British Literature I 列表

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British Literature(1)

British Literature(1)


meter(格律/韵律):foot number & foot pattern in a line. foot: division or unit of a line, each has one strong syllable
and one or more weak syllables.


Rhyme: The repetition of sounds in two or more words close to each other in a poem. internal rhyme: Spring, the sweet spring, is the year’s pleasant king. Man proposes, God disposes. alliteration: the initial sounds of two or more words are the same. Farewell, my friends! Farewell, my foes! end rhyme: 1. couplet(双韵): aabbccdd… 2. triplet: aaa 3. quatrain(四行体)押韵有aabb, abab, abba, abcb, aaba approximate rhyme: look-lack, prove-love
Beowulf《贝奥武夫》 Romance
1. Old English Period (449-1066)




大不列颠岛的土著居民aborigines是来自比利牛斯半 岛的伊比利亚人Iberian,他们以创造了巨石文化而著 称。 后来,凯尔特人Celtic从大陆进入大不列颠岛,同化 了土著居民,形成盎格鲁-撒克逊人的最早基础。 449年, 日耳曼人Teuton中的盎格鲁人Anglo、撒克逊 人Saxon进入不列颠。他们同化、消灭了一部分凯尔 特人,将另一部分凯尔特人驱赶到西南和西北部的山 区。 1066年,来自法国的诺曼人Norman征服了不列颠, 他们在英法百年战争后融合在盎格鲁-撒克逊人中。

British Literature

British Literature

1. Old English Period (449-1066)

historical background


Anglo-Saxon conquest in 449; Norman conquest in 1066.
Old English literature is also called AngloSaxon Literature


The Battle of Books书战 A Tale of a Tub木桶的故事 The Drapper‟s Letters一个麻 布商的书信 A Modest Proposal一个小小 的建议 Gulliver‟s Travels格列佛游记
Daniel Defoe丹尼尔· 笛福1660~1731


The Review (periodical founded by Defoe) 评论报 Robinson Crusoe 鲁宾逊漂流记
Henry Fielding亨利· 菲尔丁1707~1754





The History of the Adventures of Joseph Andrews 约瑟夫· 安德鲁 The Life of Mr Jonathan Wild, the Great大诗人江 奈生· 威尔德 Amelia爱米利亚 The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling汤姆· 琼斯 The Historical Register for 1736一七三六年历史记 事 Don Quixote in England堂吉柯德在英国


The Renaissance - rebirth or revival Humanism - the essence of the Renaissance, the dignity of human being & the importance of the present life Best representatives: Thomas More, Christopher Marlowe, William Shakespeare

Lecture Six British Literature

Lecture Six British Literature

2. Anglo-Norman Period (The Middle English period 1066-1485)
Romance:



The literature for the upper class; A long composition in verse or prose, about knights—adventures or love stories; Subject: about the matter of Britain, the matter of France, and the matter of Rome. King Arthur and His Knights of the Round Table Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (《高文爵士与 绿衣骑士》)
2. Anglo-Norman Period (The Middle English period 1066-1485)
Background

William the Conqueror became the King of England; Feudalism was established in England; The church had a total control of literature during much of the Middle Ages; The literature was a combination of French and Anglo-Saxon elements.
1. Anglo-Saxon Period (The Old English Period 449-1066)
Wessex Literature

TimelineofBritishLiterature(英国文学史时间线)

TimelineofBritishLiterature(英国文学史时间线)

TimelineofBritishLiterature(英国文学史时间线)Timeline of British Literature (1660-present)450-1066 Old English Period (Anglo-Saxon)1066-1500 Middle English Period (Medieval Period )1500-1660 The Renaissance1660-1785 The Neoclassical Period1785-1831 The Romantic Period (or 1798-1837)1832-1900 The Victorian Period (often dated 1837-1901)1914-1965 The Modernist Period1965-present Postmodern PeriodBritish Literature:一、Old and Medieval British Literature (5th century -- 1485)二、British Literature of the Renaissance Period (late 15th century – early 17th century)三、The 17th century—The Period of Revolution and Restoration四、The 18th century---The Age of Enlightenment in England五、The Age of Romanticism (1798-1832)六、The Victorian Period---English Critical Realism (1830s -- 1918)七、English Modernism (1918--1945)八、Contemporary Period (1945--)American Literature:一、Colonialism殖民时期(about1607—1765)二、Enlightenment and the Revolutionary War启蒙时期和独立革命(1765—18世纪末)三、Romanticism浪漫主义时期(1865—1918)四、Realism现实主义时期(1865—1918)五、Modernism现代主义时期(1918—1945)六、Contemporary Literature当代文学(1945—)各时期术语辑录(根据星火英语《英语专业考研考点精梳与精练》整理)Old and Medieval British Literature (5th century -- 1485):Alliteration, ballad, consonance(假韵), couplet(两行诗), epic, imagery(意象), kenning(隐喻表达法), legend, ottava rima(八行体), romance, simile, understatement.British Literature of the Renaissance Period (late 15th century –early 17th century): Allegory, aphorism(格言), blank verse, comedy, essay, foreshadowing(预兆), humanism, paradox(似非而是), morality play, meter(格律), miracle play, narrative poem, pastoral(牧歌), poetry, quatrain(四行诗), Renaissance, soliloquy(独白), sonnet, Spenserian stanza, stanza, terza rima(三行体), tragedy, trochee(抑扬格), university wits.The 17th century—The Period of Revolution and Restoration: Assonance(押韵), carpe diem(及时行乐), didactic literature(教诲文学), elegy, genre, metaphor,metaphysical poetry, conceit.The 18th century---The Age of Enlightenment in England:Aside(旁白), classicism, enlightenment movement, denouement(结局), epistolary novel(书信体小说), farce(闹剧), fiction, gothic romance, the graveyard school(墓地派诗歌), mock epic, neoclassicism, novel, pre-romanticism, refrain(叠句), satire, sentimentalism, theme.The Age of Romanticism (1798-1832):Byronic hero, canto, fable, lake poets, lyric, ode, romanticism.The Victorian Period---English Critical Realism (1830s -- 1918):Allusion(暗指/典故), antagonist, character, critical realism,dramatic monologue, flashback, narration, narrator, psychological novel, point of view, plot, protagonist, bildungsroman(成长小说).English Modernism (1918--1945)Aestheticism or the aesthetic movement, black comedy or black humor, Dadaism, epiphany(顿悟), free indirect discourse(自由间接引语), modernism, Oedipus Complex, parody, stream of consciousness, surrealism, the theater of absurd, tone, the Angry Young Men.Contemporary Period (1945--) :Experimental novel, open ending, metafiction, the Movement(运动派), kitchen-sink drama(极端现实主义喜剧).American LiteratureColonialism(about1607—1765)and Enlightenment and the Revolutionary War(1765—18世纪末):American Puritanism, autobiography.Romanticism浪漫主义时期(1865—1918):American Romanticism, American Transcendentalism, southern gothic, Calvinism, free verse, new England poets, symbol, symbolism.Realism现实主义时期(1865—1918):American Naturalism, American realism, Darwinism, Local Colorism.Modernism现代主义时期(1918—1945)The Beat Generation, determinism, expressionism, Freudianism, Harlem renaissance, Hemingway Code Hero, imagism, impressionism, Jazz Age, the Lost Generation, new criticism, Southern Renaissance, Waste Land Painters, Yoknapatawpha.Contemporary Literature当代文学(1945—):Postmodernism, the confessional poetry, the Black Mountain Poets.术语分类文学体裁类:诗歌:couplet(两行诗), epic, ottava rima(八行体), blank verse, narrative poem, pastoral(牧歌), poetry, quatrain(四行诗), sonnet, terza rima(三行体), elegy, genre,小说:didactic literature(教诲文学), epistolary novel(书信体小说),戏剧:comedy, morality play, tragedy,其他:ballad, legend, romance, essay,。

Timeline of British Literature 英国文学时间线

Timeline of British Literature 英国文学时间线
• Historical Context
– Life centered around ancestral tribes/clans that ruled themselves
– At first, tribes/clans were warriors from invading outlying areas
– The printing press helps stabilize English as a language and allows more people to read a variety of literature
– Economy changes from farm-based to international trade
– “Morality Plays”
• Chivalric code of honor
– Knights, their ladies fair
• Religious devotion • Romances
Medieval Period
• Style / Genre
– Oral tradition continues – Folk Ballads
– Kenning
• A poetic phrase used in place of the usual name of a person or thing
• Ex: “A wave traveler” for “A boat”
Medieval Period
• Church instructs its people through the morality and miracle plays
Romanticism
• 1785-1830 • A literary, artistic, and intellectual

British Literature Chapter 1

British Literature Chapter 1

British LiteratureChapter 1 The Old English and Medieval English PeriodContents:1. The making of England2. Beowulf, the National Epic of the English People3. The Age of Geoffrey ChaucerExpectations:1. Acquire the definition of the relative literary terms, such asepic史诗, alliteration头韵, legend(传奇), romance罗曼司, ballad歌谣/民谣, heroic couplet英雄双韵体, iambic pentameter五步抑扬格2. Give your own comments on☞The artistic features of the Old English poetry, Beowulf;☞The chief effects in literature of Norman Conquest;☞Chaucer’s position in British literary history.Part I: The Period of Old English (about 449-1066 Anglo-Saxon Period)★★ⅠThe Making of England< 1>The BritonsThe Celts, the earliest inhabitants of the British IslesThe Britons, came over in the 5th century BC, stayed for some five hundred yearsBritain: the land of the Britons<2>The Roman Conquest 征服/侵略( 55/54 B.C.- 410 A.D.)About 55 B.C., the Roman soldiers of Julius Caesar came to stay for five centuries and transplanted their civilization to the land. Britain was conquered by the Romans as a province of the West Roman Empire in 410 A.D., Roman Empire declined and its troops left Britain.<3> The Anglo-Saxon Conquest ( 449-1066)Three Germanic tribes: the Angles, Saxons and Jutes from Northern Europe along the North sea invaded the island around the 5th centuryLanguage: a Germanic dialect is called Old English todayAngle-land: the land of the Angles, that is EnglandSomething more about the Anglo-Saxon:Heathen (pagan or non-Christian): worship Heaven and Earth; believe in old mythology of Northern Europe;converting to Christianity, from pagan to Christian.Beowulf: the only organic whole poetry in the period of Anglo-Saxon conquest.Beowulf★★★Literary Terms:1). epic: (史诗)A long narrative poem telling about the deeds of a great hero and reflecting the values of the society from which it originated.2). Alliteration: (头韵)A succession of similar consonant sounds repeated at the beginning of successive words.★★★1. Status:1). Beowulf is a national epic of English people.2). Beowulf is the first written literature in English literary writing.2. Characters:Beowulf: a nephew of king of Gents, a people in Denmark.Hrothgar: king of Denmark.Grendel: a monster.She-monster(女妖怪): Grendel’s mother.Dragon: a fire dragon, a monster.3. plot:1.Beowulf’s fight with the monster Grendel in Hrothgar’s hall.2. Beowulf’s slaying of Grendel’s mother in her lair.3. Beowulf’s return in glory to his uncl e, and his succession to the throne.4. Beowulf’s victory in death, fifty years later, over the fire dragon.★★★4. General Knowledge About BeowulfThe story takes place in Scandinavia; the hero is from Sweden, and performs his deeds in Denmark.Origin: been brought over to England by minstrels at the time of the Anglo-Saxon Conquest; handed down in oral form; Beowulf was written down in the 10th century.Style: a heroic epicLanguage: Old English (the Anglo-Saxon tongue)Theme: the heroic deeds of old time; a hero killing monsters to make the world safe for people Main Characters: Beowulf and monstersRhyme: Alliteration (头韵)----A succession of similar consonant sounds repeated at the beginning of successive words.The most striking feature ---- the use of alliteration (head rhyme)Eg: the scene of Beowulf's death“Thus m ade their m ourning the m en of Geatland,For their h ero’s passing, h is h earth – companionsQuoth that of all the kings of earth,Of m en he was the m ildest and m ost beloved,To his k in the k indest, k eenest to praise.”More examples: b eauty and b east, (美女与野兽)m ommy's m anly m uscles m ade m e m adly m oan. (妈咪那强壮的力量弄的我大声哭喊)5. Characteristics of Beowulf (了解)a. the mixture of pagan elements with Christian coloring. The most outstanding example is the frequent reference in the epic to “Wyrd” (fate) as the decisive factor in human affaires, while on other occasions “God” or “Lord” is also mentioned as the omniscient and omnipotent being that rules over the whole universe.b. the frequent use of metaphors and understatements.“Ring giver” is used for king, “Swan road”, “whale-path” or “seal bath” for the sea, “wave-traveler” or “sea-wood” for ship, “shield-bearer”, “battle-hero” or “spear-fighter” for soldier. Understatement as“not troublesome ” for very welcome.c. Beowulf is written in alliterative verse.Its rhythm depends upon accent and alliteration. That is, the beginning of two or more words in the same line with the same sound or letter. The lines are made up of two short halves, separated by a pause. No rhyme is used; but a musical effect is produced by giving each half line two strongly accented syllables. Each full line, therefore, has four accents, three of which usually begin with the same sound or letter.★★★6. The significance of Beowulfa. This glorious epic presents us a vivid picture of the life of Anglo-Saxon people and highly praises the brave and courageous spirit of the fighting against the elemental forces.b. The epic combines the pagan story with chritianity, thus reflecting the features of the tribal society of ancient times, that is tribalism, and the coloring of the Christianized feudal society on the other hand.Literary Features of the Anglo-Saxon Period(了解)1)secular(非宗教的) poetry,non religious poems but with Christian coloring;2) created collectively and orally;3) based on history, legend or events of the time;4) for entertainment;5) for the minstrels吟游诗人as a paying profession;6) unknown writers, written down by the monks in the 10th century.Assignments and Questions:1. How does Old English come into being?2. Comment on Beowulf.3. What are the features of Anglo-Saxon literature?Part II The Middle / Medieval English Period (1066-1400) (Anglo-Norman Period)★★1. The Norman Conquest:In 1066, Duke William the Conqueror-----William IIt was the year 1066 that marked the beginning of the Middle English or Norman period.The Establishment of the Feudal system----feudalism:The social hierarchy:King WilliamHis nobles and followersPeasants and serfsFor almost 200 years, Old English, Norman-French, and Latin existed side by side in England. Old English : spoken only by the common English people, esp. the common peasantsFrench : official language used by the King and Norman lordsLatin: principal tongue of church affairs used by the clergymen and scholars in the universities However, at last English absorbed almost the whole body of French words and became the language of the land.2. Major Literary Form in Norman Period -----Romance and Ballad (只做了解)Literary Terms:1). Legend: (传奇)a song or narrative handed down from the past; legend differs from myths on the basis of the elements of historical truth they contain. One speak, e.g., of Arthurian legend because there is some historical evidence of Arthur’s existence.2) Romance:(罗曼司)It was a long composition, sometimes in verse, sometimes in prose, describing the life and adventures of a noble hero. (term)3) Ballad: (民谣,歌谣)a story told in song, usually in 4-line stanzas, with the second and fourth lines rhymed. Features of English Ballads:1. The ballads are in various English and Scottish dialects.2. They were created collectively and revised when handed down from mouth to mouth.3. They are mainly the literature of the peasants.4. They give an outlook of the English common people in feudal society.The Romance—the prevailing form of literature in the feudal EnglandThe central character of romances was the knight, a man of noble birth skilled in the use of weapons. He was commonly described as riding forth to seek adventures, taking part in tournaments, or fighting for his lord in battle. He was devoted to the church and the king. The code of manners and morals of a knight is known as chivalry. (骑士精神)One who wanted to be a knight should serve an apprenticeship as a squire until he was admitted to the knighthood with solemn ceremony and the swearing of oaths. (concerning with knights, chivalry and courtly love.) Form:long composition, in verse, in proseContent: description of life and adventures of a noble heroCharacter: knight with chivalry and devoted to the church and the kingThe Romance Cycles:1)the “matters of Britain” (adventures of King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table)(讲述亚瑟王和他的圆桌骑士)2)the “matters of France” (Emperor Charlemagne and his peers)(有关查理曼大帝)3)the “matters of Rome”(Alexander the Great and the attacks of Troy)(有关亚历山大大帝,和特洛伊战争)A ballad is a story told in song, usually in 4-line stanzas, with the second and fourth lines rhymed. Features of English Ballads:1. The ballads are in various English and Scottish dialects.2. They were created collectively and revised when handed down from mouth to mouth.3. They are mainly the literature of the peasants.4. They give an outlook of the English common people in feudal society.The Subjects of English Ballads----Variety in kind:1. struggle of young lovers2. the conflict between love and wealth3. the cruelty of jealousy4. the criticism of the civil war5. the matters of class struggle6. the ballads of Robin HoodThe characteristics of Robin Hood:(罗宾逊)a. his hatred for the cruel oppressors and his love for the poor and down-troddenb. strong, brave and cleverc. tender-hearted and affectionate for the poor and down-troddend. his pure love for Mariane. his simple loyalty to the monarchyMedieval Romance:English Romance: Arthurian Legends 《亚瑟王传奇》Sir Gawain and the Green Knight 《高文爵士和绿衣骑士》Medieval Folk Literature:Popular Ballads: Robin Hood Ballads (罗宾逊歌谣)Part III Geoffrey Chaucer (1340—1400)★★★Literary Terms:1)Iambic Pentameter:五步抑扬格A poetic line consisting of five iambic feet ( penta- is from a Greek word meaning “five” ).An iamb---an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable. ( Iambic pentameter is the most common verse line in English poetry. )2)Heroic couplet:英雄双韵体A couple of 2-lines of iambic pentameter with the same end rhymes and forming a logical whole. The rhyme scheme is aa bb cc dd ee ff gg...... .(lines of iambic pentameter rhymed in pairs: aa, bb, cc, and so on. This verse form was introduced into English poetry by Chaucer, and has been in constant use ever since. )1. Life of Chaucer (了解)born in a wine merchant family; a good education; the ability to speak most of the important languages;married one of the Queen’s maids;diplomatic mission to Spain, France, and Italy, thus knowing the customs and were called as the controller of the customs;still experienced some years of sufferings and poverty because of the change of kings;died in 1400 and buried in Westminster Abby , thus founding “The Poet’ s Corner” (诗人角) .2. his literary career (了解)a. French period (1360-1372) in French: translating period“The Romaunt of the Rose”《玫瑰传奇》a translation, popular in Middle agesThe Book of the Duchess 《悼公爵夫人》, the best work of the timeb. Italian period (1372-1385) in Latin: adapting period“Troilus and Criseyde”, 《特罗伊拉斯和克莱西德》, a poem of a love storyc. English period (1386-1400) in English: creating period“The Canterbury Tales” (“heroic couplet”)《坎特伯雷故事集》his masterpiece and a representative works of the Middle Ages.★★★3. What do you think of G. Chaucer? / Literary Influence of Chaucer?1). He is the "Father of English Poetry"----the first to use current English in his writing, the first to write in heroic couplets, a master of word pictures with vivid, exact and smooth language; 2). He is the first great poet who wrote in the English language, making the dialect of London the standard for the modern English speech.3). He is the founder of English realism----loyal to reality with humor, irony and satire(讽刺);4). He is the forerunner of Humanism----praising man's energy, intellect, quick wit and love of life;5). He is the first to bring the atmosphere of romantic interest about men and women and the daily work of one’s own world.6) He exerts great influence on the later generation writers, e.g. Shakespeare4. A Close Look at The Canterbury Tales★★★The Canterbury Tales is the masterpiece of G. Chaucer. In this book, he wrote 30 pilgrims(朝圣者), including knights, merchant, nuns and monks, doctor, cook, plowman, sailer, carpenter, etc., (almost all the walks of society)to go to Canterbury to worship St. Thomas. It gives us the vivid panoramic (全景的) view of English society with much humor and satire (讽刺). Originally, Chaucer planed to write 120 tales, but when he died, there are just only 24 tales left describing from London to Canterbury.1)Characters: (2 groups)①the holy orders----ironic tone of the narration, satire for the corruption and depravity. (堕落)(Catholic church and its numbers including nuns, priests, summoner, monks, etc., besides knights and squire乡绅)②the middle class----reflecting that they begin to taste the combination of power with wealth and aspiring to more of both. (emergent class including merchant, dyer,染工carpenter木匠, plowman农夫, miller磨坊主, weaver织工, carpet maker, shipper, cook, sailer, etc. )2) the structure:3 parts: the General Prologue; 总序24 tales, two of which left unfinished;Separate prologues to each tale with links, comments, quarrels, etc. in between.★★★3) the theme :① affirming man's right to pursue earthly happiness and opposing asceticism (禁欲主义),praising men's energy, intellect and love of life;② satirizing (讽刺) and exposing the corruption, depravation (堕落) and social evils of the society, esp. the religious abuses.4) the best of the whole collection:① the wife of Bath(巴斯城的妇女),② the Knight(骑士),③ the Pardoner(卖赎罪卷者),④the Nun’s Priest(尼姑的教士),⑤the Prologue(序诗)5) narration features:Sense of humor;Loyalty to reality;Sense of humanity (人文主义情怀)。

Unit_6_British_Literature

Unit_6_British_Literature

哈姆雷特
• 《哈姆雷特(Hamlet)》是由威廉· 莎士比 亚创作于1599年至1602年间的一部悲剧作 品。戏剧讲述了叔叔克劳狄斯谋害了哈姆 雷特的父亲,篡取了王位,并娶了国王的 遗孀乔特鲁德;哈姆雷特王子因此为父王 向叔叔复仇。
• 奥赛罗是威尼斯公国一员勇将。他与元老 的女儿苔丝狄梦娜相爱。因为两人年纪相 差太多,婚事未被准许。两人只好私下成 婚。奥赛罗手下有一个阴险的旗官伊阿古, 一心想除掉奥赛罗。他先是向元老告密, 不料却促成了两人的婚事。他又挑拨奥赛 罗与苔丝狄梦娜的感情,说另一名副将凯 西奥与苔丝狄梦娜关系不同寻常,并伪造 了所谓定情信物等。奥赛罗信以为真,在 愤怒中掐死了自己的妻子。当他得知真相
. Christopher Marlowe(15641593 )克里斯托弗· 马洛
His style is thought to have been a great influence on Shakespeare. Most famous play: The Tragical
History of Dr. Faustus.
《凯尔斯书》
• 《凯尔斯书》是爱尔兰中世纪手抄本中 最精美的一部,其美丽的插图作品、彩色 装饰字母代表了中世纪爱尔兰凯尔特美术 的最高成就。《凯尔斯书》手抄本出现在8 世纪。现藏爱尔兰都柏林,三一学院图书 馆。
夫》
• One of the oldest of these early “Old English” literary works is long poem from Anglo-Saxon times called Beowulf. • 这些早期的最古老的古英语文学作品之一 是长诗来自盎格鲁-撒克逊时代叫做贝奥武 夫。
的时代那就是著名的“文艺复兴”。

Unit 6 British Literature

Unit 6 British Literature

Unit 6 British LiteraturePeriods Seven and EightⅠTeaching aim: Enable students to have a good knowledge of British Literature.ⅡTeaching important points:1. Beowulf {贝奥武夫(一首古英文史诗的名字,同时也是此诗中的英雄的名字)}2. The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer (杰弗里·乔叟的《坎特伯雷故事集》)3. Stories about King Arthur (关于亚瑟王和他的骑士们的故事)4. William Shakespeare (威廉·莎士比亚)5. the Romance writers in the 19th century (19世纪浪漫派作家)6. The Brontes (布朗特三姐妹)7. Charles Dickens (查理·狄更斯)8. Sir Walter Scott (瓦尔特·司各特)9. Robert Louis Stevenson (罗伯特·路易斯·斯蒂文森)10. Modernism (现代主义)11. Postmodernism (后现代主义)12. Joseph Conrad (约瑟夫·康拉德)13. Virginia Woolf (维吉尼亚·吴尔夫)14. wrence (D.H.·劳伦斯)15. E.M Foster (EM·福斯特)ⅢTeaching method: lecturingⅣTeaching times: 4 periodsⅤTeaching procedures:<Step One>Lead-inFirst, greeting the whole classSecond, review Unit 5. Ask the following questions:1.Where is the best agricultural land in Britain?2.In the aerospace industry, which two countries are ahead of Britain?3.What did Frank Whittle do in 1937?Suggested answers:1. In the southeast of England2. The US and Russia3. He developed the first jet engine.<Step Two>Explanations1. Early writing1). British literature concerned with Christianity: Anglo-Saxons’ illustrated versions of the bible: the most famous--- the Book of Kells2). Beowulf --- a long poem, one of the oldest of these early “Old English”(AD 6th C. —AD 11th C.的盎格鲁˙撒克逊的英语) literary works (古英语文学作品指8th C. AD—11th C. AD)3). Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer (1340-1400)The most important work in Middle English (中古英语:11th C. AD—15th C. AD) Literature. It’s made up of a series of stories told by 31 pilgrims to entertain each other on their way to the Christian Church at Canterbury in south-east England. It’s quite noticeable for its diversity, not only in the range of social status among the pilgrims, but also in style of the stories they tell.杰弗里·乔叟的《坎特伯雷故事集》是中古英语文学中最重要的作品。

英美国家概况 Unit 6 BRITISH_LITERATURE

英美国家概况 Unit 6 BRITISH_LITERATURE

VIRGINIA WOOLF
Virginia
Woolf is regarded as a modernist writer and one of the most famous writers of the century. Her works are concerned with the individual consciousness, especially female consciousness. Her novels have become important to feminists for the way they show women’s personalities to be limited by society. In her writing, she uses the technique called the stream of consciousness. One of her best novels is Mrs. Dalloway.-意识流
The
development of drama in the Renaissance William Shakespeare:Hamlet, King Lear, Macbeth.
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
He
was an English dramatist and poet in the Elizabethan age. He is generally regarded as the greatest playwright in English literature. His plays fall into three categories: tragedies such as Hamlet, comedies such as Merchant of Venice and historical plays like Charles II.

【精品】英国文学史各个时期中的文学流派Britishliteratureineachperiod

【精品】英国文学史各个时期中的文学流派Britishliteratureineachperiod

【关键字】精品British literature in each periodOld English and Middle EnglishOld English was referred to the period of the English language and English countries. The earliest form of literature was poetry which spread orally, and the main poet was bards. When Christianity spread to Britain, some poems were recorded. At this period the most important literature of the British national epic was Beowulf written with head blank.Old English period(1066~1500)From the Normans conquered England in 1066 to 1,500 years around London dialect became accepted modern English literature, forms of main was ballad, poetry and knight legend. In a few groups in the legend, the British knights of the subject was king Arthur and his knights adventure stories, including The Green Knight and Heroes of the Marshes which represented the highest achievement in medieval knight legends. A lot of excellent folk emerged, and the most representative was the folk singing for hero Robin Hood .The most important poet known as "the father of English poetry" was the Chaucer. The Canterbury tales which achieved high artistic accomplishment was his representative works. He created the double blank poetry. Five steps to raise grid was adopted by many British poet. Chaucer written with London dialect laid the foundation of the literary creation, and promoted the development of the English language and literature.During the Renaissance British literature developed in poetry, prose, and especially prosperity.The poetry, the new poetic forms like sonnets and black verse were introduced to Britain.Philip Sidney was a famous poet. He wrote many beautiful sonnets, also created one of the earliest poetry A Defence of Poetry. Edmund Spenser wrote The Fairy Queen with Spencer method. Shakespeare is not only a drama writer but also a great poet, besides two poems, two epic and 154 sonnets.English version of Authorized Version (A V) in 1611, not only made great religious significance, but also a great literary works, and made great influence on British language culture. It's simple, easy and clear prose style laid the traditional British prose. A famous philosopher and essayist Francis Bacon wrote his literary works Essays which Included 58 essays he published in each period.Drama represented the highest achievement of English literature during the Renaissance. Main dramatists were Christopher Marlowe and W. Shakespeare. British literature in the 17th centuryBritish society in the 17th century is one of the severe turbulence. Because of the autocratic monarchy and the bourgeoisie, the conflict between the civil war broke out in 1642, and resulted in the glorious revolution in 1688.The political struggle and the bourgeois revolution ideology were closely connected with the Puritan religious struggle. So this period of literature and art showed the development and growth of revolutionary ideas, and had a strong Puritan tendency. Two representatives were Milton and Bunyan. Milton's masterpiece Paradise Lost and Bunyan's masterpiece The Pilgrim's Progress were both based on The Bible.The Pilgrim's Progress was anallegory works, which used "Christian" to the heaven to present mankind pursuing the bright future.British literature in the 18th centuryThe 18th century produced a kind of progress trend-- the Enlightenment. During this period, the writers and thinkers advocated rational thought. They thought enlightenment education was the basic method of social transformation. Therefore the 18th century was called the "rational era". In the field of literature embodied in the eighteenth century was neoclassicism. Representative writers were A.Pope, R.Steele, and J.Addison.Britain's modern fictions and a plenty of influential novelists rose in the mid 18th. Pamela written by Samuel Richardson used the form of epistolary to describe the characters of the psychological activity, which greatly enriched the creation of novels. The Vicar of Wakefield written by Oliver Goldsmith was one of the famous sentiment novels in British literature. Laurence Sterne broke traditional narrative methods and created Tristram Shandy, so he was believed to be the forerunner of British modernist literature.Daniel Defoe was the first realist in British literature. His masterpiece was Robinson Crusoe.Swift was the famous novelist, who used sharp writing to expose hypocrisy and corruption of the society and the church. His masterpiece was Gullivers Travels. Henry Fielding is one of the most outstanding novelists, who contributed to the development of novel in theory and practice for the British. In his masterpiece Tom Jones, he created many lifelike characters and demonstrated the intricacies of the social contradictions.British literature in the 19th centuryThe 19th century British literature mainly included Pre-Romantic Period and the later period of the critical realism novels.Black and Burns belong to former romantic poets. Black’s masterpiece was Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience. Burns was a famous national poet of Scotland. He wrote a lot of poetries for friendship, love, praises and liberty. Among them A Red Red Rose was widespread.Romantic heyday began with William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge jointly issued Lyrical ballads to the death of George Eliot. The main literary achievements were poetry. Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Southey who have often been mentioned as the “Lake Poets”, George Gordon Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley and John Keats were eulogized as rich revolutionary ideals of freedom and liberty.In the 19th century Critical Realist writer who had deep sympathy to poor people described the British bourgeois society, and exposed and criticized the bourgeois society. Charles Dickens was Britain's most outstanding critical realist who was good at describing the bottom of people's life and thoughts, ideas, and works, while William Makepeace Thackeray was good at describing the upper society people. Critical realist female novelist and their representative works: Charlotte Bronte, Emily Bronte, Mrs. Gaskell, George Eliot.Thomas Hardy was a novelist and a poet, also one of the representatives of EnglishCritical realism. He said his work was "character and environment of the novel". His masterpiece was Tess of the D’Urbervill es.The 20th century modern writersThe crisis people towards western civilization and the consequences in the Second World War contributed to the formation of western modernist literature, mainly for “stream of consciousness”. Representative writers were Henry James and James Aloysius Joyce. Joyce’s novel Ulysses described the wretched spiritual life of the modern urban residents. Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse used a skilled symbolism and stream of consciousness.此文档是由网络收集并进行重新排版整理.word可编辑版本!。

英美文学史简介

英美文学史简介

英美文学史简介Part A British LiteratureⅠEarly and Medieval English Literature 早期及中世纪英国文学1. “Beowulf”, the national epic of the English people.《贝奥武夫》(Beowulf),完成于八世纪,约750年左右的英雄叙事长诗,长达3000多行。

是以古英语记载的传说中最古老的一篇。

是现存古英文文学中最伟大之作,也是欧洲最早的方言史诗。

2. Geoffrey Chaucer ,the founder of English poetry.乔叟(1343-1400),英国诗歌之父.The Canterbury Tales 《坎特伯雷故事集》, 以一伙来自社会各个阶层的香客在宗教朝圣的路上讲述故事为线索,向我们清楚地展示了那个时代人们的生活。

在所有的23个故事中,除了两篇之外,其余都是诗歌体裁的作品。

ⅡThe Renaissance [ri′neis(ə)ns] 文艺复兴时期文学1.William Shakespeare 莎士比亚(1564~1616)英国文艺复兴时期伟大的剧作家、诗人,欧洲文艺复兴时期人文主义文学的集大成者。

莎士比亚给世人留下了37部戏剧play,其中包括一些他与别人合写的一般剧作。

此外,他还写有154首十四行诗sonnet和三、四首长诗poem。

四大喜剧: A Midsummer Night’s Dream 仲夏夜之梦The Merchant of Venice 威尼斯商人As You Like It 皆大欢喜Twelfth Night 第十二夜四大悲剧:Hamlet 哈姆雷特(To be, or not to be, that is the question)Othello 奥赛罗King Lear 李尔王Macbeth 麦克白其他:Romeo and Juliet 罗密欧与朱丽叶2.Francis Bacon 培根(1561-1626 )The founder of English materialist philosophy and modern science.Bacon is especially famous for his Essays.培根,英国唯物主义和现代科学奠基人,散文家.代表作:散文Of Studies 《论学习》ⅢThe period of English Bourgeois [buə′ʒwɑ:] Revolution and Restoration 资产阶级革命时期文学1.John Milton 米尔顿Paradise Lost 《失乐园》2. John Bunyan 班扬The Pilgrim’s Progress 《天路历程》ⅣEighteenth Century English Literature 十八世纪英国文学1. Daniel Defoe: 笛福Robinson Crusoe 《鲁滨逊漂流记》2. Jonathan Swift:斯威夫特Gulliver’s Travels 《格列佛游记》3. Henry Fielding 菲尔丁the Founder of the English Realistic Nov 英国现实主义小说奠基人Joseph Andrew 《约瑟夫·安德鲁》4. William Blake 布莱克and Robert Burns彭斯: PoetⅤRomanticism in England 浪漫主义时期文学1. William Wordsworth 华滋华斯the representative poet of the early romanticism. 标志着浪漫主义的开始2. George Gordon Byron 拜伦Don Juan 《唐·璜》3. Percy Bysshe Shelley 雪莱Prometheus Unbound《解放了的普罗米修斯》If winter comes, can spring be far behind? 冬天来了,春天还会远吗?4. John Keats 济慈Ode to a Nightingale 《夜莺颂》5. Jane Austen 简·奥斯汀Pride and Prejudice 《傲慢与偏见》ⅥThe Victorian Age 维多利亚时期文学1. Charles Dickens 狄更斯代表作:Oliver Twist 《雾都孤儿》、A Tale of Two Cities《双城记》、David Copperfield 《大卫·科波菲尔》2. William Makepeace Thackeray 萨克雷代表作:Vanity Fair 《名利场》3. George Eliot 乔治·艾略特4. The Brontë Sisters 勃朗特三姐妹Charlotte Brontë夏洛蒂·勃朗特:Jane Eyre《简·爱》Emily Brontë艾米莉·勃朗特:Wuthering Heights 《呼啸山庄》Annie Brontë安妮·勃朗特5. The Brownings 勃朗宁夫妇Husband: Robert BrowningWife: Elizabeth BrowningSonnets from the Portuguese 《葡语十四行诗集》ⅦTwentieth Century English Literature 20世纪英国文学1. Thomas Hardy 托马斯·哈代Tess of the d’Urbervilles《德伯家的苔丝》2. John Galsworthy 高尔斯华绥3. Oscar Wilde 王尔德Poet,dramatist, novelist and essayist.The Happy Prince and Other Tales 《快乐王子和其他故事》4. George Bernard Shaw 萧伯纳the most important English dramatist5. D. H. Lawrence 劳伦斯Lady Chatterley’s Lover 《查泰来夫人的情人》6. Virginia Woolf 伍尔芙Feminism, the stream of consciousness意识流女权主义与现代主义小说的先驱7. James Joyce 乔伊斯Ulysses《尤里西斯》the stream of consciousness意识流Part B American LiteratureⅠThe Literature During the Colonial American and the American Revolution殖民地时期及独立战争时期的文学Benjamin Franklin 本杰明·富兰克林ⅡAmerican Romanticism and New England Literature 浪漫主义及新英格兰时期文学1. Washington Irving华盛顿•欧文(1783-1859)the first American to achieve an international literary reputation. 是美国文学的奠基人之一。

British Literature英国文学名词解释,整理背诵

British Literature英国文学名词解释,整理背诵

British Literature英国文学名词解释,背诵第一章:Old and Medieval British Literature(中古时期英国文学)Alliteration (头韵): It is the repetition of the initial consonant sounds in poetry. In 0ld English alliterative meter, alliteration is the principal organizing device of the verse line, such as in Beowulf.Ваllаd (民谣): It is a relatively short narrative poem, written to be sung, with a simple and dramatic action. The ballads tell of love, death, the supernatural, or a combination of these. Two characteristics of the ballad are incremental repetition and the ballad stanza. Incremental repetition repeats one or more lines with small but significant variations that advance the action. The ballad stanza has four lines; commonly, the first and third lines contain four feet or accents, the second and fourth lines contain three feet. Ballads often open abruptly, present brief description and use concise dialogue.Old English period (the Anglo-Saxon period): 1) The Old English period, extended from the invasion of Celtic England by Germanic tribes (the Angles, Saxons, and Jutes) in the first half of the fifth century to the conquest of England in 1066 by the Norman French under the leadership of William the Conqueror. 2)Only after they had been converted to Christianity in the seventh century did the Anglo-Saxons, whose earlier literature had been oral, begin to develop a written literature.Consonance (假韵): It refers to the repetition of similar consonant sounds in a group of words. Sometimes the term refers to the repetition of consonant sounds in the middle or at the end of words. Sometimes the term is used for slant rhyme (or partial rhyme)in which initial and final consonants are the same but the vowels different: litter/ letter , green/groan.Couplet (两行诗): It refers to the two consecutive lines of poetry that rhyme. A heroic couplet is an iambic r pentameter couplet.Epic (史诗): Epic, in poetry, refers to a long work dealing with the actions of gods and heroes,Imagery (意象) : Words or phrases that create pictures or images in the readers‘mind. Images can appeal to other senses as well: touch, taste, smell and hearing.Kenning (隐喻表达法): In old English poetry, an elaborate phrase that descries persons, thing or events in a metaphorical and indirect way.Legend (传奇): A song or narrative handed down from the past. Legend differs from myths on the basis of the elements of historical truth they contain.Ottava Rima ( 八行体): A form of eight-line stanza, the rhyme scheme is abababcc.Romance (罗曼史/骑士文学): Any imagination literature that is set in an idealized world and deals with heroic adventures and battles between good characters and villains or monsters. Originally, the term referred to a medieval tale dealing with the loves and adventures of kings, queens, knights and ladies, and including unlikely or supernatural happenings. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (高文爵士与绿衣骑士) is the best of medieval romances. John Keats‘The Eve of St. Agnes (圣爱格尼斯节前夕) is one of the greatest metrical romances ever written.Simile (明喻): A comparison made between two things through the use of a specific word of comparison, such as like, as, than or resemble, and the comparison must be between two essentially unlike things.Understatement (含蓄): It is a figure of speech in literature writing. It deliberately represents something as very much less in magnitude or importance than it really is, or is ordinarily considered to be. The effect usually is ironic.Middle English period: The four and a half centuries between the Norman Conquest in 1066, which effected radical changes in the language, life, and culture of England, and about 1500, when the standard literary language had become recognizably modern English, that is, similar to the language we speak and write today.Arthurian legend: It is a group of tales (in several languages) that developed in the Middle Ages concerning Arthur, semi-historical king of the Britons and his knights. The legend is a complex weaving of ancient Celtic mythology with later traditions around a core of possible historical authenticity.第二章:British Literature of the Renaissance Period (文艺复兴时期英国文学)Allegory (寓言): A tale in verse or prose in which characters, actions, or settings represent abstract ideas or moral qualities. An allegory is a story with two meanings: a literal meaning and a symbolic meaning.Aphorism (格言): A concise, pointed statement expressing a wise or clever observation about life.Blank verse (无韵体诗): Verse written in unrhymed iambic pentameter. It is the verse form used in some of the greatest English poetries, including that of William Shakespeare and John Milton.Comedy (喜剧): In general, a literary work that ends happily with a healthy ,amicable armistice between the protagonist and society.Essay (散文): A piece of prose writing, usually short, that deals with a subject in a limited way and expresses a particular point of view. An essay may be serious or humorous, tightly organized or rambling, restrained or emotional. The two general classifications of essay are: the informal essay and the formal essay. An informal essay is usually brief and is written as if the writer is talking informally to the readers about some topic, using a conversational style and a personal or humorous tune. By contrast, a formal essay is tightly organized, dignified in style and serious in tone.Foreshadowing (预兆): The use of hints or clues in a narrative lo suggest what will happen later. Writers use foreshadowing to create interest and to build suspense. Sometimes foreshadowing also prepares the reader for the ending of the story.Humanism ( 人文主义): Humanism is the essence of the Renaissance. It emphasizes the dignity of human beings and the importance of the present life. Humanists voiced their beliefs that man was the center of the universe and man did not only have the right to enjoy the beauty of the present life , but had the ability to perfect himself and to perform wonders.Paradox(似非而是): A statement or expression so surprisingly self-contradictory as to provoke us into seeking another sense or context in which it would be true.Morality Play (道德剧) : An outgrowth of Miracle Plays. Morality Play was popular in the 15th and 16th centuries. In it, virtues and vices were personified.Meter (格律) : A generally regular pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in poetry. The analysis of the meter is called scansion.Miracle Play (奇迹剧) : A popular religious drama of medieval England. Miracle Plays were based on stories of the saints or sacred history.Narrative poem (叙述诗): A Narrative poem refers w a poem that tells a story. It may consist of a series of incidents, as in Homer's The Iliad and The Odysseus, and John Milton's Paradise Lost.Pastoral (牧歌): A type of poem that deals in an idealized way with shepherds and rustic life. Two pastoral poems are Christopher Marlow's The Passionate Shepherd to His Lover and Sir Walter Raleigh's The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd.Ralegh’s poem might be called anti-pastoral because of its realistic tone.Poetry (诗歌): The most distinctive characteristics of poetry are form and music. Poetry is concerned with not only what is said but how it is said. Poetry evokes emotions rather than express facts. Poetry means having a poetic experience. Imagination is also an essential quality of poetry. Poetry often leads us to new perceptions, new feelings and experiences of which we have not previously been aware.Quatrain (四行诗): Usually a stanza or poem of four lines. A quatrain can also be any group of four lines unified by a rhyme scheme. Quatrains usually follow an abab, abba or abcb rhyme scheme.Renaissance (文艺复兴): The term originally indicated a revival of classical (Greek and Roman) arts and sciences after the dark ages of medieval obscurantism. Humanism is the essence of Renaissance. The real mainstream of English Renaissance is the Elizabethan drama with William Shakespeare being the leading dramatist.Soliloquy (独白): In drama, an extended speech delivered by a character alone on stage. The character reveals his or her innermost thoughts and feelings directly to the audience, as if thinking aloud.Sonnet (十四行诗): A fourteen-line lyric poem, usually written in rhymed iambic pentameter.A sonnet generally expresses a single theme or idea.Spenserian Stanza (斯宾塞诗节):A nine-line stanza with the flowing rhyme scheme: ababbcbcc. The first eight lines are written in iambic pentameter. The ninth line is written in iambic hexameter and is called an alexandrine.Stanza (诗节):It’s a structural divi sion of a poem, consisting of a series of verse line which usually comprise a recurring pattern of meter and rhyme.Terza rima (三行体): An Italian verse form consisting of a series of thee-line stanzas in which the middle line of each stanza rhymes with the first and third lines of the following stanza.Tragedy (悲剧): In general, a literary work in which the protagonist meets an unhappy or disastrous end. Unlike comedy, tragedy depicts the actions of a central character who is usually dignified or heroic.Trochee (抑扬格):A metrical foot used in formal poetry. It consists of a stressed syllable followed by an unstressed one.University Wits (大学才子):University Wits refers to a group of scholars during the Elizabethan Age who graduated from cither Oxford or Cambridge. They came to London with the ambition to become professional writers. Some of them later became famous poets and playwrights. They were called" University Wis". Robert Greene, Thomas Kyd, Jhon Lyly and Christopher Marlowe were among them. They paved the way, to some extent, for the coming of Shakespeare.Utopia (乌托邦): It is written in a conversation form between More and Hythloday, a returned voyager. It is divided into two books. The first book contains a long discussion on the social conditions of England. The second book describes in detail an ideal communist society, Utopia.Francis Bacon: Francis Bacon (1561-1626), was an English philosopher, statesman, scientist, lawyer, jurist, author and pioneer of the scientific method. He served both as Attorney General and Lord Chancellor of England. Although his political career ended in disgrace, he remained extremely influential through his works, especially as philosophical advocate and practitioner of the scientific method during the scientific revolution. His essays are famous for its brief and wise quotations and the most widely-read works are his essays “Of Studies”, “Of Truth” and “Of Death”.第三章:The 17th Century -The Period of Revolution and Restoration (17世纪资产阶级革命和王朝复辟时期)Assonance (押韵): The repetition of similar vowel sounds, especially in poetry. Assonance is often employed to please the ear or emphasize certain sounds.Carpe Diem (及时行乐):A tradition dating back to classical Greek and Latin poetry and particularly popular among English Cavalier poets. Carpe Diem means literally “seize the day”, that is, “live for today”.Didactic literature (教诲文学):Didactic literature is said to be didactic if it deliberately teaches some moral lessons. The use of literature for such teaching is one of its traditional justifications.Elegy (挽歌): A poem of mourning, usually over the death of an individual. An elegy is a type of lyric poem, usually formal in language and structure, and solemn or even melancholy in tone.Genre (体裁):A literary species or form, e. g·, tragedy, epic, comedy, novel, essay, biography and lyric poem.Metaphor (暗喻): A figure of speech that makes a comparison between two things that are basically dissimilar. Unlike simile, a metaphor does not use a connective word such as like, as, or resemble in making the comparison.Metaphysical poetry (玄学派诗歌) : The poetry of John Donne and other 17th century poets who wrote in a similar style. Metaphysical poetry is characterized by verbal wit and excess, ingenious structure, irregular meter, colloquial language, elaborate imagery, and a drawing-together of dissimilar ideas.Conceit (奇想): Conceit is a far-fetched simile or metaphor; a literary conceit occurs when the speaker compares two highly dissimilar things. Conceit is extensively employed in John Donne's poetry.Paradise Lost: Paradise Lost is an epic poem in blank verse by the 17th-century English poetJohn Milton:The poem concerns the Christian story of “the Fall of Man”: the temptation of Adam and Eve by the fallen angel Satan and their expulsion from the Garden of Eden. Milton's purpose, stated in Book I, is to " justify the ways of God to men and elucidate the conflict between God's eternal foresight and free will.blank verse: Blank verse is a type of poetry, distinguished by having a regular meter, but no rhyme. In English, the meter most commonly used with blank verse has been iambic pentameter (as used in Shakespearean plays). The first known use of blank verse in the English language was by Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey. Christopher Marlowe was the first English author to make full use of the potential of blank verse, and also established it as the dominant verse form for English drama in the age of Elizabeth I and James I. The major achievements in English blank verse were made by William Shakespeare, who wrote much of the content of his plays in unrhymed iambic pentameter, and Milton, whose Paradise Lost was written in blank verse.第四章: The 18th Century- -The Age of Enlightenment in England (18世纪英国启蒙运动阶段)Aside (旁白): In drama, line spoken by a character in an undertone or directly to the audience. An aside is meant to be heard by the other characters onstage.Classicism (古典主义运动): A movement or tendency in art, literature, or music that reflects the principles manifested in the art of ancient Greece and Rome. Classicism emphasizes the traditional and the universal, and the places value on reason, clarity, balance, and order. Classicism, with its once for reason and universal themes, is traditionally opposed to Romanticism, which is concerned with emotions and personal themes.Enlightenment Movement (启蒙运动):Enlightenment is an intellectual movement that originates in Europe and comes to America in the 18th century. It stresses the power of human reason, the importance of methods and discoveries instead of God. Its purpose is to enlighten the whole world with the light of modern philosophical and artistic ideas. It celebrates reason or rationality, equality and science. It advocates universal education.Denouement (结局): The outcome of a plot. The denouement is that part of a play, short story, novel, or narrative poem in which conflicts are resolved or unraveled, and mysteries and secrets connected with the plot are explained.Epistolary novel (书信体小说): An epistolary novel is a novel told through the medium of letters written by one or more of the characters. The usual form is the letter, but diary entries, newspaper clipping and other documents are sometimes used. The epistolary novel's reliance on subjective points of view makes it the forerunner of the modern psychological novel.Farce (闹剧):A type of comedy based on a ridiculous situation, often with stereotyped characters. The humor in a farce is largely slapstick--that is, it often involves crude physical action. The characters in a farce are often the butts of practical jokes.Fiction (小说) : Prose narrative based on imagination, usually a novel or a short story.Gothic Romance (哥特小说): A type of novel that flourished in the lat-18th and early-19th century in England. Gothic romances are mysteries, often involving the supernatural and heavily tinged with horror, and they are usually against dark backgrounds of medieval ruins and haunted castles.The Graveyard School (墓地派诗歌): The Graveyard School refers to a school of poets of the 18th century whose poems are mostly devoted to a sentimental lamentations or meditation on life, past and present, with death and graveyard as themes. Thomas Gray is considered to be the leading figure of this school and his Elegy Witten in a Country Churchyard is his most representative work.Mock epic (讽刺史诗): A comic literary form that treats a trivial subject in the grand, heroic style of the epic. A mock epic is also referred to as a mock heroic poem.Neoclassicism (新古典主义): A revival in the 17th and 18th centuries of classical standards of order, balance, and harmony in literature. John Dryden and Alexander Pope were major exponents of the neoclassical school.Novel (小说): A book-length fictional prose narrative, having many characters and often a complex plot.Pre-romanticism (前浪漫主义): It originated among the conservative groups of men and letters as a reaction against Enlightenment and found its most manifest expression in the "Gothic Novel”. The term arose from t he fact that the greater part of such romances were devoted to the medieval times.Refrain (叠句): A word phrase, line or group of lines repeated regularly in a poem, usually at the end of each stanza. Refrains are often used in ballads and narrative poems to create a songlike rhythm and to help build suspense. Refrains can also serve to emphasize a particular idea.Satire (讽刺): A kind of writing that holds up to ridicule or contempt the weaknesses and wrong doings of individuals, groups, intuitions, or humanity in general. The aim of satirists is to set a moral standard for society, and they attempt to persuade the readers to see their points of view through the force of laughter.Sentimentalism (感伤主义): Sentimentalism came into being as a result of a bitter discontent on the part of certain enlighteners in social reality. It is a pejorative term to describe false orsuperficial emotion, assumed feeling, self-regarding postures of grief and pain. In literature, it denotes " pathetic indulgence”.Theme (主题): The general idea or insight about life that a writer wishes to express in a literary work. All the elements of a literary work- plot, setting, characterization, and figurative language---contribute to the development of its theme.English Enlightenment: With the advent of the 18th century in England, there sprang into life a progressive intellectual movement known as the Enlightenment or the Age of Reason. The enlighteners held the common faith in human rationality, eternal justice and natural equality. The great enlighteners in Britain were those great writers like Alexander Pope, Joseph Addison, Jonathan Swift and Samuel Johnson.British neoclassicism: In English literature, the stylistic trend between the Restoration and the advent of romanticism at the beginning of the 19th century is referred to as neoclassicism. The term " neoclassicism” is derived from the convictions of the leading poet-critics of the age that literary theory and practice should follow the models established by Greek and Latin writers. These critics held that writers should emphasize types rather than individual characteristics; adhere to " nature " by aspiring to order and regularity; and strictly observe the unities of time, place, and action in dramatic composition. Major British neoclassicists are John Dryden, Alexander Pope and Samuel Johnson."A Modest Proposal":"A Modest Proposal" is a famous satire written by Jonathan Swift. Assuming the cool tone of an impartial outsider, the author suggests that children of the poor Irish people be sold at one year old as food for the English nobles, Written with much conciseness and terseness, the " proposal" is by far the most consummate artistic expression of Swift’s indignation toward the terrible oppression and exploitation of the Irish people by the English ruling class.Picaresque novel: 1) Derived from the Spanish word picara, meaning " rogue" or " rascal”, the term generally refers to a basically realistic and often satiric work of fiction chronicling the career of an engaging, lower-class rogue-hero, who takes to the road for a series of loose, episodic adventures, sometimes in the company of a sidekick. 2) Well-known examples of the picaresque novel are Cervantes Don Quixote (1605) and Henry Fielding's Tom Jones (1749).第五章The Age of Romanticism (浪漫主义时期的英国文学)Byronic hero (拜伦式的英雄) :Byronic hero refers to a proud, mysterious rebel figure of noble origin. With immense superiority in his passions and powers, he would carry on his shoulders the burden of righting all the wrongs in a corrupt society, and would rise single-handedly against any kind of tyrannical rules either in government, in religion, or in moral principles with unconquerable wills and inexhaustible energies.Canto (篇/章): A section or division of a long poem. In English poetry , Alexander Pope's The Rape of the Lock (《夺发记》)and Byron's Don Juan (《唐璜》) are divided into cantos.Fable (寓言): A fable is a short story, often with animals as its characters. It illustrates a moral.Lake Poets (湖畔派诗人); Romantic poets such poets as Willian Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Robert Southey who lived in the Lake District came to be known as the Lake School or Lake poets.Lyric (抒情诗): Lyric is a poem, usually a short one, which expresses a speaker’s personal thought and feelings. The elegy, ode, and Bonnet are all forms of the lyric.Ode (颂歌) : Usually a lyric poem of moderate length, with a serious subject, an elevated style, and an elaborate stanza pattern. The ode often praises people, the arts of music and poetry, natural scenes, or abstract concepts, The Romantic poets used the ode to explore either personal or general problems; they often started with a meditation on something in nature ,as Keats' Ode to a Nightingale or Shelley's Ode to the West Wind.Romanticism (浪漫主义): A movement that flourished in literature, philosophy, music, and art in Western culture during most of the 19th century, beginning as a revolt against classicism. Romanticism gave primary concern to passion, emotion, and natural beauty. The English Romantic period is an age of poetry.tercet: Tercet refers to a unit of three verse lines, usually rhyming either with each other or with neighboring lines and three-line stanzas of terza rima and of the villanelle are known as tercets.Charles Lamb: Charles Lamb (1775- -1834) was an English essayist, best known for his Essays of Elia and children's book Tales from Shakespeare, which he produced with his sister, Mary Lamb. Lamb has been referred to as the most lovable figure in English literature, and his influence on the English essay form surely cannot be overestimated.第六章The Victorian Period- English Critical Realism (维多利亚时期英国批判现实主义文学)Allusion (暗指/典故): A reference to a person, a pace, an event or a literary work that a writer expects the readers to recognize and respond to. An allusion may be drawn from history, geography, literature or religion.Antagonist (反面人物): A person or force opposing the protagonist in a narrative; a rival of the hero or heroine.Character (角色):In appreciating a short story, characters are indispensable elements. Characters are the persons presented in a dramatic or narrative work. Forst divides characters into two types: flat character, which is presented without much individualizing detail; and round character, which is complex in temperament and motivation and is represented with subtle particularity.Critical Realism (批判现实主义): The Critical Realism of the I9h century flourished in the 1840s and in the beginning of the 1850s. The realists first and foremost set themselves the task of criticizing capitalist society from a democratic viewpoint and delineated the crying contradictions of bourgeois reality. But they did not find way to eradicate social evils. Charles Dickens is the most important critical realist.Dramatic Monologue (戏剧独白): A kind of narrative poem in which one character speaks to one or more listeners whose replies are not given in the poem. The occasion is usually a crucial one in the speaker's personality as well as the incident that is the subject of the poem. Robert Browning's My Last Duchess is a typical example.Flashback (倒叙): A scene in a short story, novel, play or narrative poem that interrupts the action to show an event that happened earlier.Narration (叙述) : Like description, narration is a part of conversation and writing. Narration is the major technique used in expository writing, such as autobiography Successful narration must grow out of good observation, to-the-point selection from observation and clear arrangement of details in logical sequence, which is usually chronological. Narration gives an exact picture of things as they occur.Narrator (陈述者) : One who narrates or tells a story. A story may be told by a first-person narrator, someone who is either a major or minor character in the story. Or a story may be told by a third-person narrator, someone who is not in the story at all. Narrator can also refer to a character in a drama who guides the audience through the play, often commenting on the action and sometimes participating in it.Psychological Novel (心里小说):It refers to a kind of novels that dwell on a complex psychological development and present much of the narration through the inner workings of a character's mind. Thackeray's characterization of Rebecca Sharp is very much psychological.Point of view (叙述角度): The perspective from which the story is told. The most obvious point of view is probably the first person or "I". The omniscient narrator knows everything, may reveal the motivations, thoughts and feelings of the characters, and gives the reader information. With a limited omniscient narrator, the material is presented from the point of view of a character, in the third person. The objective point of view presents the action and the characters' speech, without comment or emotion. The reader has to interpret them and uncover their meanings. A narrator may be trustworthy or untrustworthy, involved or uninvolved.Plot (情节): Plot is the first and most obvious quality of a story. It is the sequence of events or actions in a short story, novel, play or narrative poem. For the readers, the plot is the underlying patter in a work of fiction, the structural element that gives it unity and order. For the writer, the plot is the guiding principle of selection and arrangement. Conflict, a struggle of some kind, is the most important element of plot.Protagonist (正面人物): It refers to the hero or central character who is often hindered by some opposing force either human or animal in accomplishing his or her objectives.Bildungsroman (成长小说): Bildungsroman defines a genre of the novel which focuses on the psychological and moral growth of the protagonist from youth to adulthood, and in which characters' change is thus extremely important. In a Bildungsroman, the goal is maturity. Charles Dickens' David Copperfield is a classic Bildungsroman.Victorian period: 1) Chronologically the Victorian period roughly coincides with the reign of Queen Victoria who ruled over England from 1836 to 1901. The period has been generally regarded as one of the most glorious in the English history. 2) In this period, class struggle was very tense. As a result, a new literary trend- critical realism appeared. The criticism of the 19th century flourished in the forties and in the early fifties. The critical realists described with much vividness and great artistic skill the chief traits of the English society and criticized the capitalist system from a democratic view point. In this period, the novel became the most widely read and the most vital and challenging expression of progressive thought. The Victorian age also produced a host of great prose writers. The poetry of this period was mainly characterized by experiments with new styles and new ways of expression. 3) Victorian literature as a product of its age, naturally took on its quality of magnitude and diversity. It was many-sided and complex, and reflected both romantically and realistically the great changes that were going on in people's life and thought.第七章:The 20th Century British Literature (20世纪英国文学)Aestheticism or the Aesthetic Movement (唯美主义): It began to prevail in Europe in the middle of the 19th century. The theory of " art for art's sake" was first put forward by the French poet Theophile Gautier. They declared that art should serve no religious, moral or social purpose. The two most important representatives of aestheticists in English literature are Walt Pater and Oscar Wilde.Black comedy or Black humor (黑色幽默): It is mostly employed to describe baleful, naive, or inept characters in a fantastic or nightmarish modern world playing out their roles in what Ionesco call a" tragic fare”, in which the events are often simultaneously comic, horrifying, and absurd. Joseph Heller’s Catch-22 can be taken as an example of the employment of this technique.。

BRITISH LITERATURE 1

BRITISH LITERATURE 1

BeowuMedieval period Key words: French, Latin, Middle English Representatives: The Canterbury Tales (Geoffrey Chaucer) History of the Kings of Britain (1138 Geoffrey Monmouth, a Latin work); Death of Arthur (around 1470 Thomas Malory); . . .
The Canterbury Tales
Portrait of Chaucer as a Canterbury pilgrim
• A work written by Geoffrey Chaucer in the late fourteenth century about a group of pilgrims, of many different occupations and personalities, who meet at an inn near London as they are setting out for Canterbury, England. Their host proposes a storytelling contest to make the journey more interesting. • Some of the more famous stories are “The Knight's Tale,” “The Miller's Tale,” and “The Wife of Bath's Tale.” • The tales, which are almost all in rhyme, have many different styles, reflecting the great diversity of the pilgrims. The language of The Canterbury Tales is Middle English.

An Introduction to British Literature (英国文学)

An Introduction to British Literature (英国文学)

An Introduction to British Literature (英国文学 概论)
★ The Early Seventeenth Century (1603--1660)
Metaphysical poetry (玄学派诗歌) : John Donne (1572--1631) Songs and Sonnets Andrew Marvel (1621--1678) The Garden George Herbert (1593--1633) The Temple The Cavalier poets(骑士派诗人) Ben Johnson (1573--1637) Song to Celia John Suckling(1609--1641) Robert Herrick (1591-1674) John Milton (1572-1631) Paradise Lost: the first English Epic.
An Introduction to British Literature (英国文学概论)
English Literature of the Victorian Age (1832-1901)
English literature of the Victorian age can be divided into three periods: The early Victorian age(1832-1848) A time of troubles
An Introduction to British Literature (英国文学概论)
British literature has a long history of roughly 1560 years with glorious literary traditions. It can be divided into the following periods and each has its distinctive features: ★ Middle English Literature(449--1485) Anglo-Saxon period (449-1066) Epic: Beowulf The middle English period (1066-1485) Romance: King Arthur and His Knights of the round Table Thomas Malory(?--1471): Le Morte d’Arthur Geoffrey Chaucer (1340?--1400) : Canterbury Tales English ballads : (1200--1500) The embryo of English literature

British Literature --Part 1

British Literature --Part 1

4)
5)
Angles, Saxons and Jutes (usu. known as Anglo-Saxons) are the first Englishmen. Language spoken by them is called the Old English, which is the foundation of English language and literature. With the Anglo-Saxon settlement in Britain, the history of English literature began.
VI. English Literature in the Victorian Age (middle 19th cen.--1918) 1. Critical realist novel in the Victorian Age 2. English poetry in the Victorian Age 3. English prose in the Victorian Age 4. Literary trends at the end of the 19th cerature in the 18th Century (late 17th cen.--1798) 1. Neo-classicism 2. Realism 3. Sentimentalism 4. Pre-Romanticism
V. British Literature in the Romantic Age (1798--1832) 1. British poetry of the Romantic Age Romantic poets of the first generation Romantic poets of the second generation 2. British prose of the Romantic Age 3. British novel of the Romantic Age

British Literature

British Literature

IV. The 17th Century
Writers and works: • John Milton: Paradise Lost 失乐园
• John Buyan: The Pilgrim’s Progress 天 路历程
• (Metaphysical poet) John Donne:
Songs and Sonnets 歌与十四行诗
B. Drama: • Byron: Manfred • Shelley: Prometheus Unbound
C. Novel: • Jane Austen: Sense and Sensibility,
Pride and Prejudice, Emma. • Walter Scott: Ivanhoe
VI. The Romantic Age
(1789-1837)
The literary views: Romanticism constitutes a change of
direction from attention to the outer world of social civilization to the inner world of the human spirit. It tends to see the individual as the very center of all life and all experience. It also places the individual at the center of art.
• Neoclassicism. A revival in literature in the late 17th and 18th centuries, characterized by a regard for the classical ideals of reason, form, and restraint.
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IndexThe Sixteenth CenturyWilliam ShakespeareThe works of William Shakespeare are a great landmark in the history of world literature for he was one of thefirst founders of realism, a master hand at realistic portrayal of human characters and relations.WorksFirst period: Romeo and JulietSecond Period:1.Hamlet, Prince of Demark2.Othello, the Moor of Venice3.King Lear4.The Tragedy of MacbethThe Seventeenth CenturyPoetry took new and startling forms in Donne and Herbert, and prose became as somber as Burrton‟s Anatomy of Melancholy.The spiritual gloom sooner or later fastens upon all the writers of this age. This so called gloomy age produced some minor poems of exquisites workmanship, and one of great master of verse whose work would glorify any age or people---John Milton, in whom the indomitable Puritan spirit finds its noblest expression.John DrydenAs a critic, poet and playwright was the most distinguished literary figure of the restoration age. The most popular genre was that of comedy whose chief aim as to entertain the licentious aristocrats.John Donne1. PoetryFormPart of his poetry is in such classical forms as satires, elegies, and epistles---though it style has anything but classical smoothness---and part is written in lyrical forms of extraordinary variety. Characteristics1.Most of it purports to deal with life, descriptive or experimentally, and the first thing to strike the readeris Donne‟s extraordinary and penetrating realism.2.The next is the cynicism which marks certain of the lighter poems and which represents a consciousreaction from the extreme idealization of woman encouraged by the Patrarchan tradition.Love-poemIn his serious love-poems, however, Donne, while not relaxing his grasp on the realities the love experience, suffuses it with an emotional intensity and a spiritualized ardor unique in English poetry. 2. SonnetContrast between convent ional and Donne‟s sonnetStyleIn moments of inspiration his style becomes wonderfully poignant and direct, heart-searching in its simple human accents, with an originality and force for which we look in vain among the clear and fluent melodies of Elizabethan lyrists.Conceit1.Sometimes the “conceits”, as these extravagant figures are called, are so odd that we lose sight of thething to be illustrated, in the startling nature of the illustration.2.The fashion of conceiting writing, somewhat like euphuism in prose, appeared in Italy and Spain also.Its imaginative exuberance has its parallels in baroque architecture and painting.SongGo and catch a falling star,Get with child a mandrake root,Tell me where all the past years are,Or who cleft the Devil‟s foot,Teach me to hear mermaids singing,Or to keep off envy‟s stinging,And findWhat windServers to advance an honest mind.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 meAll strange wonders that befell thee,And answerNo whereLives a woman true, and fair,If thou find‟st one, let me know,Such a pilgrimage were sweet,Yet do not, I would no goThough next door we might meet,Though she were true when you met her,And last till you write your letter,Yet sheWill beFalse, ere I come, to two, or three.John MiltonDays in HortonPamphletsParadise Lost1.It represents the author‟s views in an allegorical religious form,2.And the reader will easily discern its basic idea---the exposure of reactionary forces of this time andpassionate appeal for freedom.3.It is based on the biblical legend of the imaginary progenitors of the human race---Adam and Eve, andinvolves God and his eternal adversary, Satan in plot.John BunyanMilton and BunyanBooks helpful for Bunyan significantly1.The books from his wife The Plain Man’s Pathway to Heaven and The Practice of Piety gave fire to hisimagination, which he saw new visions and dream terrible new dreams of lost souls.2.Without fully digestion of Bible and Scripture, he was tossed about alike a feather by all the winds ofdoctrine.The Pilgrim‟s ProgressBunyan‟s most important work is The Pilgrim’s Progress, written in old fashioned, medieval form of allegory and dream.The Eighteenth century1.2 Founders of novelThe development of industry and trade brought to the foremen of a new stamp, who had to be typified in1.3 Innermost life WritersAlong with the depiction of morals and manners and social mode of life the writers of the Enlightenment2. SentimentalismThe middle of the 18th century in England sees the inceptions of a new literary current---that of sentimentalism.The sentimentalism came into being as a result of bitter discontent on the part of certain enlighteners in social society.The representatives of sentimentalism continued to struggle against feudalism but they vaguely sensed at the same time the contradictions of bourgeois progress that brought with it enslavement and ruin to the people. The philosophy of the enlighteners, though rational and materialistic in its essence, did not exclude sense, or sentiments, as a means of perception and learning. Moreover, the cult of nature and, a cult of a “natural man” whose feelings display themselves in a most human and natural manner, co ntrary to the artful and hypocritical aristocratic---this cult was upheld by the majority of the enlighteners and helped them to fight against privileges of birth and descent which placed the aristocracy high above common people.But later enlighteners of England having come to the conclusion that, contrary to all reasoning, social injustices, still held strong, found the power of reason to be insufficient, and therefore, appealed to sentiment as a means of achieving happiness and social justice.3. Pre-romanticismAnother conspicuous trend in the English literature of the latter half of the 18소 century was the so-called pre-romanticism. It originated among the conservatives group of men of letters as a reactions against enlightenment and found its most manifest expression in the Gothie novel”, the terms arising from theEndThe task of upholding revolutionary struggle of the people for their rights in the 18소century was initiated by Robert Burns and later taken up in the 19소century by the writers of revolutionary romanticism.Daniel DefoeFour facts stand out clearly, which help the reader to understand the characters of his works.Henry FieldingJonathan SwiftThe eighteenth century in English literature is an age of prose, but because the poetry is very bad butOliver GoldsmithWilliam BlakeThe Romantic PeriodBackgroundIndus trial Revolution and French Revolution had a strong influence in Britain literature. Fighting for “Liberty, Equality and Fraternity” also becomes British national spirit.Age of Wordsworth11LiteratureLake Poets: Wordsworth, Coleridge and Southey.William WordsworthGorge Gordon, Lord ByronPercy Bysshe Shelly“Mad Shelly” his schoolmates called him, and in the judgment of the world he remained “mad Shelly” to the end of his life.John KeatsIn 1817 he published a little volume of verse, most of it crude and immature enough, but contain the magnificent sonnet, On First Looking into Chapman‘s Homer, which reveals one source of his inspiration. From the first his imagination has turned out to the old Greek work with instinctive sympathy; and he now choose as the subject for a long time narrative poem the story of Endymion, the Latmian shepherd beloved by the moon-goodness.Endymion was published in 1818. The exordium of poem, the Hymn to Pan in the opening episode, and a myriad other lines and short passages are worthy of the Keats that was to be; but as a whole Endymion is chaotic, and cloyed with ornament. Nobody knew better than Keats himself.Great odes including On Melancholy, On a Grecian Urn, To Psyche, and To a Nightingale had done wonders in deepening and strengthening his gift. In turning from Spenser and Ariosto the great masculine poets of the seventeenth century, Shakespeare, Webster, Milton, and Dryden, he had found the iron which was lacking in his earlier intellectual food, and had learned the lessons of artistic calmness and severity, without sacrifice of themellow sweetness native to him; to charm, he had added strength.Walter ScottWalter Scott is the creator and a great master of the historical novel. Scott‟s novels give a panorama of feudal society from its early stages to its downfall. The writer describes the different phases of this epoch: the Crusades, the rise of absolute monarchy, the bourgeois revolution in England, the attempts to restore feudalism in the 18소century.Scott‟s novels were written from a definite class standpoint. Despite his aristocratic inclination, Scott was greatly interested in fate of the people, of the patriarchal peasant in particular, portraying the decay of their mode of life by the onslaught of industrial capitalism. Scott‟s historical approach to life was a result of the great changes wrought by the industrial revolution in England and the first bourgeois revolution in France. A contemporary of these events, the writer learnt from the lessons given by the history of his time that one cannot understand history without taking into account the role of the masses of the people.The central heroes of Scott‟s novels are young men of valor. They are usually of noble birth. It is noteworthy however, that these heroes appear in the novels as common men, poor, persecuted and faced with innumerable hardship. They are thrown into comradery with men in the ordinary rank of life and often establish a close friendship with them (Ivanhoe and others). In the end Scott‟s heroes acquire their titles and return to the prosperous life of the ruling class. Taken as whole, Scott‟s main hero is rather spastically, lacking in virility and lacking dept of psychological characterization.Scott‟s novel is the c onsummation and development of two different trends of the English literature of the 18소and the beginning of the 19소 centuries: that pertaining to the realistic novel of H. Fielding and T.G. Smollett and of the earlier 19th century realists, such as Jane Austen and others on the one hand, and that of the so-called Gothic novel of the pre-romanticists, such as H. Walpole and A. Radcliff and of whole romantic school of poetry on the other.The great realists of the 19th century made use of, and developed, the method of a realistic presentation of the past in their description and treatment of contemporary life. Thus we may say that Walter Scott‟s historical novel paved the path for the development of the realistic novel of the 19th century.。

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