The Renaissance英国文学文艺复兴时期总结

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the Renaissance Period知识点总结

the Renaissance Period知识点总结

Chapter I The Renaissance Period一、学习目的和要求通过本章学习,了解文艺复兴运动和人文主义思潮产生的历史,文化背景,认识该时期文学创作的基本特征和基本主张,及其对同时代及后世英国文学乃至文化的影响;了解该时期重要作家的文学生涯,创作思想,艺术特色及其代表作品的主题结构,人物刻画,语言风格,思想意义等;同时结合注释,读懂所选作品,了解其思想内容和写作特色,培养理解和欣赏文学作品的能力。

二、考核要求(一) 文艺复兴时期概述1. 识记:(1)文艺复兴时期的界定(2)历史文化背景2. 领会: (1)文艺复兴运动的意义与影响(2)文艺复兴时期的文学特点(3)人文主义的主张及对文学的影响3. 应用:文艺复兴,人文主义及玄学诗等名词的解释Brief Introduction to the Renaissance PeriodI. 应用Definitions of the Literary Terms:1. The Renaissance:The Renaissance marks a transition from the medieval to the modern world. Generally, it refers to the period between the 14th & 17th centuries. It first started in Italy, with the flowering of painting, sculpture & literature. From Italy the movement went to embrace the rest of Europe. The Renaissance, which means "rebirth" or "revival," is actually a movement stimulated by a series of historical events, such as the re-discovery of ancient Roman & Greek culture, the new discoveries in geography & astrology, the religious reformation & the economic expansion. The Renaissance, therefore, in essence is a historical period in which the European humanist thinkers & scholars made attempts to get rid of those old feudalist ideas in medieval Europe, to introduce new ideas that expressed the interests of the rising bourgeoisie, & to recover the purity of the early church from the corruption of the Roman Catholic Church.2. Humanism: Humanism is the essence of the Renaissance. It sprang from the endeavor to restore a medieval reverence for the ancient authors and is frequently taken as the beginning of the Renaissance on its conscious, intellectual side, for the Greek and Roman civilization was based on such a conception that man is the measure of all things. Through the new learning, humanists not only saw the arts of splendor and enlightenment, but the human values represented in the works. Renaissance humanists found in the classics a justification to exalt human nature and came to see that human beings were glorious creatures capable of individual development in the direction of perfections, and that the world they inhabited was theirs not to despise but to question, explore, and enjoy. Thus, by emphasizing the dignity of human beings and the importance of the present life, they voiced their beliefs that man did not only have the right to enjoy the beauty of this life, but had the ability to perfect himself and to perform wonders. Thomas More, Christopher Marlowe and William Shakespeare are the best representatives of the English humanists.3. Spenserian stanza:Spenserian stanza was invented by Edmund Spenser. It is a stanza of nine lines, with the first eight lines in iambic pentameter & the last line in iambic hexameter, rhyming ababbcbcc.4. Metaphysical poetry: The term "metaphysical poetry" is commonly used to name the work of the 17th century writers who wrote under the influence of John Donne. 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 in drawn from the actual life. The form is frequently that of an argument with the poet's beloved, with God, or with himself.5. The Renaissance hero: A Renaissance hero refers to one created by Christopher Marlowe in his drama. Such a hero is always individualistic and full of ambition, facing bravely the challenge from both gods and men. He embodies Marlowe's humanistic ides of human dignity and capacity. Different from the tragic hero in medieval plays, who seeks the way to heaven through salvation and god's will, he is against conventional morality and contrives to obtain heaven on earth through his own efforts. With the endless aspiration for power, knowledge, and glory, the hero interprets the true Renaissance spirit. Both Tamburlaine and Faustus are typical in possessing such a spirit.(二)该时期的重要作家1.一般识记:重要作家的文学生涯2.识记:重要作品及主要内容3.领会:重要作家的创作思想,艺术特色及其代表作品的主题结构,人物塑造,语言风格,艺术手法,社会意义等。

文艺复兴作文英文

文艺复兴作文英文

文艺复兴作文英文英文:The Renaissance was a period of great cultural and intellectual growth that took place in Europe from the 14th to the 17th century. It was characterized by a renewed interest in classical art, literature, and philosophy, as well as a shift towards humanism and individualism.During this time, artists and thinkers began to focus on the individual and the human experience, rather than solely on religious or societal ideals. This led to the development of new forms of art, such as perspective in painting and the use of the sonnet in poetry.One of the most famous figures of the Renaissance was Leonardo da Vinci, who is known for his artistic masterpieces such as the Mona Lisa and The Last Supper, as well as his scientific and engineering inventions.The Renaissance had a profound impact on Western civilization, shaping the way we think about art, science, and the individual. It paved the way for the Enlightenment and the Scientific Revolution, which built upon the humanistic ideals of the Renaissance.中文:文艺复兴是欧洲14世纪到17世纪的一段文化和知识增长的时期。

Renaissance-英国文学-文艺复兴时期

Renaissance-英国文学-文艺复兴时期

The RenaissanceHistorical background:The breaking up of feudal relations and the establishing of the foundations of capitalism; The enclosure; the war of the Roses; the strengthening of the absolute monarchy; the rise of the bourgeoisie; the defeat of the Spanish Armada.New social and economic conditions brought about great changes in the development of science and art. So with the strengthening of new bourgeois national state, this period is marked by a flourishing of national culture known as the Renaissance.Renaissance:A rebith, revival of classical (Greek and Roman )arts, literature and sciences between 14th and mid 17th centuries in Europe, the greatest age of human accomplishments.Two striking features of the Renaissance1) A thirsting curiosity for the classical literature;2) The keen interest in the activities of humanity( People ceased tolook upon themselves as living only for God and a future world and turned to admiration for human beauty and human achievement);Renaissance marks the transition from medieval to modern world, from feudal to capitalist, from religious to secular society. In this period the European humanist thinkers and scholars made attempts to abolish oldfeudal ideas in medieval Europe (the church-centered culture which were characterized by God-centeredness, otherworldliness and asceticism.) and to introduce new ideas of the rising bourgeoisie ( humanism, the man-centered culture in which man is the measure of all things.), and to carry our religious reformation.Renaissance did not begin to show its effect in England until the reign of Henry VIII (1509-1547) owing to England’s separation from the Continent and its domestic unrest. Encouraged by Henry VIII, the Oxford reformers, scholars and humanists introduced classical literature to England. Education was revitalized and literature became more popular. From the beginning of the 16th c, the English Renaissance witnessed the brisk development of literature: the translation of ancient English, Italian and French works, as well as classical works of Greece and Rome; books of discoveries and adventures; the flowering of sonnets; the highest glory of the English renaissance is its drama ( the Elizabethan drama). This was England’s golden age in literature. There appeared many literary giants such as Shakespeare, Spenser, Jonson, Sidney, Marlowe, Bacon and Donne.Humanism:The Renaissance was marked by the spread of humanism, the keynote (the great spirit) of Renaissance. It sprang as a result of rediscovery and restudy of the Greek and Roman civilization which is based on the conception that the man is the measure of all things, theman-centered culture. It stands for devotion to the humane values represented in classical literature.While the medieval Catholic teachings (the church-centered culture) were characterized by God-centeredness, otherworldliness and asceticism, the Renaissance humanists emphasized the dignity of human beings and the importance of the present life; they believed human beings were glorious creatures; man can live a happy and meaningful life on earth; man can improve his condition with effort and change the world according to his desire. Man has the right to pursue personal happiness, knowledge and wealth. Humanism helped to civilize man, to make him realize his potential powers and gifts. It contributed a great deal to the progress of human society. It represented the new ideas of the rising bourgeoisie. Thomas More, Marlowe and Shakespeare are the best representatives of the English humanists. The humanistic ideas and belief permeated the literature of this period.Christopher Marlowe-------the greatest of the pioneers of English drama I.Literary achievement:blank verse (unrhymed iambic pentameter)II. Artistical limitations:III. Major plays:Tamburlaine (贴木耳大帝)The Jew of Malta (马尔他岛的犹太人)Doctor Faustus (浮士德博士)William Shakespeare (1564-1616)LifeWorksDuring his 22 years of literary career he produced 37 plays, Two narrative poems, 154 sonnets.Dramatic career①The first period----Early period (1590-1594)2 historical plays: Henry VI (亨利六世)Richard III (理查德三世),4 comedies: The Comedy of Errors (错误的喜剧)(错中错)The Two Gentlemen of Verona (维洛那二绅士)The Taming of the Shrew (训悍记)Love’s Labour’s Lost (爱的徒劳)1 tragedy: Romeo and Juliet② The second period----mature period (1595-1600)A period of great comedies and mature historical plays6 comedies: A Midsummer Night’s Dream (仲夏夜之梦)The Merchant of Venice (威尼斯商人)The Merry Wives of Windsor(温莎的风流娘儿们)Much Ado about Nothing(无事生非)As You Like It(皆大欢喜)Twelfth Night (第十二夜)5 historical plays: Richard IIHenry IV (Parts 1 and 2)Henry VKing John1 Roman tragedy: Julius Caesar (尤利乌斯·恺撒)③The third period-----Flourishing period (Tragic period) (1601-1607)A period of great tragedies and dark comedies5 tragedies: Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, Macbeth, Timon of Athens3 comedies: Troilus and Cressida(特洛伊洛斯与克瑞西达)All’s Well That Ends Well(终成眷属)Measure for Measure (一报还一报)2 Roman Tragedies: Antony and Cleopatra (安东尼和克莉奥佩特拉)Coriolanus (科里奥拉鲁斯)④ The fourth period----Late period (1608-1612)4 romantic drama (romances or tragicomedies):These plays portray a wide range of tragic events and difficult conditions, but they all end in reconciliation and reunion.Pericles (佩里克利斯),Cymbeline(辛白林)The Tempest(暴风雨), The Winter’s Tale(冬天的故事)1 historical play: Henry VIIIFour great comediesA 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)Four great tragediesHamlet, Othello, King Lear, Macbeth,TragedyClassical tragedians: Aeschylus(埃斯库罗斯Premetheus Bound), Sophocles(索福克勒斯Oedipus Tyrannus), Euripites(欧里庇得斯)The tragic hero—a significant person, usually a member of the nobility, a leader, a wise, just and good manTragic flaw—a character defect which causes the downfall of the tragic heroTragedyTragedies were concerned with the harshness and apparent injustice in life. They involved the trials and eventful death of a hero who was an important person and whose death led to the downfall of others.1.The central characters are always people of importance, like kings,queens, prince, general, nobles2.A tragic hero is often a flawed good man; often the hero’s fall fromhappiness was due to a weakness in his character, by some great error in his part3.supernatural beings are often involved in the conflict of human beings,like gods, spirits, witches, ghosts4.Sadness is mixed with horror, murder, treachery and bloodsheddingCatharsis(净化)—purgation of audience emotions such as pity, anger, fear; the audience feel relieved or purged when they leave the theatre. Catharsis or cathartic effect of tragedies:Tragedies give an outlet for such emotions as greed, hatred, lust, fear and pity. The tragic action arouses feelings of awe in the audience, who often leave the theater with a renewed sense of the seriousness and significance of human life. The word catharsis is often used to describe the audience’s feelings. It means the purging from the mind of the feelings of pity and fear the play has aroused when they leave the theater.Romeo and JulietHis earliest success in tragedy, full of poetry and romance. Its scenes of youth and love are painted in brilliant colors. There is no tinge of pessimism in the play. Though a tragedy, the play is optimistic in spirit. It is a song of the optimistic youth, love, wit and courage of the early rising young men and women against the drab.HamletHamlet as a typical tragic hero: a hero of the Renaissance period and a representative of humanismGood qualities: noble-minded, brave, intelligent, learned, with a strong sense of justice, loved and respected by his people;Weaknesses: rash, impulsive, indecisive, sometimes can be cruel, harsh and coarseHis tragic flaw is lack of emotional balance; either acts rashly, without thinking, or doesn’t act quickly and firmly enough. His indecisiveness, his inability to act when action is needed, is one of the major causes for his downfall.Hamlet’s soliloquy (See Anthology p76-77)(Situation) Hamlet's endurance has reached the breaking point. His father has been murdered. His mother, who he loves dearly, has married her dead husband's brother. Moreover his sweetheart, Ophelia, has been acting very strangely. He senses that she does not love him any more. Now, he's all alone. The world that he knew is shattered. His black mood of despair is deepened by his inability to act - to do something to change the situation.Now he ponders whether to continue living - or to take his own life.生存还是毁灭, 这是个必须回答的问题:是否应默默的忍受坎坷命运之无情打击,还是应与深如大海之无涯苦难奋然为敌,并将其克服。

The Renaissance 1(文艺复兴时期)1

The Renaissance 1(文艺复兴时期)1

D. Religious Reformation
In 16th century, Martin Luther, a German theologist, started a Church Reformation which led to the appearance of Protestant. He attacked the corruption of the Roman Catholic, and proposed that the Church should give up the property, the clergies should live a simple life. Martin Luther also put forward that everyone could be priest for himself. This improved the common people’s social position, and emancipated the human beings’ thoughts.
I. What is Renaissance?
1. Definition The Renaissance (14th – mid-17th century), which means rebirth and revival. The renaissance, therefore, in essence, is a historical period in which the European humanist thinkers and scholars tried to get rid of those old feudalist ideas in medieval Europe, to introduce new ideas that expressed the interests of the

英国文学史之文艺复兴简介TheRenaissancePeriod

英国文学史之文艺复兴简介TheRenaissancePeriod

General Introduction
Renaissance as a period in western civilization may be explained in different ways. But generally speaking, it refers to the period between the 14th and mid 17th century.
DRAMA Marlowe's career as a dramatist lies between
the years 1587 and 1593. Four great plays: Tamburlaine the Great, an heroic epic in dramatic form divided into two parts of five acts each (1587, printed in 1590); Dr Faustus (1588, entered at Stationers' Hall 1601); The Famous Tragedy of the Rich Jew of Malta (dating perhaps from 1589, acted in 1592, printed in 1633); and Edward the Second (printed 1594).
广义的人文主义 指把人类置于事 物中心的世界观; 狭义的人文主义 指充斥于文艺复 兴时期艺术和哲 学之中的独特思 维习惯。
THOMAS MORE
All the children in the Utopia receive a good education, primarily in the Greco-Roman classics and learning does not cease with maturity, for the goal of education is to develop rational faculties.

文艺复兴时期文学

文艺复兴时期文学

2. 文艺复兴运动产生的背景Background
① 社会历史背景 social historical background ② 文化的融合、碰撞 the culture blend and shock 文化的融合、
文艺复兴精神—— ——人文主义 3. 文艺复兴精神——人文主义(humanism)
主张以人为本,反对神的权威, 主张以人为本,反对神的权威,把人从中世纪的神学枷 锁下解放出来。 的肯定成为人文主义思想的核心。 锁下解放出来。对“人”的肯定成为人文主义思想的核心。
“destroy the form of literature”
“在欧洲一切著名文学作品中,把严肃和滑稽,悲剧性 在欧洲一切著名文学作品中,把严肃和滑稽, 在欧洲一切著名文学作品中 和喜剧性,生活中的琐屑和庸俗与伟大和美丽如此水乳交融, 和喜剧性,生活中的琐屑和庸俗与伟大和美丽如此水乳交融, 这样的范例仅见于《唐吉诃德》 这样的范例仅见于《唐吉诃德》。” ----别林斯基 别林斯基
蒙田
拉伯雷
3. 西班牙 Spain
维伽《羊泉村》 维伽《羊泉村》
无名氏的“流浪汉体小说” 小癞子》 无名氏的“流浪汉体小说”《小癞子》picaresque novel
塞万提斯(Miguel de Cervantes) 《堂吉诃德》“Don Quixote” 堂吉诃德》 塞万提斯
4. 英国 Britain
一.Life and works
1. (1547—1616) 西班牙人文主义作家
Spanish humanistic writer
2.works 《八出喜剧和八出幕间短剧集》 八出喜剧和八出幕间短剧集》 《训戒小说集》 训戒小说集》 《伽拉泰》 伽拉泰》 《巴尔纳斯游记》 巴尔纳斯游记》

文艺复兴材料Renaissance

文艺复兴材料Renaissance

The Renaissance English Literature(ca.1485-1603)学习目标:1了解文艺复兴及人文思想的内涵;2.文艺复兴时期英国文学的总体特征,诗歌、戏剧及散文的发展状况;3掌握这一时期诗歌、戏剧及散文的特征及代表作家及作品。

4.培根散文特点。

5.莎士比亚的主要作品及创作特点,《哈姆雷特》、《威尼斯商人》及十四行诗分析;I. Historical backgroundIn 1485,the Wars of the Roses(1455-1485) came to an end,and following the invention of printing and Tudor dynasty which was established by Henry VII in 1485. Henry VIII,whose needs for the annulment of his first marriage in order to father a son and heir, ended the rule of the Catholic Church in England, closed (and largely destroyed) the monasteries --- which had for centuries been the depositors of learning, history, and culture --- and established himself as both the head of Church and the head of state.Protestantism became the official national religion.The Enclosure movement compelled peasants to become the hired laborers for the merchants.The commercial expansion and the rise of bourgeoisie.The war with Spain: in 1588, the Spanish Armada was defeated. England had sovereignty over the seas. London developed in size and importance as the nation’s capital,and from the foundation of the first public theatre in London,the stage became the forum of debate,spectacle,and entertainment. Hand in hand with the growth in theatrical expression went the growth of Modern English as a national language.Ⅱ. Introduction to RenaissanceRenaissance marks the transition from the medieval to the modern world. It first started in Italy in the 14th century and gradually spread all over Europe. The word “Renaissance” means rebirth or revival. In essence, it is a historical period in which the European humanist thinkers and scholars made attempts to get rid of those old feudalist ideas in medieval Europe and introduce new ideas that expressed the interests of the rising bourgeoisie, and to lift the restriction in all areas placed by the Roman Catholic Church authorities.Two features of renaissance:1.It is a thirsting curiosity for the classical literature. People learned toadmire the Greek and Latin works as models of literary form.2.It is the keen interest in the activities of humanity.Humanism is the key-note of the Renaissance. It reflected the new outlook of the rising bourgeois class. Humanists emphasize the dignity of human beings and the importance of the present life and believe that man did not only have the right to enjoy the beauty of this life, but had the ability to perfect himself and to perform wonders by removing all the external checks by the exercise of reason. They alsoexpressed their rebellious spirit against the tyranny of feudal rule and ecclesiastical domination.III. English Literature in the Renaissance PeriodEnglish literature in the Renaissance Period is usually regarded as the highlight in this history of English literature. In Elizabethan Period, English literature developed with a great speed and made a magnificent achievement, especially the drama. Thus appeared a group of excellent dramatists. They are John Lyly, Thomas Kyd, George Peele, Robert Greene, Christopher Marlowe, William Shakespeare and Ben Jonson.Next to the drama is the Lyrical Poetry. In that period, writing poetry became a fashion. England then became " a nest of singing birds". The famous poets of that period were Thomas Wyatt, Henry Howard, Philip Sidney and Edmund Spenser.There were not so many prose writers. In the beginning period, the great humanist, Thomas More, wrote his famous prose work "Utopia", which may be thought of as the first literary masterpiece of the English Renaissance. In Elizabethan Period, Francis Bacon wrote more than fifty excellent essays, which make him one of the best essayists in English literature.3.1 Poetry in the Renaissance Period1). Thomas Wyatt(1503-1542)He is the first to introduce the sonnet into English literature.2). Philip Sidney (1554-86)Astrophel and Stella3). Edmund Spenser (1552 -1599)Spenser is often referred to as "the poets' poet".Spenser’s fame in English literature is chiefly based upon his masterpiece The Faerie Queene.In 1579, he wrote The Shepherd’s Calendar, a pastoral poem in twelve books, one for each month of the year.Writing Features of “ The Faerie Queene”a. The long poem is written in the form of allegory. It has sweet melody and its lines are very musical.b. Spenser invented a new verse form for this poem. The verse form has been called "Spenserian Stanza" since his day. Each stanza has nine lines, each of the first eight lines is in iambic pentameter form, and the ninth line is an iambic hexameter line. The rhythm scheme is abab bcbcc.3.2 Proses in the Renaissance Period1). Thomas More (1477-1535)Thomas More's UtopiaUtopia is More's masterpiece, written in the form of a conversation between More and a returned sailor. The name "Utopia" comes from two Greek words meaning "no place". The whole work is divided into two books. Book I of " Utopia" is a picture of contemporary social conditions of England. The author severely criticizes English society and exposes social evils. BookⅡoffers us a good picture of an ideal society called Utopia in some unknown ocean. In this societyproperty is held in common and there is no poverty.2). John Lyly (1553-1606)A) EuphuesLyly was one of "the university wits". He wrote poetry, court comedies and prose romances. As a prose writer, he was famous for his prose romance Euphues.The work Euphues contains two parts. The first is entitled "Euphues or the Anatomy of Wit"; the second part is called "Euphues and His England", a satire on England.B) Writing Style of EuphuesEuphues was written in a peculiar style known as "Euphuism". This kind of style consists of two distinct elements. The first is abundant use of balanced sentences and words alliterating, riming or identical. The second element is that Lyly decorated his prose with odd similes and comparisons, which were usually drawn from natural history, history and geography.3). Francis Bacon (1561-1626)A) IntroductionFrancis Bacon was the founder of English materialist philosophy and modern science. Bacon's mind was universal in its comprehensiveness; there was nothing in the world of which he could not write. Alexander Pope called him, “the wisest, brightest, and the meanest of mankind”. During the course of his lifetime he distinguished himself as a scholar in several fields and as a scientist, writer, and philosopher. His practical experience of the world also made him a great lawyer and a considerable statesman.B) Bacon's WorksBacon's works may be divided into three groups: the philosophical works; the literary works and the professional works.Advancement of Learning《治学之道》and New Instrument《新工具》were his philosophical works. Bacon's literary works are his essays. The final edition of the Essays 《论说文集》published in 1625 contained 58 pieces. These essays cover a wide variety of subjects, such as love, truth, friendship, parents and children, beauty, studies, riches, youth and age, garden, death and many others. Among these essays, the famous pieces are Of Studies, Of Travel and Of Wisdom. C) Writing Style of Bacon's EssaysBacon's essays are noted for heir clearness, brevity and force of expression. Bacon's chief concern is to express his thought with clearness and in as few words as possible. His sentences are short, pointed, incisive, and often of balanced structure. Many of them have become wise old sayings. Generally Speaking, Bacon's literary style has three prominent qualities: directness, terseness, and forcefulness.3.3 English Drama in the Renaissance Period1). Shakespeare's PredecessorsA) Lyly, Peele, Kyd, and MarloweAfter 1588, the flourishing period of English drama arrived. The summit was Shakespeare's works. Before Shakespeare, a group of university graduates known as "University Wits" wrote excellent plays. They were John Lyly, Robert Greene, George Peele, Christopher Marlowe, and Thomas Kyd.B) Christopher Marlowe (1564-1593) was the greatest playwright before Shakespeare and the most gifted of the "University Wits".Marlowe's best plays include Tamburlaine the Great, The Jew of Malta and Doctor Faustus.The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus is Marlowe' s masterpiece. The tragedy of Doctor Faustus is symbolic of a humanist in the age of Renaissance.C) Marlowe's Literary AchievementMarlowe was the greatest of the pioneers of English drama. He reformed the English drama and perfected the language and verse of dramatic works. It is Marlowe who first made blank verse (unrhymed iambic pentameter) the principal instrument of English drama. His blank verse is a living thing; it is vigorous, fluid and precise. It translates thoughts and emotions into rhythmical speech with happy exactness, thus interpreting the restlessly moving and questing spirit of the Renaissance. Marlowe's dramatic achievement lies chiefly in his epical and at times lyrical verse. His works paved the way for the plays of the greatest English dramatist – Shakespeare - whose achievements were the monument of the English Renaissance.2). Shakespeare’s contemporary and successorBen Jonson(1572-1637) was a forerunner of classicism in English literature and the Poet Laureate of James I. he is chiefly remembered for his comedies V olpone, or the Fox,The Alchemist.William Shakespeare (1564-1616)I LifeFrom three sources, we know Shakespeare's life: the church and legal records, the folk traditions, and the comments of his contemporaries.Shakespeare was born on the 23rd of April, 1564, in Stratford-on-Avon, Warwickshire( 沃里克郡艾汶河畔的斯特拉福镇).He got education in a local grammar school for a few years. There he picked up the “small Latin and less Greek".When Shakespeare was about fourteen years old, he left school and became a country schoolmaster to help support his family.In 1582 Shakespeare married Anne Hathaway who was eight years older than her husband.A few years later, Shakespeare went to London, where he first did some odd jobs. It was said that he kept horses for the audience outside the play houses. Then by 1592, he became an actor and a writer.In 1593-1594, Shakespeare published his two narrative poems, Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece.In 1612 he retired from the stage and returned to his hometown, where he bought a considerable estate and lived until his death on April 23, 1616, which was his 52nd birthday.II Literary careerDuring the twenty-two years of his literary career, he produced 37 plays, 154 sonnets and two long poems. Shakespeare’s literary career may be divided into four major phrases which represent respectively his early, mature, flourishing, and late periods.1.The first period (1590-1594)It is the period of his apprenticeship in play-writing. His work in this period relies not so much on character as on fine or witty speech and situation and bears the mark of youth, but of youth with astonishing versatility and wonderful talent. The comedies are chiefly concerned with the affairs of youth and full of romantic sentiment. In historical plays, the dramatist tried to handle political themes and give historical lessons. Besides, Shakespeare’s early plays show an extraordinary facility in expression and a felicity in the choice of phrases and epithets. And blank verse developed by him into a happy vehicle to express all kinds of thought and emotion freely.1)historical play:1590,Henry VI, part 2《亨利六世,中》1590,Henry VI, part 3《亨利六世,下》1591,Henry VI, part 1《亨利六世,上》1592,Richard III 《查理三世》2)comedy:1592,The Comedy of Errors《错误的喜剧》1593,Taming of the Shrew 《驯悍记》1594,Two Gentlemen of Verona《维洛那二绅士》1594,Love's Labour’s Lost《爱的徒劳》3)tragedy:1593,Titus Andronicus《泰特斯·安德洛尼克斯》1594,Romeo and Juliet《罗密欧与朱丽叶》4)narrative poems:1593,Venus and Adonis 《维纳斯与安东尼斯》1594,The Rape of Lucrece《鲁克丽丝受辱记》2.The second period (1595-1600)It is a period of “great comedies” and mature historical plays. The dramatist made an advance in every way and the general spirit is optimism. In the historical plays of this period, different phrases of English life are shown before us. There is a great lift in characterization(人物创造)and sources the dramatist employed in this period are many and diversified. As a whole, this period is Shakespeare’s sweet and joyful time, in which he succeeds in portraying a magnificent panorama of the manifold pursuits of people in real life.1) Six Comedies:1595,A Midsummer Night's Dream《仲夏夜之梦》1596,The Merchant of Venice《威尼斯商人》1598,The Merry Wives of Windsor《温莎的风流娘儿们》1598,Much Ado About Nothing《无事生非》1599,As You Like It《皆大欢喜》1600,Twelfth Night《第十二夜》2) Five historical plays:1595,Richard II《查理二世》1596King John《约翰王》1597,Henry IV, part 1《亨利四世,上》1597,Henry IV, part 2 《亨利四世,下》1598,Henry V《亨利五世》3) A Roman tragedy:1599,Julius Caesar《裘力斯·凯撒》Some Sonnets3.The third period (1601-1607)It is a period of “great tragedies” and “dark comedies”. In the plays of this period, the tragic note is aggravated. The sunshine and laughter of the second period has turned into clouds and storms. Even the comedies written in this period are known as “dark”because they give somber pictures of the world. The cause of such a change should be sought from Shakespeare’s change of moods as influenced by the social upheavals at the turn of the century. There were plots and rising against Elizabeth. In 1604, the Earl of Southampton, Shakespeare’s patron, was arrested by James I.1) Five tragedies:1601,Hamlet《哈姆莱特》1604,Othello《奥赛罗》1605,King Lear《李尔王》1605,Macbeth《麦克白》1607,Timon of Athens《雅典的泰门》2) Three comedies:1602,Troilus and Cressida《特洛勒斯与克里西达》1603,All's Well That Ends Well《终成眷属》1604,Measure for Measure《一报还一报》3) Two Roman tragedies:1606,Antony and Cleopatra《安东尼与克丽奥佩特拉》1607,Coriolanus《克利奥兰纳斯》4.The fourth period (1608-1612)It is the period of romantic drama. With this period we turn from the storm, the gloom, and the whirlwind of the third period to “a great peacefulness of light”, and a harmony of earth and heaven.1) Four romantic comedies:1608,Pericles, Prince of Tyre《泰尔亲王配力克里斯》1609,Cymbeline《辛伯林》1610,Winter's Tale 《冬天的故事》1611,The Tempest《暴风雨》2) A historical play:1612,Henry VIII《亨利八世》III His great ComediesA Midsummer Night's Dream,The Merchant of Venice,As You Like It,Twelfth Night are Shakespeare’s great comedies.In these plays he portrayed the young people who had just freed themselves from the feudal fetters. He sang of their youth, their love and ideal of happiness. The heroes and heroines were sons and daughters of the Renaissance. They trust not in God orKing but in themselves.Shakespeare put women characters at a prominent place in his comedies. He showed great respect for the dignity, honesty, wit, courage, determination and resourcefulness of women. The young heroines in Shakespeare's comedies are independent in character and very frank. They are no longer controlled by their parents or husbands. They are of a new type. They are witty, bold, loving, laughing and faithful. They are happy and make others happy. They carry their destinies in their own hands. Shakespeare's comedies are imbued with bourgeois ideas and show progressive significance.IV His great TragediesHamlet, Othello, King Lear, and Macbeth are Shakespeare's great tragedies. They are associated with a period of gloom and sorrow in his life. During this period, England witnessed a general unrest, and social contradictions became very sharp. All of these plays express a profound dissatisfaction with life. They show the struggle and conflicts between good and evil of the tune, between justice and injustice. In these plays, the writer Shakespeare condemns the dark and evil society.V Historical PlaysShakespeare's historical plays are political plays. The principal idea of these plays is the necessity for national unity under one sovereign.Shakespeare's historical plays reflect the historical events of two centuries from RichardⅡto Henry VIII. They show the horrors of civil war, the necessity for national unity, the responsibilities of efficient ruler, and the importance of legitimate succession to the throne.In Shakespeare’s historical plays there is only one ideal king Henry V, though his real prototype differs little from the other kings. Among Shakespeare's 10 historical plays, Henry IV and Henry V are two remarkable plays. Henry V is the continuation of Henry IV. The two plays deal with the events of the 15th century and give the picture of a troubled reign.VI Shakespeare's Poetical WorksVenus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece are two long narrative poems written by Shakespeare:Venus and Adonis is a poem in 6-line stanzas. It tells us that Venus woos the youth Adonis, but she c an’t get his love. Finally Venus finds the young man killed by a boar.The Rape of Lucrece is a poem in 7-line stanzas. It tells us a sad story about a lady called Lucrece, who has been outraged by a lustful prince, and then she kills herself because of shame.The bulk of Shakespeare's sonnets were written between 1593 and 1598. Each line of a sonnet is in iambic pentameter, and the rhyme scheme is abab cdcd efef gg. His 154 sonnets seem to fall into two series: one series are addressed to W. H, evidently a patron, and the other addressed to "dark lady" who played the poet false. For depth of sentiment, for mastery of diction, for perfection of finish, they are among the most excellent of Elizabethan poetry.VII Features of Shakespeare's Dramatic Works1. Shakespeare is one of the founders of realism in the world literature. He described the decaying of the feudal society and the rising of the bourgeois spirit.2. Shakespeare borrowed his plots from old stories of Greek and Roman, Italian and English3. Shakespeare’s dramatic works are very elastic. The action develops freely, without being hindered by the classical rules of three unities (i.e. unities of time, place, and action)4. Shakespeare was skilled in many poetic forms: the Song, the sonnet, the couplet, and the dramatic blank verse.5. Shakespeare was a great master of English language. In his drama, he used about 16,000 words. Many of his new coinages and turns of expression have become everyday usage in English life.Knowledge of poetryI. Rhythm(韵律)1.syllable: a word or part of a word which contains one vowel sound(元音).2. Stress: a word or part of a word which should be pronounced with more force.3. Rhythm:In English, words of two syllables always contain one that is stressed syllable and one that is unstressed; longer words contain one stressed syllable and two or more unstressed syllables. Unstressed syllables are marked with a curve “︶” and stressed, with a dash “—”.e.g. above suffer around standingterrible disaster political processionIn a line of poetry, when the stressed and unstressed syllables of all the words are arranged in a definite order, the line will rise and fall in a musical way. And this musical flow, or the rise and fall of language in poetry, is called “rhythm”.e.g. My heart is like a singing bird.II. foot(音步)● 1. definition: foot is the unit of rhythm and contains two or three syllables, one of whichis stressed.● 2. 4 kinds of foot:● A. iambus(︶—): consists of one unstressed syllable followed by one stressed syllable.e.g. Appear, besides , attack , supply.● B. Trochee(—︶): consists of one stressed syllable followed by one unstressed syllable.e.g. holy, upper, failing● C. anapaest(︶︶—):consists of two unstressed syllables followed by one stressedsyllable.e.g. reappear, indistinct, incomplete, on the hill● D. dactyl(—︶︶): consists of one stressed syllable followed by two unstressed syllables.e.g. messenger, merrily , property , accidentIII. meter(格律)● 1. The meter of a line of poetry is determined by the kind of foot used and by the numberof feet in a line. The longest poetical line contains 8 feet.●Monometer单音步诗行, dimeter二音步诗行, trimeter三音步诗行, tetrameter四音步诗行, pentameter五音步诗行, hexameter六音步诗行, heptameter七音步诗行, octameter 八音步诗行(八步格).● A line of five iambic feet is an iambic pentameter line.● A line of six dactylic feet is a dactylic hexameter line.●e.g. but every eye was fixed on her alone.On her white breast a sparkling cross she woreIV.Rime●Rime is a repetition of the same sound at the end of two or more lines.● E.g. day, may; wore, adore.V.stanza1. A stanza is a group of two or more consecutive lines bound together by end rime.2. Usually, we use letters to represent the rime scheme(押韵方式).● A. couplet: aa bb cc…..● B. terza rima(三行换韵):aba bcb cdc ded…..● C. Quatrain(四行诗体): there are 4 rime schemes1)abcdThen come home, my children, the sun in gone downAnd the dews of night arise.Come, come, leave off play, and let us awayTill the morning appear in the skies.2) aabaA book of Verses underneath the BoughA Jug of Wine, a Loaf of Bread--- and ThouBeside me singing in the wilderness----Oh, Wilderness were Paradise enow!3) abab4)abba● D.quintette: ababb● E .sextette: ababcc● F.septette: ababbcc●G.octave: abababcc●H. nonette: ababbcbccHeroic Couplet(英雄双韵体)● 1. They are poetry composed in iambic pentameter. In this form of poetry, lines consistingof five iambic feet rime together in pairs.● 2. The rime scheme :aa bb cc …..poem→stanza→line→foot→syllable。

英美文学选读英国部分第一章文艺复兴时期

英美文学选读英国部分第一章文艺复兴时期

英美文学选读中文翻译及重点习题答案英国文学(AMERICAN LITERATURE)第一章文艺复兴时期(The Renaissance Period)二、背景知识(Background knowledge)1、历史文化背景(Historical and cultural background)(1)文艺复兴是从中世纪向近代过渡时期发生在欧洲许多国家的一场思想文化运动。

它是在一些历史因素的合力作用下而引发的,如对希腊罗马古典文化的重新发现,宗教改革运动,地理和自然科学领域的探索,以及资本主义经济的扩张等。

(2)人文主义是文艺复兴的主要特征。

它颂扬人性,强调以“人”为本,宣传个性解放,反对神秘主义和中古神权,反对野蛮和兽性。

(3)16世纪的宗教改革导致了新教的创立。

英格兰同罗马教皇的决裂最初源于国王亨利八世决定与其第一位妻子离婚但遭到教皇否决。

宗教教义的改革则发生在后来的爱德华六世和女王伊丽莎白一世统治期间。

(4)工商业持续发展,中产阶级逐渐壮大,非神职人员获得受教育的机会,王权巩固,宫廷成为文化生活的中心,以及海外扩张和科学探索日益拓展人们的视野,所有这些都为文学提供了新的推动力和发展方向。

威廉·卡克斯顿首次将印刷术介绍到英国,使那里的出版社迅速增加,随之而来的是印刷书籍的繁荣。

2、英国文艺复兴时期文学的特点(Features of English Renaissance literature)(1) 诗歌(Poetry)开创文艺复兴时期一代新的华丽诗风的两个最重要的人物是菲利普·悉尼爵士和埃德蒙·斯宾塞。

在他们的抒情和叙事作品中,展现出一种词藻华丽、精雕细琢的文风。

到16世纪末,出现了两类新的诗歌风格。

第一类以约翰·邓恩和其他玄学派诗人为代表;第二类风格的典范是本·琼森和他所代表的流派。

英国文艺复兴时期的最后一位大诗人是清教作家约翰·密尔顿,他的诗歌具有惊人的震撼力和优雅的韵致,同时传达出深邃的思想。

英国文学各时期作家整理

英国文学各时期作家整理

英国文学(一)The Old&Middle Ages 中古时期449-1066 1066-13501、Geoffrey Chaucer 杰弗里·乔叟(二)The Renaissance 文艺复兴时期14th-mid 17th✧散文Essay1、Thomas More 托马斯·莫尔2、Francis Bacon 弗朗西斯·培根✧诗歌Poetry1、Thomas Wyatt 托马斯·怀特2、Edmund Spenser 埃蒙德·斯宾塞3、John Lyly 约翰·李利/黎里✧戏剧drama1、Christoper Marlowe 克里斯托弗·马洛2、William Shakespeare 威廉·莎士比亚(三)The Period of Revolution and Restoration资产阶级革命与王朝复辟时期17C1、John Donne 约翰·多恩2、John Milton 约翰·弥尔顿3、John Bunyan 约翰·班杨4、John Dryden 约翰·德莱顿(四)The Age of Enlightenment/Reason 启蒙运动时期18C 1688-17981、Daniel Defoe 丹尼尔·笛福2、Jonathan Swift 乔纳森·斯威夫特3、Henry Fielding 亨利·菲尔丁4、Richard Brinsley Sheridan 理查德·谢里丹5、Joseph Addison 约瑟夫·爱迪生6、Richard Steele 理查德·斯蒂尔(五)The Romantic Period 浪漫主义时期1798-1832✧诗歌Poetry1、William Blake 威廉·布莱克2、Robert Burns 罗伯特·彭斯3、William Wordsworth 威廉·华兹华斯✧小说Novel1、Jane Austin 简·奥斯汀2、Walter Scott 沃尔特·司各特(六)The Victorian Age 维多利亚时期1832-19021、Charles Dickens 查尔斯·狄更斯2、William Makepeace Thackeray 威廉·梅克比斯·萨克雷3、George Eliot 乔治·艾略特4、The Bronte Sisters 勃朗特三姐妹5、Alfred Tennyson 阿尔弗雷德·丁尼生6、Robert Browning 罗伯特·勃朗宁7、Elizabeth Barrett Browning 伊丽莎白·巴雷特·勃朗宁8、Mathew Arnold 马修·阿诺德(七)The 20th Century 二十世纪1、Thomas Hardy 托马斯·哈代2、John Galsworthy 约翰・高尔斯华绥3、Oscar Wilde 奥斯卡·王尔德4、wrence 大卫·赫伯特·劳伦斯5、Virginia Wolf 弗吉尼亚·伍尔夫6、Joseph Conrad 约瑟夫·康拉德7、James Joyce 詹姆斯·乔伊斯8、George Bernard Shaw 乔治·萧伯纳9、E.M.Forster 爱德华·摩根·福斯特10、William Golding 威廉·戈尔丁。

the renaissance 文艺复兴时英国文学

the renaissance 文艺复兴时英国文学

Renaissance(14th—mid 17th-It’s the rebirth of Greek and Roman cultures. It sprang first in Italy in the 14th century and gradually spread all over Europe. Two features are striking of this movement. One is the thirst for the classical literature and the other is the keen interest in life and human activities.The RenaissanceA thirsty curiosity for classical literature.Old manuscripts were dug out. There arose a general revival of the study of Greek and Latin authors.. While people learned to admire their works as models of literary form they also caught something very different in spirit from the medieval Catholic dogma.So the love of classics was in fact also an expression of the general dissatisfaction with the Catholic and feudal ideas.B. The keen interest in life and human activities. People ceased to look upon themselves as living only for God and a future world. Thinkers, artists, and poets showed their admiration for human beauty and human achievements. So arose humanism—the key-note of the Renaissance, reflecting the new outlook of the rising bourgeois class. Ideas: both man and the world are hindered from infinite improvement by external checks; man could mould the world according to his desires, and attain happiness by removing all external checks by the exercise of human intellect.The Chief Characteristics of the Background of the RenaissanceThis is a greatest and most advanced revolution in the human history. This is the age the giants are needed and produced ------F. EnglesHere from Engels’analysis we may see the chief characteristics of the Renaissance: (1)Politically the feudal nobility lost their power and with the establishment of the great monarchies there was the centralization of power necessary for the development of the bourgeoisie;(2)The Catholic Church was either substituted by Protestantism as a result of the so-called Reformation (as in Germany and England) or weakened in its dictatorship over men’s minds (as in Italy and France and Spain);(3)Geographical discoveries opened up colonial expansion and trade routes to distant parts of the world and brought back gold and silver and other wealth and also broadened men’s mental horizons;(4) In the countryside the peasants were terribly exploited and they either rose in uprisings or ran away and flocked to the cities and added to the proletariat there; (5) In the cities the merchants and the master artisans grew in wealth and in power and became the bourgeoisie while handicraft turned gradually into manufacture and the modern proletariat sprang up among the employed workers in the factories; and finally,(6) Culturally, as the interest in God and in the life after death was transformed into the exaltation of man and an absorption in earthly life and as materialistic philosophy and scientific thought gradually replaced the church dogmas and religious mysticism of the Middle Ages, a totally new culture rose out of the revival of the old culture ofancient Greece and Rome and out of the emergence of a new philosophy and science and art and literature through the exploration of the infinite capabilities of man . Examples①Copernicus (哥白尼) asserted that the earth was not the center of the universe;②The passionate Petrarch produced sonnets that influenced S hakespeare and many others;③Boccaccio(卜伽邱) wrote tales of eternal charm;④Marco Polo (马可波罗) made journeys into the remote kingdom of China;⑤Michelangelo (米开朗琪罗),Leonardo da Vinci (达芬奇),Raphael (拉斐尔),and Titian (提香) created paintings and sculptures that are invaluable treasures of the world.HumanismHumanism is the key note of the Renaissance. The humanists put man at the center of their beliefs and hold that man is the measure of all things. By emphasizing the dignity of human beings and the importance of the present life, they believed that man had not only the right to enjoy the beauty of life, but the ability to perfect and perform wonders. Thomas More, Christopher Marlowe and William Shakespeare are representatives of English humanists.The Renaissance in EnglandSome major historic events:a. The War of Roses (1455-1488) and the establishment of the dynasties of Henry VII and VIII—the centralized monarchy.b. The Enclosure movement (“sheep devoured Men”)c. The religious reformation, establishment of the Anglican Churchd. Flourishing in the Elizabethan Age (1558-1603)e. defeating the Spanish Invincible fleet “Armada”in 1588 and the establishment of the hegemony(霸权)on the seas.f. The geographical exploration and trade expansion brought about the growth of the cities and the development of the capitalist textile industry.The House of Tudor, one of the English ruling dynasties (1485-1603), including Henry VII and his descendants Henry VIII, Edward VI, Mary I, and Elizabeth I.都铎王朝:英格兰统治王朝(1485-1603年),包括亨利七世及其后代亨利八世、爱德华六世、玛丽一世和伊丽莎白一世Tudor DynastyHenry VII (acceded to throne in 1485)Henry VIII (acceded to throne in 1509)Edward VI (acceded to the throne in 1547)Mary I (acceded to the throne in 1553 and ruled until 1557)Queen Elizabeth I (acceded to the throne in 1558 and ruled until 1603)The Reformation(1) There is an inevitable conflict between the regime(统治)of the Roman Catholic Church and the establishment of an absolute monarchy in England, Hence the far-reaching movement of the Reformation. (2) Under the reign of Henry Ⅷ, England witnessed some rapid social changes. Feudalism was on the decline, population increased fast, printing machines became popular, and intellectual knowledge was spreading rapidly. Henry Ⅷwas a strong king and he always had awill of his own.(3) One thing he did during his reign sowed the seed of trouble for England for many years to come. He wanted to divorce Catherine of Aragon, who had borne only one daughter, Mary. When the Pope in Rome refused to end their marriage, he rebelled by marrying Anne Boleyn without permission. He soon declared himself head of the English Church. So England was separated from Rome. During the reign of his successor, the child king Edward Ⅵ, the Protestant movement developed rapidly.But he died young and the next monarch, Queen Mary, was a devout Catholic. Her attempts to restore Catholicism to England resulted in internal conflicts and much bloodshed. The bloody religious persecution came to a stop after the church settlement of Queen Elizabeth.(4) The Protestant Reformation was in essence a political movement in a religious guise, a part of the long struggle of the bourgeois class for power.Defeating the Spanish Invincible Fleet “Armada”The War with SpainReason: Commercial ExpansionTime : 1588.5.28 –1588.7.29 –the end of Sep.,1588Winner: the English bourgeoisie defeated the Spanish feudalismThe Spanish Armada was a fleet of warships that attempted to destroy the English fleet in 1588. The English defeated the Armada, however, by sending small boats to set a fire to float among the Spanish ships as they lay at anchor off the French coast near Calais. About 60 English ships sank two Spanish ships and damaged over 50 more. The crippled Armada then sailed back toward Spain, but heavy winds wrecked many more ships. Out of the original number of 130 ships in the Armada, only 67 returned to Spain.the Hundred-year W ar with France百年战争指1337年到1453年英法之间一场断断续续的战争,战争的起因既有领土因素又有经济因素。

英国文学总结一览表

英国文学总结一览表

英国的文学复习资料1 Old and medieval period中古时期的文学1 The Anglo-Saxon period (449-1066)The Story of Beowulf 《贝奥武甫》:the poetry represents the highest achievement of the old english.2 The Anglo-Norman period (1066-1350) Canto 诗章romance 传奇文学代表作:《Sir Gawain and the Green Knight》高文爵士和绿衣骑士是一首押头韵的长诗3 Geoffrey Chaucer (1340-1400) 杰弗里.乔叟12、heroic couplet 英雄双韵体a verse unit consisting of two rhymed(押韵) lines in iambic pentameter(五步抑扬格)3、代表作:《the Canterbury Tales 》坎特伯雷的故事(英国文学史的开端)大致内容:the pilgrims are people from various parts of England, representatives of various walks of life and social groups. 朝圣者都是来自英国的各地的人,代表着社会的各个不同阶层和社会团体小说特点:each of the narrators tells his tale in a peculiar manner, thus revealing his own views and character.这些叙述者以自己特色的方式讲述自己的故事,无形中表明了各自的观点,展示了各自的性格。

小说观点:he believes in the right of man to earthly happiness. He is anxious to see man freed from superstitions(迷信) and a blind belief in fate(盲目地相信命运). 他希望人们能从迷信和对命运的盲从中解脱出来。

自考英美文学选读要点总结精心整理2

自考英美文学选读要点总结精心整理2

英美文学选读要点总结细心整理[英国』Chapter1 The Renaissance period(14世纪至十七世纪中叶)文艺复兴1. Humanism is the essence of the Renaissance.人文主义是文艺复兴的核心。

2. the Greek and Roman civilization was based on such a conception that man is the measure of all things.人文主义作为文艺复兴的起源是因为古希腊罗马文明的基础是以“人”为中心,人是万物之灵。

3. Renaissance humanists found in then classics a justification to exalt human nature and came to see that human beings were glorious creatures capable of individual development in the direction of perfection, and that the world they inhabited was theirs not to despise but to question, explore, and enjoy.人文主义者们却从古代文化遗产中找到足够的论据,来赞美人性,并开始留意到人类是崇高的生命,人可以不断发展完善自己,而且世界是属于他们的,供他们怀疑,探究以及享受。

4. Thomas More, Christopher Marlowe and William Shakespeare are the best representatives of the English humanists.托马斯.摩尔,克利斯朵夫.马洛和威廉.莎士比亚是英国人文主义的代表。

5. Wyatt introduced the Petrarchan sonnet into England.怀亚特将彼特拉克的十四行诗引进英国。

英国文学简史 文艺复兴(16世纪)

英国文学简史 文艺复兴(16世纪)

四、The Renaissance(16世纪)一、文学知识Definitions of the Literary Terms:1. The Renaissance: It is a cultural and intellectual movement. It started in Italy in the late 13th century and gradually spread in Europe. The peak of Renaissance occurred at different time in different places. In England it was in 16th century. It was brought out by the growth of productive forces with the development of new forces of social relationships. It signified the beginning of disruption of feudal system. It’s a great liberation of human thought. It became the movement against feudalism and the classical literature and culture. The second feature is keen interest in human activities. Humanism is the essence of the Renaissance.2. Humanism:Humanism is the essence of the Renaissance. It is a kind of literature and psychological system of thought. It tries to place the affairs of mankind at the center of their concerns. It originated in Italy during Renaissance and soon spread through out west Europe. It reflects the interest and new outlook of the rising bourgeois class. Thomas More, Christopher Marlowe and William Shakespeare are the best representatives of the English humanists.二、文学分类和代表作家1、小说:1)Thomas More (1478-1535)an outstanding humanist in the early 16th centuryUtopia: The first book contains a long discussion on the social conditions of England. In the second book is describedin detail an ideal communist society, Utopia.2)John Lyly(1553-1606):Eupheus大学才子:Thomas Kyd, John Lyly, Thomas Lodge, Thomas Deloney, Thomas Nashe,Christopher Marlowe, Robert Greene.2、诗歌lyrical poems:Sonnet:is a lyrical poem in 14 lines with 10 syllables in each line, usually in iambic pentameter. It’s composed in definite rhyming scheme, of which the Petrarcan and Shakespearean are the principle. The Petrarcan sonnet was introduced into England by Thomas Wyatt and Earl of Surrey in the early 16th century. The rhyme pattern was abba abba cdcdcd/ cde cde. The rhyme pattern of Shakespearean sonnet is abab cdcd efef gg. Sonnet became a perfect English poetic medium in the hands of Shakespeare and Milton and so on.1Thomas Wyatt(1503-1542)[first introduced the sonnet into English literature]; Earl of Surrey2Earl of Surrey(1527-1547)[created blank verse];3Philip Sidney(1554-1586);4Edmund Spenser(1552-1599). the author of the greatest epic poem of the time The Fairy Queen; The Shepherds’ Calendar.He created a new stanza, called the Spenserian stanza, which is well suited to narrative verse.Spenserian stanza: Spenserian stanza was invented by Edmund Spenser. It is a stanza of nine lines, with the first eight lines in iambic pentameter & the last line in iambic hexameter, rhyming ababbcbcc.3、EssayFrancis Bacon(1561-1626)The founder of English materialist philosophy and modern science in England.. He is the first English essayist.散文:Of Truth; Of Studies4、戏剧A Christopher Marlowe(1564-1593)Marlowe was the first great English Dramatist. In his plays, Marlowe used blank verse, which he molded into a superb instrument for expressing intense emotions. After his development of blank verse it became the standardmedium for English dramatic & epic poetry.作品:Doctor Faustus; The Jew of Malta; TamburlaineB) Ben Jonson(1572-1637)作品:Every Man in His Humour; V olpone, or the Fox; The Alchemist; Bartholomew Fair.C William Shakespeare(1564-1616)The First Period (1590-1594)-five historical plays & four comedies:Henry Ⅵ, part Ⅰ (1590)Henry Ⅵ, part Ⅱ (1590)Henry Ⅵ, part Ⅲ (1591)Richard Ⅲ (1592)Titus Andronicus (1593)The Comedy of Errors (1592)The Two Gentlemen of Verona (1594)The Taming of the Shrew (1593)Love's Labor's Lost (1594)The Second Period (1595-1600)-five historical plays, six comedies & two tragedies:Richard Ⅱ (1595)King John (1596)Henry Ⅳ, Part Ⅰ & Part Ⅱ(1597)Henry V (1598)A Midsummer Night's Dream (1595)The Merchant of Venice (1596)Much Ado About Nothing (1598)As You Like It (1599)Twelfth Night (1600)The Merry Wives of Winsor (1598)Romeo & Juliet (1595)Julius Caesar (1599)The Third Period (1601-1609)-Seven tragedies & two dark comedies:HamletOthelloKing LearMacbethAntony & CleopatraTroilus & CressidaCoriolonusAll's Well That Ends WellMeasure for MeasureThe Fourth Period (1609-1612)-Romantic tragic-comedies & two plays:PericlesCymbelineThe Winter's TaleThe TempestHenry ⅧThe Two Noble KinsmenShakespeare's authentic non-dramatic poetry consists of two long narrative poems: Venus & Adonis & The Rape of Lucrece & his sequence of 154 sonnets.。

文艺复兴1therenaissanceperiod知识讲解

文艺复兴1therenaissanceperiod知识讲解
The Protestant reformation:
1. Jonh Wycliffe (1320-1384)---the Morning Star of the Reformation
2. Man stands directly under God and needs no mediation from church and priest.
2. The keen interest in activities of humanity---
admire human beauty and human achievement
• Humanism ( the key-note of the Renaissance)
• According to humanist: both man and the world are hindered only by external checks from infinite improvement. Man could mould the world according to his desires, and attain happiness by removing all external checks by the exercise of reason.
2. The Reformation
Henry VIII (1509-1547) declared him to be the “supreme Head of the English Church and Clergy , confiscated the property of the Church, thus enriching the new bourgeoisie nobility.
1. The New Monarchy

第一讲英国文艺复兴时期诗歌赏析

第一讲英国文艺复兴时期诗歌赏析

Characteristics of Renaissance



Humanism Individualism Questioning Attitude Interest in Secular, or nonreligious worldly matters. Rise of the middle class (Disposable income) Great achievements in the arts.
During the Middle Ages man had lived enveloped in a cowl. He had not seen the beauty of the world, or had seen it only to cross himself, and turn aside and tell his beads and pray. Beauty is a snare, pleasure a sin, the world a fleeting show, man fallen and lost, death the only certainty, judgment inevitable, hell everlasting, heaven hard to win, ignorance is acceptable to God as a proof of faith and submission-- these were the fixed ideas of the ascetic mediaeval Church.


The curell│ markes of│ many│ a bloud│y fielde ;│ B
Yet armes │till that │time did│ he nev│er wield :│ B His an│gry steede │did chide│ his fo│ming bitt ,│ C As much │disday│ning to │the curbe │to yield :│ B Full jol│ly knight│ he seemd , │and faire│ did sitt ,│ C

Part Two The English Renaissance-Shakespeare英国文艺复兴时期——莎士比亚篇(下)

Part Two  The English Renaissance-Shakespeare英国文艺复兴时期——莎士比亚篇(下)

Part Two The English Renaissance------Shakespeare英国文艺复兴时期——莎士比亚篇(下)VI Hamlet《哈姆雷特》1.Background: Hamlet is considered the summit of Shakespeare’s art. The story comes from an old Danish legend. Before Shakespeare, Thomas Kyd had written a play on the same subject. It was a tragedy of “blood and thunder.”But under Shakespeare’s pen, the medieval story assumed a new meaning.《哈姆雷特》被认为是莎士比亚的巅峰之作。

这个故事取材于一个古老的丹麦传说。

在莎士比亚之前,托马斯·基德写过同样题材的剧本。

它是一部“血与泪”的悲剧。

然而,在莎士比亚笔下,这个中世纪故事却具有一种新意。

2.The Character of Hamlet 哈姆雷特的性格Hamlet is neither a frail and weak-minded youth nor a thought-sick book-worm. The play itself does not bear out such ideas. In the play, nobody thinks of him in that way. Though he is deprived of his right to the throne, he is still loved and respected by everyone. We see him rushing after the Ghost, killing Polonius, dealing with Claudius’agents on the ship, boarding the pirate, leaping into the grave and at last executing his revenge. A mere book-worm can never do any of these things.哈姆雷特既不是一个性格脆弱的青年,也不是一个被思想困扰的书呆子。

湖北自考《英美文学选读》重点总结

湖北自考《英美文学选读》重点总结

上古及中世纪英国文学Old and Medieval English literature上古:450 to 1066 中世纪;1066-14世纪中叶CeltsOld English poetry: the religious group and the secular oneBeowulf: national epic poem Chaucer introduced from F rance the rhymed s tanzas of various types to English poetry to replace the Old English alliterative verse.<The Canterbur y Tales >The father of English poetry English Homer In the medieval period :use narrative verse of prose to tell stori es of knightly adventures or other heroic deeds.第一章文艺复兴时期the RenaissancePeriod 14th andmid-17th centuries Humanism is the essence of theRenaissance. Golden AgeIt started in ItalyHenry VIII Defender of the FaithBible in English ancient Romanand Greekculture classstruggle Petrarchpoetry and poetic dramaElizabethan dra madramatists: Christopher Marlowe ,Willia m Shakespeare andBen Jonson3威廉莎士比亚William Shak espeare 1564-1616Playwrights , dramatist, poets 1591-1611was i n t he prime of his dramati c career.38plays 戏剧154sonnets 十四行诗 2 long poems叙事诗Stratford-on-A von“University w i ts”“an upstart crow”Sonnet18 : meditation eter nal beauty origin:Italy<Hamlet>“to be,or not t o be-that is the question”<the merchant of V eni ce> against Christians /Jews.Tw o narrative poems <venus and Adonis> <the rape of lucrece> Tragedies: <hamlet> <Othello> <k ing lear> <Macbeth><re meo and Juliet> <Julius casear>Six comedies:<a midsummer night‟s dream> <the merchant of Venice> <much ado about nothing> <sa you like it> <twelfth night> <the merry wives of Windsor><all‟s well that ends well> <measure for measure e>Romantic tragicomedi es: <[eroc;es> <Cymbeline> <The Winter‟s T ale> <the T e mpest>Romantic tragedy <Romeo and Juliet> tragedy but optimistic 乐观spirit.1 a play in t he play2 borrow plots from other stories such sa Roman,Greekand ancient myth.3 several threads running through the play4 combination of tragic and comic elements.Writing style:1 trimendous vocabulary(16,000words,invent words) 2literary devices(allit erat eion头韵,simile明喻,metaphor暗喻)3 use poetry in his playThe theme of the sonnet:1 express love and praise to a young man2 immortali ze beauty through verses3friendship or betrayal of friendship6约翰弥尔顿John Milton 1608-1674A Catholic family天主教Latin blind .<P Lost>失乐园masterpiece.a story taken from “the old Testament” ,a long epic divided into 12 book s ,taken from the Bible.the theme is “fall of man”The main idea:to beg for me rcy and worship his power were more shamefull and disgrace full than this downfall.<Samson Agonists>the most powerfull dramatic poem on the Gree k model.Three group: A the early poeticworks B the middle prosepamphletsC the last great poemsThe fre edom of the will is thek e ystone of Milton‟s creed.<Paradise Regained>第二章新古典主义时期the NeoclassicalPeriod1660-1798(18t hcentury)人社会动物industrial revolution工业革命the RestorationGothic Novel:1 content: magic, supernaturallelements, ghost s, monsters.2setting: old castle, graveyard, dardforest3atomsphere:horribleThe enlightenmen t movement(theage of reason ):启蒙运动It was a progressive in telle ctuall进步知道份子movement which flourishedin F ranc e a nd swept the w holewestern Europe at the time. Itsenlighten the wholeworld with the light of modernphilosophical and artistic ideas.哲学和艺术思想The enlightenerscelebrated reason or rationality,equality and scienc e,理性平等科学and they also advocated universaleducation.全民普及教育1约翰班杨John Bunyan 1628-168818年坐牢,Christianity基督教<the pilgrim’s progress>”the vani tyfair”is the most successfulreligious allegory 宗教寓言i n theEnglish langua ge.Me taphor暗喻-life as a journeysearch for spiritual salvationStyle: Moded after the Bible,language:e asy to read,colloquial,concrete and concise form:allegorian form,reallystic,true to life.3丹尼尔笛福Daniel defoe1660-1731butcher‟s fa mily 卖肉家庭Englishmiddle –class<Robinson Crusoe>masterpiece,Robinson is the empire builder,thepioneer colonist.The theme:A man‟s strugglees against natureB glorifyication of the bourgeois menwho has the courage and will to facehardship and determineation toimprove his livelihood.C glorifyication of labor(Robinsonlives on hi s own hands)笛福的创作特点:Defoe w as a ver ygood story-telle r.he had a gift fororganizing minute details in such avivid w a y that his stories could beboth credible可信and fascinating神奇.his sentences ar e sometimesshort,crisp 短小干脆and pl ain,andsometimes long and rambling,w hichleave on the reader an impression ofcasual narration.his language issmooth,easy,colloquial口语andmostly vernacula r方言.there isnothing artificeial in his language: itis common English at its best.4乔纳森斯威夫特Jonathan Sw ift1667-1745<a tale of a tub><the battle of the books><Gulli ver’s travels>th e greatestsatiric w or k<a modest proposal>a greatest andbitter est satire.Lilliput yahoos bitter satire5亨利菲尔丁Henry F ield ing1707-1754Born of an old aristocratic family.老贵族家庭“father of the Englishnovel”“the third-person nar ration”第三人称叙述<the histor y of TomJones ,afoundling> “prose homer”散文荷马”comic epic in prose”散文体喜剧史诗:1 the descryiption in a grand style ofclassic epic.”classic epic”has:A a great hero Bcalls on Muses Cgive a list of na mes of gods Dcompare s mall fights to great wars.2 use verifyied language t o narrate asmall fight3 different figure of speech .esp,irony讽刺,hyperbole夸张<the histor y of Amelia>费尔丁的语言特色:Fielding‟slanguage is easy, unlaboured andfamil iar,自然流畅通俗易懂butextremely vivid and vigorous. Hissentences are always distinguished bylogic逻辑性and rhythm,韵律性andhis structure carefully planed towardsan inevitable ending. His works arealso noted for lively,dramatic dialogues戏剧性对话and other theat ricaldevices such as suspendse,悬念coincidence巧合and unexpectedness.出人意料第三章浪漫主义时期theRomantic Periodis an age ofpoetry.1798-1832人的孤单状态P assi ve , old and conservative :“lak e poets”William Wordsw or th Rober t South eySamuel Taylor ColeridgeActi ve , young and revolutionar y:Byron Shelly Keats1威廉布莱克William Blak e1757-1827候看见过天使,他父亲死后他弟弟也死了,神秘主义。

-文艺复兴时期(14-16世纪)外国文学

-文艺复兴时期(14-16世纪)外国文学
3、蒙田
蒙田(1533—1592)是法国文艺复兴后期人文主义的代表作家。他1595年出版的《随笔集》开创了随笔这种文学体裁,因而蒙田被认为是欧洲散文体裁的创始人。
(三)西班牙文学
由于资本主义没有得到充分发展,西班牙的人文主义文学出现的较晚,十六世纪末、十七世纪初之间,西班牙文学进入了文学史上的“黄金时代”,十七世纪二十年代之后,西班牙的文艺复兴运动趋于衰落。西班牙文艺复兴时期文学的主要成就是小说和戏剧。
有关教育的主题 文艺复兴运动带来了新的世界观。 反抗中世纪的禁欲主义和出世思想 倡导的健康、积极、乐天的人的崇拜 提出了一个新人的理想。 身心和智慧都达到平衡和谐的顶点、全面发展的自由人。 通过恰当的教育,人均能成为“巨人”。
巨人卡冈都亚是一位国王的儿子 一降生便喝了17913头母牛的奶,食量过人,躯干高大 人们为婴儿缝制衣服.一次便用了12000多匹布料 他和其他小孩过着同样的日子,用拉伯雷的话说,即是:喝、吃、睡;吃、喝、睡;睡、喝、吃。 老国王也从他身上看出了他具有的过人智慧和颖异的悟性,认为只要好好借教育之手培养他,定能成为真正“智慧”的巨人。
(一)人文主义思想的特征
人文主义思想处处体现了与中世纪神学思想相抗衡的特征。 1、它以人反对神,宣扬人性人权,反对神性神权。中世纪教会认为神高于一切,主宰一切,而人则是渺小的,只能充当神的奴仆 而人文主义者以“人性论”为理论纲领,他们宣称发现了“人”,竭力歌颂人的价值、人的尊严和人的力量,认为人有理性,有崇高的品质,有无穷的求知能力,可以创造一切,是“宇宙的精华,万物的灵长”。
内容分析
拉伯雷《巨人传 》以其 神话般的人物 荒诞不经的故事情节,妙趣横生 有时不免流于油滑粗俗的独特风格 赢得世界文学史上占据不可撼动的地位。然而,这决不是一不纯粹的搞笑的作品。它在有关“宗教”政治形势和经济生活方面,却“显示出极其高深的哲理和惊人的奥妙”。

英国文学各时期文学的特点

英国文学各时期文学的特点

Chapter 1 The Renaissance PeriodTime: Generally, it refers to the period between the 14th and mid-17th centuries.The Renaissance (文艺复兴): The Renaissance is a historical period in which the European humanist thinkers and scholars made attempts to get rid of those old feudalist ideas in medieval Europe, to introduce new ideas that expressed the interests of the rising bourgeoisie, and to recover the purity of the early church from the corruption of the Roman Catholic Church.Humanism (人文主义): Humanism is the essence of the Renaissance. “Man is the measure of all things.” Thomas More, Christopher Marlowe and William Shakespeare are the best representatives of the English humanists.Mainstream of Literary Forms: In the early stage of the Renaissance, poetry and poetic drama were the most outstanding literary forms and they were carried on especially by Shakespeare and Ben Jonson. The Elizabethan drama, in its totality, is the real mainstream of the English Renaissance.Chapter 2 The Neoclassical PeriodTime: Between the return of the Stuarts to the English throne in 1660 and the full assertion of Romanticism which came with the publication of Lyrical Ballads by Wordsworth and Coleridge in 1798.Social Events: Glorious Revolution (光荣革命); British colonies (Abroad); Acts of Enclosure (圈地运动)(At home); The Enlightenment Movement (启蒙运动). The Enlightenment Movement: The 18th century England is known as the Age of Enlightenment or the Age of Reason. The Enlightenment Movement was a progressive intellectual movement which purpose was to enlighten the whole world with the light of modern philosophical and artistic ideas. The enlighteners celebrated reason or rationality, equality and science. They held that rationality or reason should be the only, the final cause of any human thought and activities. They called for a reference to order, reason and rules. They believed that when reason served as the yardstick for the measurement of all human activities and relations, every superstition, injustice and oppression was to yield place to “eternal truth,” “eternal justice” and “natural equality”. Great writers like John Dryden, Alexander Pope, Joseph Addison and Sir Richard Steele, the two pioneers of familiar essays, Jonathan Swift, Daniel Defoe, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Henry Fielding and Samuel Johnson.Neoclassicism: In the field of literature, the Enlightenment Movement brought about a revival of interest in the old classical works. This tendency is known as neoclassicism. According to the neoclassicists, all forms of literature were to be modeled after the classical works of the ancient Greek and Roman writers. They believed that the artistic ideals should be order, logic restrained emotion and accuracy, and that literature should be judged in terms of its service to humanity.This belief led them to seek proportion, unity, harmony and grace in literary expression, in an effort to delight, instruct and correct human beings, primarily as social animals. Thus a polite, urbane, witty, and intellectual art developed. Neoclassicists had some fixed laws and rules for almost every genre of literature. Prose should be precise, direct, smooth and flexible. Poetry should be lyrical, epical, didactic, satiric or dramatic; Drama should be written in the Heroic Couplets (英雄双韵体诗).In the last few decades of the 18th century, the neoclassical emphasis upon reason, intellect, wit and form was rebelled against or challenged by the sentimentalists, and was gradually replaced by Romanticism.Novel: The mid-century was predominated by a newly rising literary form---the modern English novel. Gothic novels---mostly stories of mystery and horror which take place in some haunted or dilapidated Middle Age castles.Chapter 3 The Romantic PeriodTime: From 1798 with the publication of Lyrical Ballads to 1832 with Sir Walter Scott’s death and the passage of the first Reform Bill in the Parliament.Social Events: French Revolution; English Industrial Revolution.Romantic Movement: The Romantics saw man essentially as an individual in the solitary state and emphasized the special qualities of each individual’s mind. Thus we can say that Romanticism actually constitutes a change of direction from attention to the outer world of social civilization to the inner world of the human spirit. In essence, it designates a literary and philosophical theory which tends to see the individual as the very center of all life and all experience.Major Figures: Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelly and Keats. Theme: Imagination and NatureMajor Literary Forms: Poetry (best), prose, novel (Jane Austen and Walter Scott). Drama is less successful.Chapter 4 The Victorian PeriodTime: 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.Social Events: Reform Bill (改革法案);Chartist Movement (宪章运动);Theme: Common sense and moral propriety, which were ignored by the Romanticists, again became the predominant preoccupation in literary works. Theory of “art for art’s sake”: Osca r Wilde and Walter PaterUtilitarianism(功利主义): Utilitarianism was widely accepted and practiced. Almost everything was put to the test by the criterion of utility, that is, the extent to which it could promote the material happiness. Dickens, Carlyle, Ruskin and many other socially conscious writers severely criticized the Utilitarian creed, especially its depreciation of cultural values and its cold indifference towards human feelings and imaginationMajor Literary Forms:1. Novel (best): In this period, the novel became the most widely read and the mostvital and challenging expression of progressive thought. While sticking to the principle of faithful representation of the 18th century realist novel, they carried their duty forward to the criticism of the society and the defense of the mass. They were all concerned about the fate of the common people. They were angry with the inhuman social institutions, the decaying social morality as represented by the money-worship and Utilitarianism, and the widespread misery, poverty and injustice.2. Prose: Many of the prose writers joined forces with the critical realist novelists in exposing and criticizing the social reality, and some became very influential in the ideological field.3. Poetry: The poetry of this period was mainly characterized by experiments with new styles and new ways of expression. “psycho-analytical” elementChapter 5 The Modern PeriodTime: 1850-1910Social Events: First World War; Sun-never-set Empire collapsedNew Theories:1. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels: they put forward the theory of scientific socialism.2. Darwinism: Darwin’s theory of evolution exerted a strong influence upon the people, causing many to lose their religious faith. The social Darwinism, under the cover of “survival of the fittest,” vehemently advocated colonialism or jingoism.3. Einstein: Einstein’s theory of relativity provided entirely new ideas for the concepts of time and space.4. Freud: Freud’s analytical psychology drastically altered our conception of human nature.5. Arthur Schopenhauer: a pessimistic (悲观主义) philosopher, started a rebellion against rationalism(唯理主义), stressing the importance of will and intuition.6. Friedrich Nietzsche: he went further against rationalism by advocating the doctrines of power and superman and by completely rejecting the Christian morality.7. Henry Bergson: He established his irrational philosophy, which put the emphasis on creation intuition, irrationality and unconsciousness. The irrationalist philosophers exerted immense influence upon the major modernist writers in Britain.Modernist Movement: Modernism takes the irrational philosophy and the theoryof psycho-analysis as its theoretical base. The major themes of the modernist literature are the distorted, alienated and ill relationships between man and nature, man and society, man and man, and man and himself. The modernist writers concentrate more on the private than on the public, more on the subjective than on the objective. They are mainly concerned with the inner being of an individual. Modernism is a reaction against realism. It rejects rationalism, which is the theoretical base of realism. As a result, the works created by the modernist writersare often labeled as anti-novel, anti-poetry and anti-drama.Major Figures: Kafka, Picasso, Pound, Webern, Eliot, Joyce and Virginia Woolf. Major Literary Forms:1. Modern Poetry: The early poems of Pound and Eliot and Yeats’s matured poetry marked the rise of “modern poetry”, which was a revolution against the conventional ideas and forms of the Victorian poetry. The modernist poets fought against the romantic fuzziness and self-indulged emotionalism, advocating new ideas in poetry-writing such as to use the language of common speech, to create new rhythms as the expression of a new mood, to allow absolute freedom in choosing subjects, and to use hard, clear and precise images in poems.2. Realistic Novel: The realistic novels in the early 20th century were the continuation of the Victorian tradition, yet its exposing and criticizing power against capitalist evils had been somewhat weakened both in width and depth. Another important aspect of realistic novels in this period is the fact that there rose a few working class writers, who gave a direct portrayal of the working-people’s poverty and sufferings, by singing highly of the heroic struggles against capitalism waged by the working class.3. Modernist Novel: In stimulating the technical innovations of novel creation, the theory of the Freudian and Jungian psycho-analysis played a particularly important role. Writers like Dorothy Richardson, James Joyce and Virginia Woolf concentrated all their efforts on digging into the human consciousness. They had created unprecedented stream-of-consciousness novels such as Pilgrimage by Richardson, Ulysses by Joyce.4. Drama: Oscar Wilde and G.B. Shaw, who, in a sense, pioneered the modern drama, though they didn’t make so many innovations in techniques and forms as modernist poets or novelists.。

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The RenaissanceThis is a greatest and most advanced revolution in the human history. This is the age the giants are needed and produced.------F. Engles<1> Brief introduction▪Renaissance in European history, refers to the period between 14th century to 17th century. It started in Italy and ended in England and Spain.▪“Renaissance” means “revival”, the revival of interest in Ancient Greek and Roman culture and getting rid of conservatism in feudalist Europe and introducing new ideas that express the interests of the rising bourgeoisie.▪Renaissance sprang first in Italy (Florence and Venice) with the flowering of paintings, sculpture and architecture, and gradually spread all over Europe;▪Renaissance originally indicated a revival of classical arts and science (ancient Greek and Roman culture) after the dark ages of medieval obscurantism.During the period of Renaissance:1. the Roman Catholic Church was shaken,2. old sciences revived and new sciences emerged,3. national languages and cultures took shape,4. art and literature flourishedBrief introduction▪There arose an interest in the manuscripts surviving from ancient Greece and Rome. Classical learning and philosophy were enthusiastically studied.▪The intellectual wisdom of ancient Greece and Rome encouraged a rebirth of human spirit,a realization of human potential for development and creation.▪Never before in human history were men and women so eager to create and discover something new.In Italy a group of artists,scientists,politicians,and writers created the most brilliant page of culture and science in Renaissance Europe.Examples:①Copernicus (哥白尼) asserted that the earth was not the center of the universe;②The passionate Petrarch produced sonnets that influenced Shakespeare and many others;③Boccaccio(卜伽邱) wrote tales of eternal charm: The Decameron;④Marco Polo (马可波罗) made journeys into the remote kingdom of China;⑤Michelangelo(米开朗琪罗),Leonardo da Vinci (达芬奇),Raphael (拉斐尔),and Titian (提香) createdpaintings and sculptures that are invaluable treasures of the world.<2>Essence and features▪Essence: It is the reflection of the rise of bourgeoisie in the sphere of cultural life.(另版本):Renaissance, in essence, is a historical period in which the European humanist thinkers and scholars made attempts to:to get rid of conservatism in Feudalist Europe;to introduce new ideas that expressed the interests of the rising bourgeoisie,to lift the restrictions in all areas placed by the Roman church authorities.Briefly it is the reflection of the rise of bourgeoisie inthe sphere of cultural life.▪Features: there are two striking features①A thirsting curiosity for the classical literature.②The keen interest in the activities of humanity.<3>Renaissance and HumanismRenaissance: the term originally indicated a revival of classical arts and science after the dark ages of medieval obscurantism. Indeed, a great number of the works of classical authors were translated into English during the 16th century.Humanism:The progressive thinkers of the humanists held their chief interest not in ecclesiastical knowledge, but in man, his environment and doings and bravely fought for the emancipation of man from the tyranny of the church and religious dogmas.Humanism is the key-note of the Renaissance. It reflected the new outlook of the rising bourgeois class;<4>HumanismHumanism is the essence of the Renaissance. It sprang from the endeavor to restore a reverence for the Greek and Roman civilization based on the conception that man is the measure of all things.Contrary to the subordination of individuals to the feudal rules and the sacrifice of earthly life for a future life in the medieval society, Renaissance humanists found in the classics a justification to exalt human nature and came to see that human beings were glorious creatures capable of individual development for perfection.By emphasizing the dignity of human beings and the importance of the present life, they voiced their beliefs that man did not only have the right to enjoy life, but had the ability to perfect himself and to perform wonders.<5>Features of humanism in RenaissanceEmphasizing the power, value and dignity of the human being and holding that human beings are glorious creatures The core of Renaissance thought is the greatness of man/giants. This is best summarized in the lines of Shakespeare’s HamletWhat a piece of work is man; how noble in reason; how infinite in faculty, in form and moving how express and admirable; in action how like and angel; in apprehension how like a god! The beauty of the world, the paragon of animals.人是一件多么了不起的杰作!多么高贵的理性!多么伟大的力量!多么优美的仪表!多么文雅的举动!在行为上多么像一个天使!在智慧上多么想一个天神!宇宙的精华!万物的灵长!▪1. Emphasizing secular happiness and individualism against the medieval ideas of asceticism;▪2.shifting man’s interest from Christianity to humanity, from religion to philoso phy, from beauty and greatness of God to the beauty of human body in all its joys and pains.▪3. Applying Aristotle’s theory, Humanist literature mainly use realistic style and take literature as the mirror or miniature of the society.<6>Influence and English RenaissanceInfluences:1.These Italians, and many others, helped to make Italy the center of the Renaissance movement in Europe.2.The movement changed the medieval Western Europe into a modern one.3.The intellectual wisdom of ancient Greece and Rome encouraged a rebirth of human spirit,a realization of human potential for development and creationEnglish Renaissance:Oxford Reformers: the Oxford reformers, scholars and humanists introduced classical literature to England. Education was revitalized and literature became more popular.This was England’s Golden Age in literature. There appeared many English literary giants such as Shakespeare, Spenser, Johnson, Sidney, Marlowe, Bacon and Donne.English RenaissanceContents●I.TheSixteenthCentury England ●II. Renaissance in England ●III. The main artistic styles●IV. William Shakespeare●V. Francis BaconI. The Sixteenth Century England1. Enclosure Movement2. The establishment of absolute monarchy3. Religious reformation4. International situation5. Cultural preparati●The background of the humanism in Europe●The introduction of printing led to an enlarged reading public and a commercial market for literature;●The great economic and political changes led to the rise of democracy;●The spirit of nationalism;●The growing of "new science” etc.Characteristics of the Elizabethan Age1. An age of comparative religious tolerance;2. An age of comparative social contentment;3. An age of dreams, of adventures, of unbounded enthusiasm;4. An age of intellectual liberty, of growing intelligence and comfort among all classes and of unbounded patriotism.II. Renaissance in England▪The time: mainly from the reign of Henry VIII, Edward, Mary and then to Queen Elizabeth and Jacobean Eraa. Beginning: the last years of the 15-th century---first half of the 16-th centuryb. Flourishing: the Elizabethan Age (1558-1603)c. Declining: the period of James I (1603-1625) early 17-th centuryThe flowering of English literatureThe second half of the 16th century, “a nest of singing birds”The early period:imitation and assimilation, translated works, poetry and poetic drama were the most outstanding literary forms. ▪Sonnet: an exact form of poetry in 14 lines of iambic pentameter intricately rhymed.▪Blank verse: iambic pentameter unrhymedThe latter period:Drama— the real mainstream of the English Renaissanceyears 1587-93. they were all of humble birth and struggled for a livelihood by writing. Through hard work, they revised old plays and wrote new ones. They made rapid progress in dramatic techniques because they has close contact with the actors and audiences. They were looked down upon by the gentlemen and suspected by the government. It was their industrious works that furnished the Elizabethan stage.Christopher MarloweWilliam ShakespeareIII. The main artistic stylesThe artistic styles as lyric poetry, narrative poetry, drama are maturized; new styles which characterized the modern literature such as sonnets, short stories and novels were produced.translation:Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Homer’s Iliad, Montaigne’s Essays▪travel books:More’s Utopia▪poetry: Edmund Spenser▪drama: “University Wits”, Marlowe, Shakespeare▪essay: Francis BaconForerunner of utopian socialism▪An imaginative travel narrative written in the form of conversation between More and Hythloday, a returned voyager describing an ideal state governed by reason.▪The subject is the search for the best possible form of government: Utopia---a community of property---a pure, pre-Marx form of communism.The Sheph erd’s Calendar 《牧人日历》: 12 pastoral poems and eclogues, one for each month, put into the mouths of speakers distinguishing themselves as shepherds, really representing Spenser and his friends.▪Amoretti《爱情小诗》:a series of 88 sonnets in honor of his lover Elizabeth. All except one was written in the Spenserian sonnet.▪Epithlamion 《婚后曲》: marriage hymns to celebrate his marriage with Elizabeth.The Faerie Queene《仙后》:▪The blending of religious and historical allegory with chivalric romance: a long poem planned 12 books. 12 knights for the qualities of the chivalric virtues--- the six completed books are holiness, temperance, chastity, friendship, justice and courtesy.Fairy Queen—Queen Elizabeth, the knights as a whole --- England, the evil figures—enemies.Themes of the poem :●nationalism( celebration of Queen Elizabeth)●humanism (strong opposition to Roman Catholicism),●Puritanism (moral teaching)Spenserian stanza:it is a nine-line stanza with the first 8 lines iambic pentameter and the ninth, iambic hexameter 六步格的诗rhyming abab,bcbc,c which is the typical verse in The Faerie Queene.For its rare beauty, this verse form was much used by many later poets, esp. imitated by the romantic poets of the 19th century.Spenser’s position in English Literature:the publica tion of “The Shepherd’s Calendar” marks the budding of Renaissance flower in the northern island of England.The language he used was modern English which has distinguished itself from the Middle English of Chaucer's day. Spenserian stanza: a model of poetic art among the Renaissance English poets.“the poet’s poet”, the first master to make the Modern English the natural music of his poetic effusion and held his position as a model of poetic art. His influence can be traced in the works of Milton, Shelley and Keats.Life: short but riotous⏹Major works:➢Tamburlaine the Great:《帖木耳》•A drama in a blank verse•About the rise and fall of Tamburlaine the Mongol conqueror on the 14th century central Asia.•A tragedy about a man who thinks he can but actually can not control his own fate.•By depicting a great hero with high ambition and sheer brutal force, the author voiced the supreme desire of the man of the Renaissance for infinite power and authority.•➢The Jew of Malta:《马耳他的犹太人》•A study of the lust for wealth, which centers around Barabas the Jew, an old money lender, whose only philosophy is the art of gaining advantage.•Suggestive of Shylock in Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice.•A tragic result: typically greedy of riches and gold, which is another feature shared by those in Renaissance England. •➢The History of Doctor Faustus 《浮士德博士》•Refer to compare with Goethe’s Faust•The Faust myth in 16th century Germany: the myth of men seeking great earthly power from demons at the cost of their immortal soul.•The conventional view: Dr. Faustus is a morality play that vindicates humility, faith and obedience to the law of God. •The new view: Dr. Faustus celebrates the human passion for knowledge, power and happiness, and also reveals man’s frustration in realizing the high aspiration in a hostile moral order.⏹Social significance and literary achievement1.showing the spirit of the rising bourgeoisie. Its eager curiosity for knowledge, power and gold.The praise of individuality freed from the restraints of medieval dogmas and the conviction of the boundless possibility of human efforts in conquering the universe.The heroes are mainly individualists. Their individualistic ambition often brings ruin to the world and to themselves.…soul of the Age!The applause! Delight! The wonder of our stage! Triumph, my Britain, thou hast one to show To whom all scenes of Europe homage owe. He was not of an age, but for all time!William Shakespeare1. Brief Introduction2. Shakespeare’s dramaFour periods of his literary career Categories of his drama 3. the artistic features of his plays4. Shakespeare’s place and contribution5. Shakespeare’s sonnetsWhat to be at least known about ShakespeareLife: birthplace, birth date, death date, important time in his life and career●His major works: 37 plays(10histories, 10 comedies, 10 tragedies), 2 long narrative poems, 154 sonnets.Plays to be read: great comedies & 4 great tragedies●Writing features in each of four periodsI. Brief IntroductionA dramatist “not of an age, but of all time” by Ben Jonhson, not of Engla nd, but of the world.●Not only a master of English language but also a genius of character portrayal and plot construction●A “poet of reality” for his idea that literature should reflect nature and reality.●37 plays, 154 sonnets and 2 long poems.II. Shak espeare’s dramaFour Periods of Shakespeare’s Literary careerFour major phrases represent respectively his early, mature, flourishing and late periods.1. Period of early experiment and apprenticeship (1590-1594)Background:A. it was in the middle of the highly thriving Elizabethan Age.B. The thoughts of humanism and the ideas of man’s emancipation, freedom of love was rapidly spread.C. Shakespeare was a young man full of astonishing versatility and wonderful talent and the great interest in the political questions of his time.Features:A. the writer made experiments in a number of dramatic forms: the historical plays, comedy, the revenge tragedy and the romantic tragedy.B. this period is distinctively marked by youthfulness and exuberance of imagination, by extravagance of witty language or speech, and by the final and frequent use of blank verse. In his hand, blank verse developed into a happy vehicle to express all kinds of thoughts and emotions (thus shaking off the rigidity of rimed and mechanic lines) .2. Period of maturity (1595-1600)Features:A. a period of “great comedies” and mature historical plays and sonnets.B. a sweet and joyful time when the writer portrays successfully a magnificent panorama of the manifold pursuit of people in real life.C. a great shift in characterization. A notable gallery of heroines in the comedies and vivid characters in historical plays is presented: Portia, Posalynd, Voila, Beatrice, Sir John Falstaff.3. Period of gloom and depression (1601-1607)Background:A. the aggravation of the social situation: the rising of peasants, the corruption, the tension between bourgeoisie and the feudal lands.B. the change of mood in the playwright: gloomy and indignantFeatures:A. a period of “great tragedies” and “dark comedies”B. the writer gave a scathing exposition of the somber pictures and scenes of murder, lust, treachery, ingratitude and crime.C. a higher level of crafts is reached: more intricate plotting, intense inner conflict, meticulous depiction of human mind.4. Period of calm and reconciliation (1608-1612)Background:A. the fall and collapse of absolute monarchB. the retirement of the playwright back into the tranquil countrysideFeatures:A. some serenity and optimism, instead of the beginning lightness and the middle somber violence reigned.B. romantic dramas and comedies were the main form.C. moral teaching and supernatural forces were relied on to restore the rightful honor and position. These plays all show a falling off from his previous works.Categories of his dramacomedies histories tragedies romances??Comedy is a light form of drama aiming primarily to amuse and ending happily. It often deals with people in their human state, restrained and ridiculous by their limitations, faults, bodily functions.Four Great ComdiesThe Merchant of VeniceA Midsummer Night’s DreamAs you Like itTwelfth NightComedies of the First PeriodThe keynote of his comedies:●to portray people just freed from the feudal fetters, sing of youth, love and ideas of happiness.●The heroes and heroines fight against destiny and mould their fate according to their own free will. Thus becomethe sons and daughters of Renaissance.●The victory of humanist ideal is inevitable. The general spirit of these plays is optimistic.The Merchant of Venice•The double plot: one is about the Bassanio’s winning of a bride by undergoing a test; the other is about the demanding of a pound of human flesh by Shylock.•The traditional theme is to praise the friendship between Antonio and Bassanio, to idealize Portia as a heroine of great beauty, wit and loyalty and to expose the insatiable greed and brutality of the Jew.•The new one is to regard the play as a satire of the Christian hypocrisy and their false standards of friendship and love, their cunning ways of pursuing worldliness and unreasoning prejudice against Jews.Portia: a rich heiress of Belmont in Shakespeare's comedy The Merchant of Venice.●1. Portia is a woman of Renaissance—beautiful, prudent, cultured, courteous and capable of rising to an emergency. She is one of Shakespear’s ideal women.●2. the young heroes in Shakespeare's comedies are always independent in character and take their own path of life.History plays aim to present some historical age or character, and may be either a comedy or a tragedy.●His histories include two tetralogies (四部曲)and two other plays. Characterizes two centuries of English history from Richard III to Henry VIII (1377-1547)●There is only one ideal king---Henry V who represents the aspiration for national unity under a powerful and efficient monarchy.The image of Henry V:Henry V is the symbol of Shakespear’s ideal kingship. He represents the upsurging patriotism of the time. In depicting Henry V as a prince and as a man, Shakespeare looks deep into the personality of his hero and shows a profound understanding of the politics and social life of the time.Theme: Shakespeare’s historical plays describe the decaying of the old feudal society an d the rising of the new forces. His historical plays sum up the necessity for national unity under a mighty and just sovereign. The idea is anti-feudal inIt is concerned with the harshness and injustice of life. They are often serious plays with sad endings.●Often the hero’s tragedy is due to a weakness in his or her character which brings self-destruction. A weakness such as the excessive pride of Faustus, the overweening ambition of Macbeth, or the uncontrolled jealousy of Othello.●In S hakespeare’s plays, he saw sharp contradictions between his lofty humanistic ideals and the evil social forces. Background for Shakespeare’s tragediesHe began to observe life with penetration, to expose mercilessly the contradiction of the Elizabethan society. The economical and social crisis which began at the end of the reign of Queen Elizabeth continued right up to the English Revolution.The bourgeoisie intended to break up the yoke of absolute monarchy and struggled for free development.It was in this atmosphere of general unrest that he created his great tragedies.Four Great Tragedies All analyzing the human wickedness.●Hamlet: the hero’s weakness makes him vulnerable in fighting against the outward evil.●Othello shows how an outward evil make s use of the hero’s weakness and causes his fall.●King Lear demonstrates how man’s mistake sets free the evils of treachery, hypocrisy, flattery, selfishness and distrust.●Macbeth reveals how the outward evil stirs up the wickedness in man and destroys him.Hamlet“Hamlet” is considered the summit of Shakespeare's art.Hamlet is a man of genius, highly accomplished and educated, a man of profound perception and sparkling wit. He is a scholar, soldier and statesman all combined. His image reflects the versatility of the man of Renaissance.Hamlet’s melancholy is not the negative, over-subtle and fruitless kind, it is the result of his penetrating mind. It expresses, in away, the crisis of humanism at the end of the 16th and the beginning of the 17th century.III. the artistic features of his plays1. Characterization: By using comparison and contrasts, he depicts a group of individuals with strong and distinct personalities.The melancholy of Hamlet, the wickedness of Claudius and Iago, the honesty of Othello, ambition of Macbeth and the beauty and wit of Portia.2. Psycho-analytical study: He reveals the intricate inner workings of the character’s minds through the full use of soliloquies(独白).3. Structure:⏹His plays usu. have more than one plot. Through contrast and parallel, the major and minor plots are woven intoan organic whole.⏹the device of a play within the play also plays an important part.4. Language: Shakespeare is a master of the English language, with a large vocabulary of 16000 English words. More important are the figurative speeches such as analogy and metaphor.5. style: realistic style. The reader may be impressed by the typical speech modes —the question in Hamlet, the ambiguities in Macbeth, the exclamations and very simple but also very basic questions in King Lear.IV. Shakespeare’s place and contributionOne of the founder of realism in world literature. Living in the historical period of the transition from feudalism to capitalism, he paints a panorama of the decline of the old feudal nobility and the rise of new bourgeoisie.Amazing prolificacy. In 22years, nearly 40 plays, no two of which evoke the same feeling or image among the audience, a master of every forms of drama.Skilled in many poetic forms. The songs, sonnets, couplets, esp. at home with blank verse, which became a vehicle of utterance to all the possible sentiments of his characters.A great master of English language. He has an amazing wealth of vocabulary and idiom. He is known to have used 16,000 different words. His coinage of new words and distortion of the meaning of the old ones also create striking effects on the reader.He was universally regarded are the summit of English Renaissance. His influence on later writers is immeasurable. Almost all English writers after him have been influenced by him either in artistic point view, in literary form or in language.SonnetDefinition:▪A sonnet is a fourteen-line poem in iambic pentameter with a carefully patterned rhyme scheme.Origin:▪A form of lyrical poetry was originated in Italy. “sonnet” was derived from Provencal (普罗旺斯语) “Sonet”. It was once a short popular poetry used for singing in the medieval age.▪Italian poet Petrarch was the major representatives of the poets who used this poetic form. He wrote altogether 375 sonnets, dedicated to his lover. That is the Petrarchan sonnet.▪Sonnet was introduced into England by Thomas Wyatt . It flourished in the 1590s and reach its peak of popularity with the surge of Renaissance in England.Two types of sonnetThe Italian, or Petrarchan sonnet :Petrarchan Sonnet▪The Italian form, in some ways the simpler of the two, Its fourteen lines break into an octave (八行诗)(or octet), which usually rhymes abba,abba, and a sestet (六行诗节), which may rhyme cdecde or cdcdcd, or any of the multiple variations possible using only two or three rhyme-sounds.▪It usually projects and develops a subject in the octave, then executes a turn at the beginning of the sestet, which means that the sestet must in some way release the tension built up in the octave.▪Example: see Wyatt's "Farewell Love and all thy laws for ever."Farewell, LoveSir Thomas Wyatt (1503~1542)Farwell, Love, and all thy laws forever,Thy baited hooks shall tangle me no more;Senec and Plato call me from thy lore,To perfect wealth my wit for to endeavor,In blind error then I did persever,Thy sharp repulse, that prickth aye so sore,Hath taought me to set in trifles no storeAnd’ scape forth since liberty is leverTherefore farewell, go trouble younger hearts, And in me claim no more authorityWith idle youth go use thy property,And therein spend thy many brittle darts,For hitherto though I have lost all my time,Me lusteth no longer rotten boughs to climb.别了,爱,以及你所有的法则,你上饵的钩子不再能把我缠绞,塞内克与柏拉图叫我离开你那套,并尽我才智把完美的财富获得。

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