美国文学-名词解释.doc

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1、美国文学1. 殖民地时期及独立革命战争时期的美国文学Philip Freneau(菲利普弗瑞诺)(1)He was considered as the “Poet of the American revolution” as the most outstanding poet in America of the 18th century. (2)He was a satirist, a bitter polemicist. (3)He wrote many poems encouraging revolution and encouraging the glory that would be

2、won by overcoming the British.The Wild Honey Suckle 野金银花The Indian Burying Ground 印第安人的殡葬地The British Ship英国囚船The Rising Glory of America 美洲光辉的兴起(1)The Wild Honey Suckle is Freneaus best lyric (2)It anticipated the 19thcentury use of simple nature imagery.The Indian Burying Ground anticipated romant

3、ic primitivism and the celebration of the “Noble Savage”.Thomas Jefferson(托马斯杰弗逊)The Declaration of Independence独立宣言(1)The Declaration of Independence was adopted July 4, 1776. (2)It not only announced the birth of a new nation, but also expounded a philosophy of human freedom. (3)It lists 13 cruelt

4、ies committed by the King of Britain. (4)The famous lines are: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”(5) Thomas Jeffersons thought was inspired by the thoughts

5、 of John Locke.2. 浪漫主义时期的美国文学Calvinism(加尔文主义)(1)Calvinism refers to the religious teachings of John Calvin and his followers. (2) Calvin taught that only certain persons, the elect, were chosen by God to be saved, and these could be saved only by Gods grace. (3) Calvinism forms the basis for the doc

6、trines and practices of the Huguenots, Puritans, Presbyterians, and the Reformed churches.American Romanticism(美国浪漫主义)(1) American Romanticism is one of the most important periods in the history of American literature. (2) It was a rebellion against the objectivity of rationalism. For romantics, the

7、 feelings ,intuitions and emotions were more important than reason and common sense. They emphasized individualism, placing the individual against the group. They affirmed the inner life of the self, and cherished strong interest in the past, the wild, the remote, the mysterious and the strange. The

8、y stressed the element “Americanness” in their works. (3)It started with the publication of Washington Irvings The Sketch Book and ended with Walt Whitmans Leaves of Grass. (4) Being a period of the great flowering of American literature, it is also called “the American Renaissance.” (5) American Ro

9、manticists include such literary figures as Washington Irving, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, William Cullen Bryant, Henry Wordsworth Longfellow, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Edgar Allan Poe, Herman Melville, Walt Whitman and some others.Transcendentalism(超验主义)(1) Transcendentalism refers to the

10、religious and philosophical doctrines of Ralph Waldo Emerson and others in New England in the middle 1800s, which emphasized the importance of individual inspiration and intuition, the Oversoul, and Nature. Other concepts that accompanied Transcendentalism include the idea that nature is ennobling a

11、nd the idea that the individual is divine and, therefore, selfreliant. (2)New England Transcendentalism is the product of a combination of native American Puritanism and European Romanticism.Free verse(自由体诗歌)(1)Free verse means the rhymed or unrhymed poetry composed without paying attention to conve

12、ntional rules of meter.(2) Free verse was originated by a group of French poets of the late 19th century. (3)Their purpose was to free themselves from the restrictions of formal metrical patterns and to recreate instead the free rhythms of natural speech. (4)Walt Whitmans Leaves of Grass is, perhaps

13、, the most notable example.Symbol(象征) (1) Symbol means an act, a person, a thing, or a spectacle that stands for something else, usually something less palpable than the named symbol. (2) The relationship between the symbol and its referent is not often one of simple equivalence. Allegorical symbols

14、 usually express a neater equivalence with what they stand for than the symbols found in modern realistic fiction.Theme(主题)(1) Theme means the unifying point or general idea of a literary work. (2) It provides an answer to such questions as “What is the work about?”(3)Each literary work carries its

15、own theme or themes. For example, King Lear has many themes, among which are blindness and madness.3. 现实主义与自然主义时期的美国文学American Naturalism (美国自然主义)(1) The American Naturalists accepted the more negative interpretation of Darwins evolutionary theory and used it to account for the behavior of those cha

16、racters in literary works who were regarded as more or less complex combinations of inherited attributes, their habits conditioned by social and economic forces.(2) American Naturalism is evolved from realism when the authors tone in writing becomes less serious and less sympathetic but more ironic and more pessimistic. It is no more than a gloomy philosophical approach to reality, or to human

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