爱党青年和谐版美国文学答案

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Literary terms这部分的答案均来自星火《英美文学》一书,质量高

1.Transcendentalism: is literature,philosophical and literary movement that flourished in New England from about 1836 to1860. It originated among a small group of intellectuals who were reaching against the orthodoxy of Calvinism and the rationalism of the Unitarian Church, their own faith centering on the divinity of humanity and the natural world instead. Transcendentalism derived some of its basic idealistic concepts from romantic German philosophy, and from such English authors as Carlyle,Coleridge, and Wordsworth. The ideas of transcendentalism were most eloquently expressed by Ralph Waldo Emerson in such essays as Nature and Self-Reliance and by Henry David Thoreau in his book Walden.

2.American naturalism:this term was created by Emile Zola. Charles Darwin’s evolutionary theory played an important role in naturalism. In the works off naturalism,characters were conceived as complex combinations of inherited attributes and habits conditioned by social and economic forces. At the end of the 19th century,this pessimistic form of realism appeared in America. Naturalism attempted to achieve extreme objectivity and frankness. Characters in the works of naturalism were dominated by their environment and heredity. Naturalism emphasized:the world was around;men had no free will;religious “truth” were illusory;the destiny of human beings was misery in life and oblivion in death. The dominant figures in naturalism were Stephen crane,Frank Norris, Jack London and Theodore Dreiser.

3.The lost generation: included the young English and American expatriates as well as men and women caught in the war and cut from the old value and yet unable to come to terms with the new era when civilization had gone mad. These writers adopted unconventional style of writing and reacted against the tendencies of the older writers in the 1920s. The term came from Gertrude Stein who said in Hemingway's presence that “you are all a lost generation.”

4.Jazz age: the novelist F. Scott Fitzgerald coined the term "Jazz Age" retroactively to refer to the decade after World War I and before the stock market crash in 1929, during which Americans embarked upon what he called "the gaudiest spree in history". Jazz Age is inextricably associated with the wealthy white "flappers" and socialites immortalized in Fitzgerald's fiction.

5.Free verse: is a poetry that has an irregular rhythm and line length and that attempts to avoid any predetermined verse structure, instead, it uses the cadences of natural speech. While it alternates stressed and unstressed syllables as stricter verse forms do, free verse does so in a looser way. Whitman's poetry is an example of free verse at its most impressive. It has since been used by Ezra Pound, T.S. Eliot and other major American can poets of the 20th century.

6. The iceberg analogy: The Iceberg Theory is a writing theory by American writer Ernest Hemingway, as follows:if a writer of a prose knows enough about what he is writing about he may omit things that he knows and the reader,if the writer is writing truly enough, will have a feeling of those things as strongly as though the writer had stated them.

这部分来自星火的为:3,7,8, 来自课本为:1,4,9 来自网络为:2,5,6大家自取之

1.Poe's Poetic Ideas

A.His conviction that the function of poetry is not to summarize and interpret earthly experience,

but to create a mood in which the soul soars toward supernal beauty.

B.He insists that poetry must be disembarrassed of that moral sense.

C.Poe believes that the elevation of excitement of the soul should be “the poetic principle” thus

poetry must concern itself only with “supernal beauty”.

D.Poe defines poetry as “the rhythmical creation of beauty” a definition gi ving unexampled

emphasis upon the importance of the rhythmical or musical element in poetry.

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