for his scientific achievementsIronically, it was his work at the Mint which earned him a knighthood.Quotations by NewtonI know not what I appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only like a boyplaying on the sea-shore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell, whilest the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me.If I have been able to see further, it was only because I stood on the shoulders of giants.Merits shared by the Great Scientists of the 17th CenturyBoldness in framing hypotheses,( had courage to challenge the deep-rooted beliefs.) Immense patience in observation.Philosophy, Politics and Literature in EnglandFrancis Bacon (1561-1626)English philosopher, essayist and statesmanMajor works are The Advancement of Learning, the New Atlantis, the Novum Organum (New Method), and EssaysFounded modern inductive method 归纳法Essays by BaconMost widely read workContained 58 essaysDeal with a wide range of topics concerning various aspects of lifeJohn Milton (1608-1674)In English Literature John Milton ranks with Shakespeare and ChaucerA great part of his life was connected with the English RevolutionMost famous for his epic poems: Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained and Samson AgonistesThe English RevolutionIn the middle of the 17th centuryCauses:Growth of capitalismThe break-up of serfdomThe Puritan movementGrowth of capitalismCapitalism in England started growing much earlier and faster than other European countyTextile industry pushed the development of coal-mining and other industriesThe break-up of serfdomThe Enclosure MovementSerfs were driven out of their farm lands and homesWent to the cities and became the source of cheap labour for the early capitalistsThe Puritan movementEmphasized the liberty of the individual soul before GodReflected the desires of the early rising bourgeoisie 资产阶级for free development of capitalismConflicts between Puritans and the feudal monarchyTwo leadersCromwell: the man of actionJohn Milton: the man of thoughtFrench Classicism古典主义Rene Descartes笛卡尔French philosopher, physicist and mathematicianalso known as CartesiusThe Method of Cartesian DoubtFour rules of the Cartesian methodaccept nothing as true which I did not clearly recognize to be sodivide up each of the difficulties which I examined into as many parts as possiblecarry on my reflections in due ordermake enumerations 列举so complete and reviews so general that I should be certain of having omitted nothing.I think, therefore I amDoubting is thinking, thinking is the essence of the mindKnowledge of things must be by the mindAs to the senses, he believed that they are not dependableDescartes’s Dualism双重性,二元性Thought was the foundation of all knowledge while senses might deceive us. idealist The external world existed, which was independent of human mind. materialistIn Cartesian system, mind & matter are completely apart from each other.As a mathematician, he was the founder of analytical geometry. 解析几何Baroque PeriodThe period roughly between 1600 and 1750Originated in Italyderived from a Portuguese term “an irregularly shaped pearl”originally used derogatorilyDramatic, bizarre, overdecoratedThe term “Baroque” was applied toArchitecture with too much ornamentElaborate paintingsEarly (prior to 1650) and late baroque MusicBaroque ArtFlourished first in ItalySpread to Spain, Portugal, France and to NetherlandsCharacterized by dramatic intensity and sentimental appeal with a lot of emphasis on light and colourGiovanni Lorenzo Bernini (1598—1680) 贝尼尼Italian sculptor and architectProminent figure of Italian BaroqueSt Peter's BasilicaDavid---The figure is charged with such great energy that it makes the whole space around seem active.Apollo and Daphne阿波罗与达芙妮The Ecstasy of St. Theresa(圣苔列沙的幻觉)Bernini‟s masterpiecePeter Paul Rubens鲁本斯(1577-1640)The greatest of painters of Flemish school. 佛兰芒派Was the man more than anyone else who helped to spread the Baroque style to North Europe.Diego Velazquez,1599~1660)魏拉斯开茨A Spanish painter of the baroque periodVan Rijn Rembrandt (1606-69) 伦勃朗Principal Dutch Baroque painter and etcher 蚀刻师ArchitecturePalace of V ersailles凡尔赛Garden FrontSt. Paul‟s Cathedral.Music1600, one of the most important landmarks in music historyThe rise of recitative,(叙唱调)cantata,(康塔塔)opera, oratorio(讲述宗教故事的圣乐)A swelling, emotional style, baroque•1600-50 early baroque music---Monteverdi•1650-1750 late baroque music ---Vivaldi, Bach, HandelThe development of late baroque music led to the Musical Enlightenment.。

高中英语世纪、年代、年、月、日的表达方式

高中英语世纪、年代、年、月、日的表达方式

高中英语世纪、年代、年、月、日的表达方式1、世纪:①用“定冠词+序数词+century”表示例:在十七世纪写作:in the 17th century,读作:in the seventeenth century②用“定冠词+百位进数+s”表示例:在十七世纪写作:in the 1600s,读作:in the sixteen hundreds注意:这种情况下,实际表达的世纪数是阿拉伯数字本身加一。

2、年代用“定冠词+(世纪百位进数+十位年代数)+s”表示例:在二十世纪三十年代写作:in the 1930s,读作:in the thirties of the twentieth century或in the nineteen thirties 表示某年代的早期、中期和晚期,可以在定冠词后添加early,mid-和late例如:在二十世纪二十年代早期in the early 1920s;在二十世纪五十年代中期in the mid-1950s3、年月日1)年份①读年份时一般分为两个单位来读,前两个数为一个,后两个数为一个:1949读作:nineteen forty-nine或nineteen hundred and forty-nine②如果是三位数,先读第一位,再把后两个数合起来读:253读作:two fifty-three或two hundred and fifty-three③另外:2000读作:two thousand,1902读作:nineteen hundred and two或nineteen o two④如果要使用year,year放在数词之前例如:in the year two fifty-three B.C.在公元前253年2)月份月份是专有名词,除了少数几个月份外都有缩写形式:January-Jan.一月February-Feb.二月March-Mar.三月April-Apr.四月August-Aug.八月September-Sept.九月October-Oct.十月November-Nov.十一月December-Dec.十二月注意:缩写形式后面的点不能省略,因为它是表示缩写形式的符号。

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The Metaphysical Poets
Famous Literary Men in this Period
• 1. John Donne (1572—1631) • 2. John Dryden(1631—1700) • 3. John Milton(1608—1774) • 4. John Bunyan(1628—1688)
Stanza III of Song
The Holy Sonnets by Donne
• John Donne gave exquisite expression on love and death. His meditation on love deserves the attention from the critics and his followers in the later period.
Historical Background
• Elizabeth I died in 1603 and James I came to the throne, a succession that marks the change from a united England to a divided England. The government of James I was a despotism based
Charles 1
• In the next reign (Charles I succeeded James I in 1625) the religious tyranny of Archbishop Laud was added to the political tyranny of the king.
• The Metaphysical poets(玄学派诗人) • About the beginning of the 17th century, there appeared in England a school of poets called "Metaphysicals" by Samuel Johnson. With a rebellious spirit, the metaphysical poets tried to break away from the conventional fashion of the Elizabethan love poetry. The diction is simple as compared with that of the Elizabethan or the Neoclassic periods and echoes the words and cadences of common speech. The imagery is drawn from the actual life. The form is frequently that of an argument with the poet's beloved, with God, or with himself. The representatives are John Donne and John Dryden
Historical Background
II Literary Characteristics
• 1. Medieval standards of chivalry, the impossible loves and romances perished no less surely than the ideal of a national church. • 2. A sudden breaking away from old standards, just as society broke away from the restraints of Puritanism. • 3. On the return of the former officials, they renounced old ideals and demanded the English poetry and drama should follow the style to which they had become accustomed in the gaiety of Paris. • 4. Restoration created a literature of its own, that was often witty and clever, but on the whole immoral and cynical. The most popular genre was that of comedy whose chief aim was to entertain the licentious aristocrats.
Queen Elizabeth 1
King James 1
Historical background
• Against this royal arrogance, the Puritans offered another theory of divine right, the divine right of the individual conscience. They renounced a life of joy in this world, in hope of an eternal joy in the would to come. • Even in Elizabeth 1’s time the Puritans were persecuted and some of them went to America for religious freedom.
Stanza II of Song
• • • • • • • • •
If thou find’st one, let me know, Such a pilgrimage were sweet; Yet do not, I would not go, might meet; Though she were true when you met her, And last will you write your letter, Yet she Will be False, ere I come, to two, or three.
• In 1649 Charles I was beheaded and England became a commonwealth under the leadership of Oliver Cromwell. In 1653 Cromwell imposed a military dictatorship on the country.
Song
• • • • • • • • •
If thou beest born to strange sights, Things invisible to see, Ride ten thousand days and nights, Till age snow white hairs on thee, Thou, when thou return’st, wilt tell me All strange wonders that befell thee, And swear No where Lives a woman true, and fair.
Part V The 17th Century
The Period of Revolution and Restoration
• It was a period when absolute monarchy impeded the further development of capitalism in England and the bourgeoisie could no longer bear the sway of landed nobility. The contradictions between the feudal system and the bourgeoisie had reached its peak and resulted in a revolutionary outburst.
Oliver Cromwell
The statue of Oliver Cromwell
• After Cromwell’s death, monarchy was again restored in 1660. • That revolution meant three things: 1. the supremacy of Parliament. 2. the beginning of modern England. 3. the final triumph of the principle of political liberty for which the Puritan had fought and suffered hardship for a hundred years. • Revolution and Restoration
John Donne (1572—1631)
• He was the founder of the Metaphysical school of poetry. • Literary works:Donne wrote a large number of poems. The Elegies and Satires , The Songs and
• • • • • • • • •
Go and catch a falling star, a Get with child a mandrake root, b Tell me where all past years are, a Or who cleft the Devil’s foot, b Teach me to hear mermaids singing, c Or to keep off envy’s stinging, c And find d What wind d Serves to advance an honest mind. d
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