literature 英美文学

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英文literature是什么汉语意思

英文literature是什么汉语意思

英文literature是什么汉语意思英文literature是什么汉语意思英文literature是一个较为简单的单词,前提是我们要清楚它的汉语意思。

快来看看店铺为你准备了单词literature表达的汉语意思,欢迎大家阅读!literature的`汉语意思英 [ˈlɪtrətʃə(r)] 美 [ˈlɪtərəˌtʃʊr, -tʃɚ]第三人称复数:literatures名词文学; 文献; 文学作品; 著作相关例句名词1. She went through the literature on the subject.她查阅有关此一问题的资料。

2. He majors in Russian literature.他主修俄罗斯文学。

3. I shall take literature and mathematics this spring.今年春天我要修文学及数学。

literature的词典解释1. 文学;文学作品Novels, plays, and poetry are referred to as literature, especially when they are considered to be good or important.e.g. ...classic works of literature.文学经典e.g. ...a Professor of English Literature...英国文学教授2. (某一学科的)著述,文献,图书资料The literature on a particular subject of study is all the books and articles that have been published about it.e.g. The literature on immigration policy is almostunrelievedly critical of the state...移民政策方面的著述几乎总是会一成不变地批评政府。

Introduction to English literature英美文学选读张伯香 PPT

Introduction to English literature英美文学选读张伯香 PPT

v 文学是指以语言文字为工具形象化地反映客观现实的艺 术,包括诗歌、散文、小说、剧本、寓言、童话等,是 文化的重要表现形式,以不同的形式(称作体裁)表现 内心情感和再现一定时期和一定地域的社会生活。
Fiction 小说
❖ Elements of Fiction
❖ Theme ❖ Plot & structure ❖ Character ❖ Point of view ❖ Setting ❖ Tone ❖ Language & style ❖ Irony ❖ Symbol
revolution.
Recommended Novels for Reading
a romantic story a revenge story a tragedy of social inequality
a poor, plain governess struggling for self-dignity and
personal happiness
Recommended Novels for Reading
A Novel Without a Hero
tragic fate of a “pure” young peasant woman at the time of capitalist invasion
into the country in the 19th-century England
Training one’s thinking
Fostering one’s connoisseurship (the ability to appreciate a work of art)
Enjoying oneself
Aims

英语专八英美文学常识(EnglishLiterature)

英语专八英美文学常识(EnglishLiterature)

英国文学(English Literature)450-1066 Old English (or Anglo-Saxon) Period 古英语(或盎格鲁—撒克逊)时期1066-1500 Middle English Period 中古英语时期1500-1660 1516-1578 1578-1625 1625-1660The Renaissance 文艺复兴1) The beginning of the Renaissance2) The flowering period3) The epilogue of the Renaissance1660-1785 The Neoclassical Period 新古典主义时期1785-1830 The Romantic Period 浪漫主义时期1832-1901 The Victorian Period 维多利亚时期1901-1914 The Edwardian Period 爱德华时期1910-1936 The Georgian Period 乔治五世时期1914 - The Modern Period 现代时期1945 - Postmodernism 后现代主义一、Old and Medieval English Literature中古英语文学(8世纪-14世纪)1) The Old English Period / The Anglo-Saxon Period古英语时期(449-1066)a. pagan poetry(异教诗歌): Beowulf《贝奥武甫》- 最早的诗歌;长诗(3000行) heroism & fatalism & Christian qualitiesthe folk legends of the primitive northern tribes; a heroic Scandinavian epic legend; 善恶有报b. religious poetry: C aedmon(凯德蒙610-680): the first known religious poet; the father of English songCynewulf(基涅武甫9C): The Christc. 8th C, Anglo-Saxon prose: Venerable Bede(673-735); Alfred the Great(848-901)2) The Medieval Period中世纪(1066-ca.1485 / 1500):a. Romance中世纪传奇故事(1200-1500): the Middle Ages; 英雄诗歌无名诗人- Sir Gawain and the Green Knight《高文爵士与绿色骑士》: Celtic legend; verse-romance; 2530 lines~ 14th C,Age of Chaucer:* Geoffrey Chaucer(乔叟1340-1400): 文风:vivid and exact language, his poetry is full of vigor and swiftnessthe father of English poetry; the father of English fiction; 首创“双韵体”;首位用伦敦方言写作英国作家The Canterbury Tales:pilgrims stories 受Boccaccio(薄伽丘) - Decameron《十日谈》启发The House of Fame; Troilus and Criseyde; The Romaunt of the Rose《玫瑰罗曼史》(译作) * William Langland(朗兰1332-1400):The Vision of Piers Plowman《农夫皮尔斯之幻象》: 普通人眼中的社会抗议b. 15th C, English ballads:Thomas Malory (1395-1471) :Morte d’Arthur《亚瑟王之死》- 圆桌骑士二、The Renaissance Period英国文艺复兴(1500-1660): humanism十四行诗,文艺复兴,无韵诗,伊丽莎白戏剧1) 诗歌Henry Howard(霍华德1516-1547)a. Thomas Wyatt (怀亚特1503-1542): the first to introduce the sonnet into English literatureb. Sir Philip Sidney(雪尼爵士1554-1586):代表了当时的理想- “the complete man”Defense of Poetry《为诗辩护》Astrophel and Stella; Arcadia《阿卡狄亚》: a prose romance filled with lyrics; a forerunner of the modern worldc.Edmund Spenser(斯宾塞1552-1599): the poets’ poet; non-dramatic poet of伊丽莎白时代- long allegorical romance文风:a perfect melody, a rare sense of beauty and a splendid imagination. The Shepherd CalendarThe Faerie Queen《仙后》:long poem for Queen Elizabeth; Allegory - nine-line verse stanza/ the Spenserian Stanza Spenserian Stanza(斯宾塞诗体): Nine lines, the first eight lines is in iambic(抑扬格) pentameter(五步诗),and the ninth line is an iambic hexameter(六步诗) line.2) Prose 散文a. Thomas More(莫尔1478-1535): 欧洲早期空想社会主义创始人Utopia《乌托邦》: More与海员的对话b. John Lyly(黎里1553-160,剧作家&小说家):EupheusEuphuism(夸饰文体): Abundant use of balanced sentences, alliterations(头韵) and other artificial prosodic(韵律) means.The use of odd similes(明喻) and comparisonsc. Francis Bacon (培根1561-1626):英国首位散文家,中世纪至现代欧洲时期; 近代唯物主义哲学奠基人和近代实验科学先驱: the first true English prose classic the trumpeter of a new age;Essays(论说文集):Of Studies, Of Love, Of Beauty3) 戏剧a. Christopher Marlowe(马洛1564-1593): University Wits 大学才子派Edward II;The Jew of Malta《马耳他的犹太人》first made blank verse(无韵诗:不押韵的五步诗) the principle instrument of English dramaThe Tragical History of Doctor Faustus《浮士德博士的悲剧》:根据德国民间故事书写成; 完善了无韵体诗。

美国文学Literature(introduction)

美国文学Literature(introduction)

Definition (Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary) 1) writings in prose or verse; esp. writings having excellence of form or expression and expressing ideas of permanent or universal interest. 2) the body of written works produced in a particular language, country, or age.
浪漫主义(Romanticism)促使了文 学的现代含义,出于对工业社会和 中产阶级的憎恨,文学代表有机社 会的理想和人的完整统一。
18世纪的Mathew Arnold把文学看作一 种精英文化。 Derrida(1989)认为文学是一种思想建 构(某种思想价值体系),文学性是 文本与某种意向关系发生联系之后的 产物。
当我们说生活毫无诗意时, 当我们说生活毫无诗意时,我们事实 上是对生活提出了诗意的要求
我们的本性是诗意的。因此,我们 将非本真的无诗意的生存评价为沉 沦,而将本真的诗意的生存评价为 超越。诗意不是一种轻飘浪漫的状 态。
日常生活被非诗意遮蔽着, 因此我们总是通过文学的引 领到达诗意,感受无限,领 悟神圣,这才是人类本真的 生活状态。
Interpretation(阐释)of Literary Works (学者的解释)
“阐释”是对文本的理解和说明,是 一种人类通过文本(text)达到理解 进行对话的行为. “阐释”是作为人类对话、沟通和 理解的基本行为模式.
在文学理论的概念中,阐释既是一种 文本阅读理解的活动,又是一种文学 批评的模式,同时还涉及通过文学艺 术的阅读理解而进行的更广义的认知 活动.

英美文学之文学术语

英美文学之文学术语

英美文学之文学术语文学术语汇编11.Literature of the absurd: (荒诞派文学) The term is applied to a number of works in drama and prose fiction which have in common the sense that the human condition is essentially absurd, and that this condition can be adequately represented only in works of literature that are themselves absurd. The current movement emerged in France after the Second World War, as a rebellion against essential beliefs and values of traditional culture and traditional literature. They hold the belief that a human being is an isolated existent who is cast into an alien universe and the human life in its fruitless search for purpose and meaning is both anguish and absurd.2.Theater of the absurd: (荒诞派戏剧) belongs to literature of the absurd. Two representatives of this school are Eugene Ionesco, French author of The Bald Soprano (1949) (此作品中文译名<秃头歌女>), and Samuel Beckett, Irish author of Waiting for Godot (1954) (此作品是荒诞派戏剧代表作<等待戈多>). They project the irrationalism, helplessness and absurdity of life in dramatic forms that reject realistic settings, logical reasoning, or a coherently evolving plot.3.Black comedy or black humor: (黑色幽默) it mostly employed to describe baleful, naïve, or inept characters in a fantastic or nightmarish modern world playing out their roles in what Ionesco called a “tragic farce”, in which the events are often simultaneously comic, horrifying, and absurd. Joseph Heller’s Catch-22 (美国著名作家约瑟夫海勒<二十二条军规>) can be taken as an example of the employment of this technique.文学术语汇编24. Aestheticism or the Aesthetic Movement(唯美主义): it began to prevail in Europe at the middle of the 19th century. The theory of “art for art’s sake” was first put forward by some French artists. They declared that art should serve no religious, moral or social purpose. The two most important representatives of aestheticists in English literature are Walt Pater and Oscar Wilde.5. Allegory(寓言): a tale in verse or prose in which characters, actions, or settings represent abstract ideas or moral qualities, such as John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress. An allegory is a story with two meanings, a literal meaning and a symbolic meaning.6. Fable(寓言): is a short narrative, in prose or verse, that exemplifies an abstract moral thesis or principle of human behavior. Most common is the beast fable, in which animals talk and act like the human types they represent. The fables in Western cultures derive mainly from the stories attributed to Aesop, a Greek slave of the sixth century B. C.7. Parable(寓言): is a very short narrative about human beings presented so as to stress analogy with a general lesson that the narrator is trying to bring home to his audience. For example, the Bible contains lots of parables employed by Jesus Christ to make his flock understand his preach.(注意以上三个词在汉语中都翻译成语言,但是内涵并不相同,不要搞混)8. Alliteration(头韵): the repetition of the initial consonant sounds. In Old English alliterative meter, alliteration is the principal organizing device of the verse line, such as in Beowulf.9. Consonance is the repetition of a sequence of two or more consonants but with a change in the intervening vowel, such as “live and love”.10. Assonance is the repetition of identical or similar vowel, especially in stressed syllables, in a sequence of nearby words, such as “child of silence”.11. Allusion (典故)is a reference without explicit identification, to a literary or historical person, place, or event, or to another literary work or passage. Most literary allusions are intended to be recognized by the generally educated readers of the author’s time, but some are aimed at a special group.12. Ambiguity(复义性): Since William Empson(燕卜荪)published Seven Types of Ambiguity(《复义七型》), the term has been widely used in criticism to identify a deliberate poetic device: the use of a single word or expression to signify two or more distinct references, or to express two or more diverse attitudes or feeling.文学术语汇编313. Antihero(反英雄):the chief character in a modern novel or play whose character is totally different from the traditional heroes. Instead of manifesting largeness, dignity, power, or heroism, the antihero is petty, passive, ineffectual or dishonest. For example, the heroine of Defoe’s Moll Flanders is a thief and a prostitute.14. Antithesis(对照):(a figure of speech)An antithesis is often expressed in a balanced sentence, that is, a sentence in which identical or similar syntactic structure is used to express contrasting ideas. For example, “Marriage has many pains, but celibacy(独身生活)has no pleasures.” by Samuel Johnson obviously employs antithesis.15. Archaism(拟古):the literary use of words and expressions that have become obsolete in the common speech of an era. For example, the translators of the King James Version of Bible gave weight and dignity to their prose by employing archaism.16. Atmosphere(氛围): the prevailing mood or feeling of a literary work. Atmosphere is often developed, at least in part, through descriptions of setting. Such descriptions help to create an emotional climate to establish the reader’s expectations and attitudes.文学术语汇编417. Ballad(民谣):it is a song, transmitted orally, which tells a story. It originated and was communicated orally among illiterate or only partly literate people. It exists in many variant forms. The most common stanza form, called ballad stanza is a quatrain in alternate four- and three-stress lines; usually only the second and fourth lines rhyme. Although many traditional ballads probably originated in the late Middle Age, they were not collected and printed until the eighteenth century.18. Climax:as a rhetorical device it means an ascending sequence of importance. As a literary term, it can also refer to the point of greatest intensity, interest, or suspense in a story’s turning point. The action leading to the climax and the simultaneous increaseof tension in the plot are known as the rising action. All action after the climax is referred to as the falling action, or resolution. The term crisis is sometimes used interchangeably with climax.19. Anticlimax(突降):it denotes a writer’s deliberate drop from the serious and elevated to the trivial and lowly, in order to achieve a comic or satiric effect. It is a rhetorical device in English.20. Beat Generation(垮掉一代):it refers to a loose-knit group of poets and novelists, writing in the second half of the 1950s and early 1960s, who shared a set of social attitudes – antiestablishment, antipolitical, anti-intellectual, opposed to the prevailing cultural, literary, and moral values, and in favor of unfettered self-realization andself-expression. Representatives of the group include Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac and William Burroughs. And most famous literary creations produced by this group should be Allen Ginsberg’s long poem Howl and Jack Kerouac’s On the Road.文学术语汇编521. Biography(传记):a detailed account of a person’s life written by another person, such as Samuel Johnson’s Lives of the English Poets and James Boswell’s Life of Samuel Johnson.22. Autobiography(自传):a person’s account of his or her own life, such as Benjamin Franklin’s autobiography.23. Blank verse(无韵体): Verse written in unrhymed iambic pentameter. It is the verse form used in some of the greatest English poetry, including that of William Shakespeare and John Milton.24. A parody(模仿)imitates the serious manner and characteristic features of a particular literary work, or the distinctive style of a particular author, or the typical stylistic and other features of a serious literary genre, and deflates the original by applying the imitation to a lowly or comically inappropriate subject.文学术语汇编625. Celtic Revival also known as the Irish Literary Renaissance (爱尔兰文艺复兴)identifies the remarkably creative period in Irish literature from about 1880 to the death of William Butler Yeats in 1939. The aim of Yeats and other early leaders of the movement was to create a distinctively national literature by going back to Irish history, legend, and folklore, as well as to native literary models. The major writers of this movement include William Butler Yeats, Lady Gregory, John Millington Synge and Sean O’Casey and so on.26. Characters(人物)are the persons represented in a dramatic or narrative work, who are interpreted by the reader as being endowed with particular moral, intellectual, and emotional qualities by inferences from the dialogues, actions and motivations. E. M. Forster divides characters into two types: flat character, which is presented without much individualizing detail; and round character, which is complex in temperament and motivation and is represented with subtle particularity.27. Chivalric Romance (or medieval romance) (骑士传奇或中世纪传奇)is a type of narrative that developed in twelfth-century France, spread to the literatures of other countries. Its standard plot is that of a quest undertaken by a single knight in order to gain a lady’s favor; frequently its central interest is courtly love, together with tournaments fought and dragons and monsters slain. It stresses the chivalric ideals of courage, loyalty, honor, mercifulness to an opponent, and elaborate manners.28. Comedy:(喜剧)in general, a literary work that ends happily with a healthy, amicable armistice between the protagonist and society.29. Farce (闹剧)is a type of comedy designed to provoke the audience to simple and hearty laughter. To do so it commonly employs highly exaggerated types of characters and puts them into improbable and ludicrous situations.30. Confessional poetry(自白派诗歌)designates a type of narrative and lyric verse, given impetus by Robert Lowell’s Life Studies, which deals with the facts and intimate mental and physical experiences of the poet’s own life. Confessional poetry was written in rebellion against the demand for impersonality by T. S. Elliot and the New Criticism. The representative writers of confessional school include Robert Lowell, Anne Sexton and Sylvia Plath and so on.31. Critical Realism:(批判现实主义)The critical realism of the 19th century flourished in the fouties and in the beginning of fifties. The realists first and foremost set themselves the task of criticizing capitalist society from a democratic viewpoint and delineated the crying contradictions of bourgeois reality. But they did not find a way to eradicate social evils. Representative writers of this trend include Charles Dickens and William Makepeace Thackeray and so on.32. Drama:(戏剧)The form of composition designed for performance in the theater, in which actors take the roles of the characters, perform the indicated action, and utter the written dialogue. (The common alternative name for a dramatic composition is a play.)文学术语汇编733. Dramatic Monologue:(戏剧独白)a monologue is a lengthy speech by a single person. Dramatic monologue does not designate a component in a play, but a type of lyric poem that was perfected by Robert Browning. By using dramatic monologue, a single person, who is patently not the poet, utters the speech that makes up the whole of the poem, in a specific situation at a critical moment. For example, Robert Browning’s famous poem “My Last Duchess” was written in dramatic monologue. 34. Elegy(哀歌或挽歌):a poem of mourning, usually over the death of an individual. An elegy is a type of lyric poem, usually formal in language and structure, and solemn or even melancholy in tone.35. Enlightenment(启蒙运动):The name applied to an intellectual movement which developed in Western Europe during the seventeenth century and reached its height in the eighteenth. The common element was a trust in human reason as adequate to solve the crucial problems and to establish the essential norms in life, together with the belief that the application of reason was rapidly dissipating the remaining feudal traditions. It influenced lots of famous English writers especially those neoclassic writers, such as Alexander Pope.36. Epic(史诗):it is a long verse narrative on a serious subject, told in a formal and elevated style, and centered on a heroic or quasi-divine figure on whose actions depends the fate of a tribe, a nation, or the human race.37. Epiphany:(顿悟)In the early draft of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, James Joyce employed this term to signify a sudden sense of radiance and revelation that one may feel while perceiving a commonplace object. “Epiphany” now has become the standard term for the description, frequent in modern poetry and prose fiction, of the sudden flare into revelation of an ordinary object or scene.38. Epithet(移就): as a term in criticism, epithet denotes an adjective or adjectival phrase used to define a distinctive quality of a person or thing. This method was widely employed in ancient epics. For example, in Homer’s epic, the epithet like “the wine-dark sea” can be found everywhere.39. Essay:(散文)any short composition in prose that undertakes to discuss a matter, express a point of view, persuade us to accept a thesis on any subject, or simply entertain. The essay can be divided as the formal essay and the informal essay (familiar essay).40. Euphemism(委婉语): An inoffensive expression used in place of a blunt one that is felt to be disagreeable or embarrassing, such as “pass away” instead of “die”41. Expressionism(表现主义):a German movement in literature and the other arts which was at its height between 1910 and 1925 – that is, in the period just before, during, and after WWⅠ. The expressionist artist or writer undertakes to express a personal vision – usually a troubled or tensely emotional vision – of human life and human society. This is done by exaggerating and distorting. We recognize its effects, direct or indirect, on the writing and staging of such plays as Arthur Miller’s Death ofa Salesman as well as on the theater of the absurd.42. Free verse(自由体诗):Like traditional verse, it is printed in short lines instead of with the continuity of prose, but it differs from such verse by the fact that its rhythmic pattern is not organized into a regular metrical form – that is, into feet, or recurrent units of weak and strong stressed syllables. Most free verse also hasirregular line lengths, and either lacks rhyme or else uses it only occasionally. Walt Whitman is a representative who employed this poem form successfully.文学术语汇编843. Gothic novel:(哥特式小说)It is a type of prose fiction. The writers of this type of fictions mostly set their stories in the medieval period and in a Catholic country, especially Italy or Spain. The locale was often a gloomy castle. The typical story focused on the sufferings imposed on an innocent heroine by a cruel villain. This type of fictions made bountiful use of ghosts, mysterious disappearances, and other supernatural occurrences. The principle aim of such novels was to evoke chilling terror and the best of this type opened up to the fiction the realm of the irrational and of the perverse impulses and nightmarish terrors that lie beneath the orderly surface of the civilized mind. Some famous novelists liked to employ some Gothic elements in their novels, such as Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights.44. Graveyard poets(墓园派诗歌): A term applied to eighteenth-century poets who wrote meditative poems, usually set in a graveyard, on the theme of human mortality, in moods which range from pensiveness to profound gloom. The vogue resulted in one of the most widely known English poems, Thomas Gray’s“Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard”.45. Harlem Renaissance(哈莱姆文艺复兴):a period of remarkable creativity in literature, music, dance, painting, and sculpture by African-Americans, from the end of the First World War in 1917 through the 1920s. As a result of the mass migrations to the urban North in order to escape the legal segregation of the American South, and also in order to take advantage of the jobs opened to African Americans at the beginning of the War, the population of the region of Manhattan known as Harlem became almost exclusively Black, and the vital center of African American culture in America. Distinguished writers who were part of the movement included Langston Hughes and Jean Toomer. The Great Depression of 1929 and the early 1930s broughtthe period of buoyant Harlem culture – which had been fostered by prosperity in the publishing industry and the art world – effectively to an end.46. Heroic Couplet(英雄双韵体)refers to lines of iambic pentameter which rhyme in pairs: aa, bb, cc, and so on. The adjective “heroic” was applied in the later seventeenth century because of the frequent use of such couplets in heroic poems and dramas. This verse form was introduced into English poetry by Geoffrey Chaucer. From the age of John Dryden through that of Samuel Johnson, the heroic couplet was the predominant English measure for all the poetic kinds; some poets, including Alexander Pope, used it almost to the exclusion of other meters.47. Hyperbole(夸张):this figure of speech called hyperbole is bold overstatement, or the extravagant exaggeration of fact or of possibility. It may be used either for serious or ironic or comic effect.48. Understatement(轻描淡写):this figure of speech deliberately represents something as very much less in magnitude or importance than it really is, or is ordinarily considered to be. The effect is usually ironic.49. Imagism(意象派):it was a poetic vogue that flourished in England, and even more vigorously in America, between the years 1912 and 1917. It was planned and exemplified by a group of English and American writers in London, partly under the influence of the poetic theory of T. E. Hulme, as a revolt against the sentimental and mannerish poetry at the turn of the century. The typical Imagist poetry is written in free verse and undertakes to be as precisely and tersely as possible. Meanwhile, the Imagist poetry likes to express the writers’ momentary impression of a visual object or scene and often the impression is rendered by means of metaphor without indicating a relation. Most famous Imagist poem, “In a Station of the Metro”, was written by Ezra Pound. Imagism was too restrictive to endure long as a concerted movement, but it influenced almost all modern poets of Britain and America.50. Irony(反讽):This term derives from a character in a Greek comedy. In most of the modern critical uses of the term “irony”, there remains the root sense of dissembling or hiding what is actually the case; not, however, in order to deceive, but to achieve rhetorical or artistic effects.51. Local Colorism(地方色彩)was a literary trend belonging to Realism. It refers to the detailed representation in prose fiction of the setting, dialect, customs, dress and ways of thinking and feeling which are distinctive of a particular region. After the Civil War a number of American writers exploited the literary possibilities of local color in various parts of America. The most famous representative of local colorism should be Mark Twain who took his hometown near the Mississippi as the typical setting of nearly all his novels.52. Lyric(抒情诗):in the most common use of the term, a lyric is any fairly short poems consisting of the utterance by a single speaker, who expresses a state of mind or a process of perception, thought and feeling.。

英美文学赏析

英美文学赏析
◦ Fiction: short stories and novels . ◦ Non-Fiction: prose, biographies and autobiographies. ◦ Poetry: free verse, blank verse, sonnets, ballads, songs, etc. ◦ Drama: theatrical plays.
APPRECIATION OF THE SELECTED READINGS IN BRITISH AND AMERICAN LITERATURE
CONTENTS
What is the literature? Fiction Poetry Drama
PART ONE WHAT IS LITERATURE
Non-fiction (or nonfiction) is the form of any narrative, account, or other communicative work whose assertions and descriptions are understood to be factual.
In a narrower sense, however, fiction denotes only narratives that are written in prose (the novel and short story), and sometimes is used simply as a synonym for the novel.
reading, “literacy.”
The definition of 18th century:
Practice and profession of writing.

英美文学选读Literature

英美文学选读Literature
• ③The Renaissance, therefore, in essence i historical period in which the European humanist , thinkers & scholars made
• ①The re-discovery of ancient Roman&Greek culture
• ②The new discoveries in geography & astrology, the religious reformation & the economic expansion.
motifs of the quest, the test, the meeting with t evil giant and the encounter with the beautiful beloved.
• ③The hero is usually the knight, who sets out on
Chaucer ’s achievement
• ①He presented a comprehensive r e a l i s t i c picture of his age and created a whole galle of vivid characters in his works, especiall The Canterbury Tales.
ease and charm for the first time in the history of English literature.
• oets in English ; John Dryden called him “the fat of English poetry ”.

literature清晰读法

literature清晰读法

literature清晰读法
literature清晰读法:英['lɪtrətʃə(r)]美['lɪtrətʃər]。

语法:
literature的基本意思是“文学,文学作品”,是抽象名词,表示“多种语言的文学”时可用复数形式。

literature作“(某一学科的)文献,著作”解时,用作单数形式,其前可加不定冠词a。

用法示例:
She is fond of polite literature.她喜爱风雅文学。

He destroyed feudal ideas in literature.他摧毁了文学中的封建思想。

相关词组:
appreciate〔create, criticize〕literature 欣赏〔创作,评论〕文学作品。

love〔study, teach〕literature 喜爱〔研究,教授〕文学。

ancient〔classical, current, folk〕literature 古代〔古典,当代,民间〕文学。

voluminous literature 长篇文学,大量的文献。

Renaissance literature 文艺复兴时期的文学。

schools of literature 文学流派。

literature about〔on〕有关…的文献〔作品〕。

如何写英美文学论文Literature

如何写英美文学论文Literature

Composed Upon Westminster Bridge 1807
Earth has not anything to show more fair; Dull would be of soul who could past by A sight so touching in its majesty: This city now doth, like a garment, wear The beauty of the morning; silent, bare Ships, towers, domes, theatres, and temples lie Upon unto the fields, and to the sky;
All bright and glittering in the smokeless air. Never did sun more beautifully steep In his first splendour, valley, rock, or hill; Ne’er saw I, never felt, a calm so deep! The river gilden at his own sweet will: Dear God! the very houses seem asleep; And all that mighty heart is lying still! William Wordsworth
Literature
Basic Process
Reading the work(阅读原著) Formulating your thesis(酝酿论点) Outlining(构思) Drafting(拟写初稿定稿)
Reading
研究文学作品,除必须通过反复阅读原著熟悉作

英美文学名词解释Terms in English Literature

英美文学名词解释Terms in English Literature

英美文学名词解释T erms in English Literature1.Allegory (寓言)A tale in verse or prose in which characters, actions, or settings represent abstract ideas or moral qualities.寓言,讽喻:一种文学、戏剧或绘画的艺术手法,其中人物和事件代表抽象的观点、原则或支配力。

2.Alliteration (头韵)Alliteration is the repetition of the same initial consonant sound within a line or a group of words.头韵:在一组词的开头或重读音节中对相同辅音或不同元音的重复。

3.Allusion (典故)A reference to a person, a place, an event, or a literary work that a writer expects the reader to recognize and respond to.典故:作者对某些读者熟悉并能够作出反映的特定人物,地点,事件,文学作品的引用。

4.Analogy (类比)A comparison made between two things to show the similarities between them.类比:为了在两个事物之间找出差别而进行的比较。

5. Antagonist (反面主角)The principal character in opposition to the protagonist or hero or heroine of a narrative or drama.反面主角:叙事文学或戏剧中与男女主人公或英雄相对立的主要人物。

6. Antithesis (对仗)The balancing of two contrasting ideas, words, or sentences.对仗:两组相对的思想,言辞,词句的平衡。

文学英语单词literature

文学英语单词literature

文学英语单词literature
literature
英[ˈlɪtrətʃə(r)] 美[ˈlɪtrətʃər]
n.
文学;文学作品;(某学科的)文献,著作,资料
复数:literature
记忆技巧:liter 文字,字母+ ature 与行为有关之物→文学literature是一个英语单词,名词,作名词时意为“文学;文献;文艺;著作”。

短语搭配
Chinese Literature 中国文学; 中国语言文学; 中华文学; 华文文学
Comparative Literature [语] 比较文学; 比较文学系; 比较语言学; 对比文学
electronic literature 网络文学; 电子文学; 电子文献
Modernist literature 现代主义文学; 主义文学; 现代派文学
irish literature 爱尔兰文学; 爱尔兰的文学
Tibetan literature 藏族文学; 藏文文献
argentine literature 阿根廷文学; 详细翻译
Serbian literature 塞尔维亚文学
Ukrainian literature 乌克兰文学
双语例句
How should we read literature?
我们为何要阅读文学?
He knew everything about literature except how to enjoy it.他通晓有关文学的一切,就是不知怎样去欣赏它。

How do you like our English literature Prof . ?
你觉得我们的英语文学教授怎么样?。

literature(英美概况之文学)

literature(英美概况之文学)
an(1751-1816) and Oscar Wilde (1856-1900), whose plays made them famous in London.Wilde,of course,is known also for his trenchant essays,particularly "The Soul of Man under Socialism" and his controversial novel,The Picture of Dorian Gray.
• Other forms of oral recitation ,such as genealogies,local myths and legends,folk poetry,anecdotes,and jokes are still current in the present oral culture. • Other traditional material,such as folk songs and folk tales,have been collected intensively over the last seventy years
Samuel Beckett
He was self-consciously avant-garde and was fascinated by the different shapes and patterns one can make out of language.
His great play Waiting for Godot (as a critique of bourgeois obsessions with hard work and accomplishment,purpose and meaning,the play could scarely be more savage.)

英美文学课件

英美文学课件
American Literature
Lecture One
030533/4/5, 12th Sep. 2006
Part I. Introduction
Part I: answer the questions
1. What is literature? 2. Why do people read literature? 3. Why is it necessary for you to study literature? 4. How to define American Literature? 5. Basic qualities of American writers? 6. How to study literature? 7. How to improve reading skills?
7. How to Improve Reading Skills
1) Form a habit of intelligent guessing at the meaning of new words with the clues provided by the context. But for the key words in the sentence, you need not check each new word in the dictionary. 2) Learn how to notice details, how to get the main idea, and how to skim to locate the most meaningful passages in a literary work. 3) Cherish a strong desire to extract greater meaning from a literary work by relating ideas found in your reading with your own experience.

literature的用法和例句

literature的用法和例句

literature的用法和例句
literature是指文学作品的总称,包括小说、诗歌、戏剧等各种文学形式。

它也可以指某一特定时期或地区的文学作品。

在学术上,literature也可以指研究和评价文学作品的领域。

用法:
literature可以用作名词,表示文学作品;也可以用作不可数名词,表示文学这一领域。

常见搭配有:English literature(英国文学)、American literature (美国文学)、world literature(世界文学)、classic literature(经典文学)等。

例句:
1.She has a deep understanding of Chinese literature.
她对文学有深刻的理解。

2.The course covers a wide range of English literature.
这门课程涵盖了广泛的英国文学。

3.He is a professor of world literature at the university.
他是这所大学的世界文学教授。

4.The library has a large collection of classic literature.
图书馆收藏了大量经典文学作品。

5.I enjoy reading American literature in my free time.
我闲暇时喜欢阅读美国文学。

英美文学术语(英文版) literary terms

英美文学术语(英文版) literary terms

英国文学Alliteration:押头韵repetition of the initial sounds(不一定是首字母)Allegory:寓言a story with two meanings, a literal meaning and a symbolic meaning.Allusion:典故a reference in a literary work to person, place etc. often to well-known characters or events. Archetype:原型Irony:反讽intended meaning is the opposite of what is statedBlack humor:黑色幽默Metaphor: 暗喻Ballad: 民谣about the folk logeEpic:史诗in poetry, refers to a long work dealing with the actions of gods and heroes.Romance: 罗曼史/骑士文学is a popular literary form in the medieval England./ChivalryEuphuism: 夸饰文体This kind of style consists of two distinct elements. The first is abundant use of balanced sentences, alliterations and other artificial prosodic means. The second element is the use of odd similes and comparisons.Spenserian stanza: It refers to a stanza of nine lines, with the first eight lines in iambic pentameter and the last line in iambic hexameter. 斯宾塞诗节新诗体,每一节有9排,前8排是抑扬格五步格诗,第9排是抑扬格六步格诗。

英美文学史简介

英美文学史简介

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

是以古英语记载的传说中最古老的一篇。

是现存古英文文学中最伟大之作,也是欧洲最早的方言史诗。

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

在所有的23个故事中,除了两篇之外,其余都是诗歌体裁的作品。

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

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

此外,他还写有154首十四行诗sonnet和三、四首长诗poem。

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

AmericanLiterature《英美文学选读》(美国文学部分)

AmericanLiterature《英美文学选读》(美国文学部分)

AmericanLiterature《英美文学选读》(美国文学部分)American LiteratureChapter one : The romantic periodI. Emerson’s transcendentalism and his attitude toward nature:1.Transcendentalism—it is a philosophic and literary movement that flourish in New England, as a reaction against rationalism and Calvinism. It stressed intuitive understanding of god without the help of the church, and advocated independence of the mind.2. Emerson’s transcendentali sm:The over-soul—it is an all-pervading power goodness, from which all things come and of which all are a part. It is a supreme reality of mind, a spiritual unity of all beings and a religion. It is a communication between an individual soul and the universal over-soul. And he strongly believe in the divinity and infinity of man as an individual, so man can totally rely on himself.3.His toward nature:Emerson loves nature. His nature is the garment of the over-soul, symbolic and moral bound. Nature is not something purely of the matter, but alive with God’s presence. It exercise a healthy and restorative influence on human beings. Children can see nature better than adult.II. Hawthorne’s Puritanism and his black vision of man:1. Puritanism—it is the religious belief of the Puristans, who had intended to purify and simplify the religious ritual of the church of England.2. his black vision of man—by the Calvinistic concept of original sin, he believed that human being are evil natured andsinful, and this sin is ever present in human heart and will pass one generation to another.3. Young Goodman Brown—it shows that everyone has some evil secrets. The innocent and na?ve Brown is confronted with the vision of human evil in one terrible night, and then he becomes distrustful and doubtful. Brown stands for everyone ,who is born pure and has no contact with the real world ,and the prominent people of the village and church. They cover their secrets during daily lives, and under some circumstances such as the wit ch’s Sabbath, they become what they are. Even his closed wife, Faith, is no exception. So Brown is aged in that night.IV. Whitman and his Leaves of Grass :1. Theme: sing of the “en-mass”and the self / pursuit of love, happiness, and ***ual love / sometimes about politics (Drum taps)2. Whitman’s originality first in his use of the poetic form free verse (i.e. poetry without a fixed beat or regular rhyme scheme),by means of which he becomes conversational and casual.3.He uses the first person pronoun “I”t o stress individualism, and oral language to acquire sympathy from the common reader.III. Sister Carrie by Theodore Dreiser:1. Theme: The author invented the success of Carrie and the downfall of Hurstwood out of an inevitable and natural judgment, because the fittest can survive in a competitive, amoral society according to the social Darwinism.2. The character analysis of Carrie: She follows the right direction to a pursuit of the American dream, and the circumstances and her desire for a better life direct to thesuccessful goal. But she is not contented, because with wealth and fame, she still finds herself lonely. She is a product of the society, a realization of the theory of the survival of the fittest.3. The character analysis of Hurstwood: He is a negative evidence of the theory of the survival of the fittest. Because he is still conventional and can not throw away the social morals, he is not fitted to live in New York.III. F. Scott Fitzgerald and his The Great Gatsby1. Theme: Gatsby is American Everyman. His extraordinary energy and wealth make him pursue the dream. His death in the end points at the truth about the withering of the American Dream. The spiritual and moral sterility that has resulted from the withered American Dream is fully revealed in the article. However, although he is defeated, the dream has gave Gatsby a dignity and a set of qualities. His hope and belief in the promise of future makes him the embodiment of the values of the incorruptible American Dream .2. The character analysis of Gatsby: Gatsby is great, because he is dignified and ennobled by his dream and his mythic vision of life. He has the desire to repeat the past, the desire for money, and the desire for incarnation of unutterable vision on this material earth. For Gatsby, Daisy is the soul of his dreams. He believe he can regain Daisy and romantically rebels of time. Although he has the wealth that can match with the leisured class, he does not have their manners. His tragedy lies in his possession of a naive sense and chivalry.IV. Ernest Hemingway’s artistic features:1. The Hemingway code heroes and grace under pressure:They have seen the cold world ,and for one cause, they boldly and courageously face the reality. They has an indestructiblespirit for his optimistic view of life. Whatever is the result is, the are ready to live with grace under pressure. No matter how tragic the ending is, they will never be defeated. Finally, they will be prevail because of their indestructible spirit and courage.2. The iceberg technique:Hemingway believe that a good writer does not need to reveal every detail of a character or action. The one-eighth the is presented will suggest all other meaningful dimensions of the story. Thus, Hemingway’s lang uage is symbolic and suggestive.V. The character analysis of Emily in A Rose for Emily:Emily is a symbol of old values, standing for tradition, duty and past glory. But she is also a victim to all those she cares and embrace. The source of Emily’s strang eness is from her born pride and self-esteem, the domineering behavior of her father and the betrayal of her lover. Barricaded in her house, she has frozen the past to protect her dreams. Her life is tragic because the defiance of the community, her refusal to accept the change and her extreme pride have pushed her to abnormality and insanity.。

英美文学课件

英美文学课件

Ulysess
• • • • • (James Joyce): Centers on Jun 16, 1904. The three characters’ past experiences and inner world are thoroughly presented through the skill of stream-of-consciousness, including free association, recalling, thoughts, and description of vivid details. • Bloom, Molly, Stephen
• Round character, flat character (E.M. Forster Aspects of the Novel) • Flat character: built around “a single idea or quality” and thus lack of complexity; he or she doesn’t change in the course of the story • Round character: complex and usu. encounters conflict and is changed by it.
• (4) plot: the organization of interrelated events and characters designed by the author • What makes a plot move is “conflict”---- the opposition of characters/struggle of opposing forces • Climax: the point at which a crisis is reached, one opposing force overcomes the other, and finally conflict is resolved. • Plot development: Exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, denouement/resolution

literature 英美文学

literature 英美文学

Lewis Carrol
• Charles Lutwidge Dodgson查尔斯· 路德维希· 道 奇森
He was born on 27th Jan,1832, England Cheshire holden area 英格兰柴郡霍尔顿区.He was a writer and photographer .The main work is Alice's Adventures in Wonderland .
Sentimentalism 感 伤 主 义
• the middle and later decades of the 18th
Sentimentalism came into being as a result of a bitter discontent on the part of certain enlighteners in social reality. It is a pejorative term to describe false or super facial emotion, assumed feeling, self-regarding postures of grief and pain. In literature, it denotes "pathetic indulgence".
Prose:
the scripture legend Ancient prose: the history books
• • • Modern prose:
narrative prose
lyrical prose
the philosophical essays
Novel • Periods: the pre-qin Dynasties Modern the Tang and Qing
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What is literature???
• Literature is a term used to describe written or spoken material. Broadly speaking, "literature" is used to describe anything from creative writing to more technical or scientific works, but the term is most commonly used to refer to works of the creative imagination, including works of poetry, drama, fiction, and
Features • pluralistic 多元化
ቤተ መጻሕፍቲ ባይዱ

• •
manifestations varied
Individualistic conflicting
表现形式多样
个人主义
矛盾
Representatives:
Robert Frost
罗伯特· 弗罗斯特(Robert Lee Frost,1874年3月 26日-1963年1月29日),美国诗人,曾四度获得 普利策奖。1874年生于美国西部的旧金山,16岁 开始学写诗,20岁时正式发表第一首诗歌。弗罗斯 特的诗可分分两大类:抒情短诗和戏剧性较强的叙 事诗,两者都脍炙人口。这些诗形象而生动,具有 很强的感染力,深受各层次的读者欢迎。主要作品 有《雪晚林边歇马》(Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening)、《美景易逝》(Nothing Gold Can Stay)、《荒野》(Desert Places)等。 1963年1月29日,弗罗斯特在波士顿去世。
Lewis Carrol
• Charles Lutwidge Dodgson查尔斯· 路德维希· 道 奇森
He was born on 27th Jan,1832, England Cheshire holden area 英格兰柴郡霍尔顿区.He was a writer and photographer .The main work is Alice's Adventures in Wonderland .
Famous figures:
Date:26th April,1564 Birthplace: England (Stratfordon-Avon斯特拉特福 )
• Role:剧作家,诗人,演员
•Shakespeare
Major works:
Others’ remarks:
• A cultural phenomenon, a kind of myth. • Produced an astonishing variety of masterpieces, including history plays, comedies,fantasies,tragedies . • A genius who was fortunate in that he was born at exactly the right time . • Each of his plays has its own individuality . • Every linguistic technique seems to be found Shakespeare .
Chinese literature
Poetry:
• the Book of songs YueFu Rhythm poetry Song lyrics Modern poetry
• • • • • • •
Goose Luo Bingwang (626?-684) Goose, Goose, Goose, Hi! You with a long-crooked neck sing to the sky, Floating on green water by feathers in white, With red-webbed feet stirring in blue dye
Contents
• Chinese literature
• American literature
• British literature
《 春秋 》 《 史记 》 《 诗经 》 《 书经 》 《 易经 》 《 礼记 》 《 大学 》 《 中庸 》 《 论语 》 《 孟子 》
The Spring and Autumn Annals Historical Records The Book of Songs The Book of History The Book of Changes The Book of Rites The Great Learning The Doctrine of the Mean The Analects of Confucius The Mencius
Romanticism 浪 漫 主 义
• the end of 18th to the middle of 19th Romanticism is the artistic movement of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, which was concerned with the expression of the individual's feeling and emotions. The movement is partly a revolt against aristocratic social and political norms of the Age of Enlightenment and a reaction against the scientific rationalization of nature. It stresses strong emotion as a source of aesthtic experience. Besides, Romanticism emphasizes intuition and imagination.
major works
雪夜林边小驻
林间空地
未 曾 选 择 的 路
Mark Twain
Samuel Langhorne Clemens 萨缪尔· 兰 亨· 克莱门(November 30, 1835 – April 21, 1910),well known by his pen name Mark Twain, was an American author and humorist. Twain is noted for his novels The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn 《哈 克贝利· 费恩历险记》(1884), which has been called "the Great American Novel", and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer《汤 姆· 索亚历险记》 (1876). He is extensively quoted. Twain was a friend to presidents, artists, industrialists, and European royalty.
British literature •
Humanism 人 文 主 义
• Sentimentalism 感 伤 主 义
Romanticism 浪 漫 主 义

Humanism 人 文 主 义
• 14th century Humanism is the essence of
the Renaissance. (文艺复兴)It emphasizes the dignity of human later. Writers use foreshadowing of the present life. Humanists voiced their beliefs that man was the center of the universe and man did not only have the right to enjoy the beauty of the present life, but had the ability to perfect himself and to perform wonders.
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
• Reared in the South, Huck believes that slaves belong to their rightful owners, yet in his honest gratitude toward his friend, Jim, he helps him escape his slavery. Huck could not bear to cheat the three innocent girls, but he does not hesitate to steal food when he is hungry. As one literary critic said, "Huck seems to have all the little vices, but also possesses all the important virtues."
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Blank verse无韵诗 elegiac挽歌的 secular长期的 stride跨过 fatalistic宿命论的 setting bards吟游诗人 mingle embody具体表达 lyrical adj.抒情的 epigram n.讽刺短诗 rhymed couplet iambic抑扬格诗 prosody诗体论;作诗法;韵律学
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