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英国文学名词解释大全(整理版)

英国文学名词解释大全(整理版)
英国文学名词解释大全(整理版)

名词解释

1.Epic(史诗)(appeared in the the Anglo-Saxon Period )

It is a narrative of heroic action, often with a principal hero, usually mythical in its content, grand in its style, offering inspiration and ennoblement within a particular culture or national tradition.

A long narrative poem telling about the deeds of great hero and reflecting the values of the society from which it originated.

Epic is an extended narrative poem in elevated or dignified language, like Homer’s Iliad & Odyssey. It usually celebrates the feats of one or more legendary or traditional heroes. The action is simple, but full of magnificence.

Today, some long narrative works, like novels that reveal an age & its people, are also called epic.

E.g. Beowulf (the pagan(异教徒),secular(非宗教的) poetry)Iliad 《伊利亚特》,Odyssey《奥德赛》Paradise Lost 《失乐园》,The Divine Comedy《神曲》

2.Romance (传奇)(Anglo-Norman feudal England)

?Romance is any imaginative literature that is set in an idealized world and that deals with heroic adventures and battles between good characters and villains or monsters.

?Originally, the term referred to a medieval (中世纪) tale dealing with the love and adventures of kings, queens, knights, and ladies, and including supernatural happenings.

Form:long composition, in verse, in prose

Content:description of life and adventures of a noble hero

Character:a knight, a man of noble birth, skilled in the use of weapons; often described as riding forth to seek adventures, taking part in tournaments(骑士比武), or fighting for his lord in battles; devoted to the church and the king ?Romance lacks general resemblance to truth or reality.

?It exaggerates the vices of human nature and idealizes the virtues.

?It contains perilous (dangerous) adventures more or less remote from ordinary life.

?It lays emphasis on supreme devotion to a fair lady.

①The Romance Cycles/Groups/Divisions

Three Groups

●matters of Britain Adventures of King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table (亚瑟王和他的圆桌骑士)

●matters of France Emperor Charlemagne and his peers

●matters of Rome Alexander the Great and the attacks of Troy

Le Morte D’Arthur (亚瑟王之死)

②Class Nature (阶级性) of the Romance

Loyalty to king and lord was the theme of the romances, as loyalty was the corner-stone(the most important part基石)of feudal morality.

The romances were composed not for the common but for the noble, of the noble, and by the poets patronized (supported 庇护,保护)by the noble.

3. Alliteration(押头韵): a repeated initial(开头的) consonant(协调,一致) to successive(连续的) words.

e.g. 1.To his kin the kindest, keenest for praise.

2.Sing a song of southern singer

4. Understatement(低调陈述)(for ironical humor)

not troublesome: very welcome

need not praise: a right to condemn

5. Chronicle《编年史》(a monument of Old English prose)

6. Ballads (民谣)(The most important department of English folk literature )

①Definition:

A ballad is a narrative poem that tells a story, and is usually meant to be sung or recited in musical form.

An important stream of the Medieval folk literature

②Features of English Ballads

1. The ballads are in various English and Scottish dialects.

2. They were created collectively and revised when handed down from mouth to mouth.

3. They are mainly the literature of the peasants, and give an outlook of the English common people in feudal society.

③Stylistic (风格上)Features of the Ballads

1. Composed in couplets (相连并押韵的两行诗,对句)or in quatrains (四行诗)known as the ballad stanza (民谣诗节), rhyming abab or abcb, with the first and third lines carrying 4 accented syllables (重读音节)and the second and fourth carrying 3.

2. Simple, plain language or dialect (方言,土语)of the common people with colloquial (口语的,会话的), vivid and, sometimes, idiomatic (符合当地语言习惯的)expressions

3. Telling a good story with a vivid presentation around the central plot.

4. Using a high proportion of dialogue with a romantic or tragic dimension (方面)to achieve dramatic effect.

④Subjects of English Ballads

1. struggle of young lovers

2. conflict between love and wealth

3. cruelty of jealousy

4. criticism of the civil war

5. matters of class struggle

7. Heroic couplet (英雄双韵体)(introduced by Geoffrey Chaucer)

Definition:the rhymed couplet of iambic pentameter; a verse form in epic poetry, with lines of ten syllables and five stresses, in rhyming pairs.

英雄诗体/英雄双韵体:用于史诗或叙事诗,每行十个音节,五个音部,每两行押韵。

8. couplet(两行诗,对句): Two consecutive lines of poetry that rhyme.A heroic couplet is an iambic pentameter couplet. During the Restoration period and the 18th C. it was a popular verse form.

9. iambic pentameter: A poetic line consisting of five V erse feet (penta- is from a Greek word meaning ―five‖), with each foot an iamb-- that is, an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable.

10. Rhyme(韵,押韵): the repetition (反复) of sounds in two or more words or phrases that appear close to each other in a poem.E .g . river/shiver, song/long

11. meter (格律) (属于Prosody ['pr?s?d?](韵文学;诗体学;(某语言的)韵律(学))): A generally regular

pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables(音节)in poetry.

The meters with two-syllable feet are:

Iambic (x /)(抑扬格): That time of year thou mayst in me behold

Trochaic (/ x)(扬抑格): Tell me not in mournful numbers

Spondaic (/ /)(扬扬格): Break, break, break/ On thy cold gray stones, O Sea!

The meters with three-syllable feet are:

anapestic (x x /)(抑抑扬格): And the sound of a voice that is still

dactylic (/ x x)(强弱格,长短格,扬抑抑格): This is the forest primeval, the murmuring

pines and the hemlock

(a trochee replaces the final dactyl)

12. Rhythm(节奏,韵律)(属于Prosody ['pr?s?d?](韵文学;诗体学;(某语言的)韵律(学))):refers

to the regular recurrence(反复,重现)of the accent(重读)or stress in poem or song.

e.g. the rhythm of day and night, the seasonal rhythm of the year, the beat of our hearts, and the rise and fall of sea tides, etc.

basic patterns of rhythms

a) Iambic foot (iamb['ai?mb])(抑扬格):an unstressed syllable followed by an stressed one as in the word ―prevent‖ or ―about‖

It’s time the children went to bed.

We’ll learn a poem by Keats.

b) Trochaic [tr?u'keiik] foot (trochee ['tr?uki:])(扬抑格):a stressed syllable followed by an unstressed one as in ―football‖, ―never‖, ―happy‖ or ―English‖

William Morris taught him English.

Double, double, toil and trouble.

Fire burns and cauldron bubble.

c) Anapestic foot (anapest [??n?pi:st] )(抑抑扬格): two unstressed syllables followed by a stressed one as in ―comprehend‖ or ―intervene‖

I’ve been working in China for forty years.

d) Dactylic foot (dactyl)(强弱格,长短格,扬抑抑格): a stressed syllable followed by two unstressed ones as in ―dangerous‖, ―cheerfully‖, ―yesterday‖ or ―merrily‖

13.Common line lengths:

number of feet per line

?one foot m onometer [m?'n?mit?] (rare)(单音部)

?two feet dimeter ['dimit?] (二步)

?three feet trimester ['trimit?](三步)

?four feet tetrameter [te'tr?mit?](四步)

?five feet pentameter [pen't?mit?](五步)

?six feet hexameter [hek's?mit?]

?seven feet heptameter [hep't?mit?] (rare)

?eight feet octameter [?k't?mit?] (rare)

14.Line patterns:

Couplet(相连并押韵的两行诗,对句): 2 lines rhyming with each other

? A heroic couplet is an iambic pentameter couplet.

Tercet ['t?:sit](三行押韵诗句,三拍子): 3 lines, terza rima (aba, bcb, cdc, ded)

Quatrain ['kw?trein](四行诗): 4 lines, ballad stanza (abcb)

Octave ['?kt?v, -,te?v](八行诗): 8 lines, ottava rima (abababcc)

Spenserian stanza (斯宾塞诗节): 9 lines (ababbcbcc) (The Faerie Queene(仙后))

Sonnet (十四行诗): 14 lines (Shakespearean: ababcdcdefefgg)

Example:

She walks in beauty, like the night

of cloudless climes and starry skies;

And all that’s best of dark and bright

Meet in her aspect and her eyes:

Thus mellow’d to that tender light

Which heaven to gaudy day denies

1. Foot and length: Iambic tetrameter

2. Rhyme (scheme): ababab

15.Humanism

1) Humanism is the essence of the Renaissance. According to humanists, human beings were glorious creatures capable of individual development in the direction of perfection and the world can be questioned, explored and enjoyed.

2) By emphasizing the dignity of human beings and the importance of the present life, in contrast to the medieval emphasis on God and contempt for the things of this world, they voiced their beliefs that man did not only have the right to pursue happiness of this life, but had the ability to perfect himself and to perform wanders.

16. Drama

1. Definition

?Drama is ―a composition in prose or verse, adapted to be acted upon a stage, in which a story is related by means of dialogue and action, and is represented with accompanying gesture, costume, and

scenery, as in real life.‖

2. The Development of Drama

1.Religious Period

1) Mystery plays presented stories from the Old and New Testament of the Bible.

?Creation of the World, the Fall, the Great Flood, Redemption, Final Judgment, etc.

?The birth of the Christ—child symbolized hope in the darkness of winter; Christ’s resurrection(复活)accorded with the earth’s renewal in spring, and the promise of harvest at

midsummer.

2) Miracle plays(奇迹剧)

?Dramatizing(将-改编成剧本)the lives and miracles of saints, or divine intervention (神的干预,介入) in human affairs, that is, stories from the lives of saints.

?Often focused on blessed virgin Mary

3) Morality plays (道德剧)

?Presenting stories containing abstract(抽象的)virtues and vices (美德和恶习)as characters.

?They were plays which had a moral message: Good and Evil fight for domination(统治)of the human soul.

?Everyman, the best example, is the story of a character representing mankind.

2. Artistic Period

The first Comedy, Ralph Roister Doister《拉尔夫·罗伊斯特·多伊斯特》written by the schoolmaster, Nicholas Udall between 1550 and 1553

The first English tragedy, Gorboduc written in 1561 by Thomas Sackville and Thomas Norton

3. Elements of drama

1. Plot (情节)

The structure of a play’s action, the order of the incidents, their arrangem ent and form.

2. Character(人物): the vital center of a play

How they look, what they say and in what manners they say; what they do and how their actions reveal who they are and what they represent

The human qualities are the most engaging feature.

3. Dialogue(对白)

Drama is described as ―persons moving about on stage using words.‖

Major functions of Dialogue: to advance the plot, to establish setting, and to reveal character.

4. Staging(舞台设计)

Things like positions of actors, nonverbal gestures and movements, scenic background, props and costumes, lighting and sound effects

5. Theme(主题): the central idea of the play.

4. Dramatic Terms

1. Script(脚本): the written work from which a drama isproduced. It contains stage directions and

Dialogue

2. Stage Directions(舞台指导): notes provided by the playwright to describe how something should be

presented or performed on stage

3. Monologue(独白): a long speech given by an actor

4. Soliloquy(独白): a speech given by a character who is alone (or thinks he is alone) on stage

5. Aside(旁白): a statement intended to be heard by the audience or by a single other character but not by all

the other characters on stage

6. Act(幕): a major division of a drama

7. Scene(场): a division of an act. A scene typically begins with the entrance of one or more characters and

ends with the exit of one or more characters.

https://www.wendangku.net/doc/598983403.html,edy(喜剧)(Drama form)

A play written chiefly to amuse its audience by appealing to a sense of superiority over the characters

depicted. A comedy will normally be closer to everyday life than a tragedy, and will explore common human failings rather than tragedy’s disastrous crimes. Its ending will usually be happy for the leading characters.

? E.g.(莎士比亚)Romantic Comedies(the overcoming the obstacle of love): As You Like It(皆大欢喜), A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Twelfth Night, & The Merchant of Venice(威尼斯商人)

18. Tragedy(Drama form)

?A serious play or novel representing the disastrous downfall of a central character, the protagonist. According to Aristotle, the purpose is to achieve a catharsis through incidents arousing pity and terror. The tragic effect usually depends on our awareness of admirable qualities in he protagonist, which are wasted terribly in the fated disaster.

? E.g. (莎士比亚)Great Tragedies(四大悲剧)(explores the faults/weaknesses of humans): Hamlet, Othello, King Lear& Macbeth

19. dramatic Romance (tragi-comedy)(悲喜剧)(莎士比亚)(Drama form):

?Romances focus on the separation and reunion of families rather than love and marriage.

?Endings were characterized by homecoming, recognition, reconciliation, and forgiveness.

?The romances are set in mythical worlds where supernatural and magic and unlikely coincidences are commonplace.

E.g. Pericles《波里克利斯》, Cymbeline《辛柏林》, The Winter’s Tale《冬天的故事》, The Tempest《暴

风雨》

20. Monologue(长篇独白)

?An extended speech uttered by one speaker, either to others or alone. Significant varieties include the dramatic monologue(a kind of poem in which the speaker is imagined to be addressing a silent audience), and the soliloquy(in which the speaker is supposed to be ―overheard(偷听,无意中听到)‖ while alone).

21. Soliloquy

?A dramatic speech delivered by one character speaking aloud while under the impression of being alone.

The soliloquist thus reveals his or her inner thoughts and feelings to the audience, either in supposed self-communion(自我反省)or in a consciously direct address(演说,演讲). It is also known as interior monologue.内心独白

22. The basic plot of the play (Freytag’s pyramid )

1. Exposition (阐述,讲解,说明): provides the background information needed to properly understand the story,

such as the protagonist, the antagonist, the basic conflict, and the setting.

2. Rising action(发展): during rising action, the basic internal(内部)conflict is complicated(复杂)by

the introduction of related secondary conflicts, including various obstacles that frustrate the protagonist's

attempt to reach his goal.

3. Climax(高潮): the turning point, which marks a change, for the better or the worse, in the protagonist’s

affairs. If the story is a comedy, things will have gone badly for the protagonist up to this point;

now, the tide, so to speak, will turn, and things will begin to go well for him or her. If the story is a

tragedy, the opposite state of affairs will ensue, with things going from good to bad for the

protagonist.

4. Falling action:during the falling action, or resolution, which is the moment of reversal(反向,倒转,转变,

颠倒)after the climax, the conflict between the protagonist and the antagonist unravels, with the

protagonist winning or losing against the antagonist. The falling action might contain a moment of

final suspense, during which the final outcome of the conflict is in doubt.

5. Dénouement, resolution, or catastrophe: comprises events between the falling action and the actual

end of the drama or narrative and thus serves as the conclusion of the story. Conflicts are resolved,

creating normality for the characters and a sense of catharsis, or release of tension and anxiety, for

the reader.

The comedy ends with a dénouement (a conclusion) in which the protagonist is better off than at the story's outset. The tragedy ends with a catastrophe in which the protagonist is worse off than at the beginning of the narrative.

In Shakespeare's tragedies, the dénouement is usually the death of one or more characters.

23. Dramatic irony (戏剧性讽刺)

Dramatic irony: the words or acts of a character may carry a meaning unperceived by the character but under-stood by the audience.

Examples of dramatic irony in Romeo and Juliet

?Before Romeo drinks the poison, he observes that Juliet looks as though she were alive.

?Romeo is cheerful because of a dream, but his h opes are quickly dashed by Balthasar’s news of Juliet’s death. 24. Blank V erse (无韵诗)

?Unrhymed lines of iambic pentameter. It is a very flexible English verse form which can attain rhetorical grandeur(雄伟,壮观)while echoing the natural rhythms of speech. It was first used by Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, and soon became a popular form for narrative and dramatic poetry. Marlowe, Shakespeare, Milton, Wordsworth, Tennyson, Stevens and Robert Frost are fond of this form.

25. Sonnet

A sonnet is a lyric poem comprising 14 rhyming lines of equal length: iambic pentameter in English, hendecasyllables [hen,dek?'sil?bl](十一音节)in Italian, and alexandrines.[??liɡ?zɑ:ndrain](亚历山大诗行)in French.

1. The Italian/Petrarchan(彼得拉克)sonnet

It is named after Francesco Petrarch (1304-1374), the Italian poet. The 14 lines break into an octave(or octet) of 2 quatrains, rhymed abbaabba(rhymed sometimes abbacddc or even abababab); and a sestet, usually rhymed cdecde or cdcdcd.

2. The English/Shakespearean sonnet

It was introduced into English poetry in the early 16th century by Sir Thomas Wyatt (1503-1542). It consists of 3 quatrains and a final couplet, rhyming abab cdcd efef gg.

An important variant is the Spenserian sonnet,which links the 3 quatrains by rhyme, rhyming abab bcbc cdcd ee.

(quatrain: 四行诗(每节四行,韵律一般为abab或abba))

26. Allegory(寓言)

?A story with a double meaning: a primary or surface meaning, and a secondary or under-the-surface meaning

?A story that can be read, understood and interpreted at two levels

Two levels of allegory

?One level examines the moral, philosophical and religious values and is represented by the Red Cross Knight, who stands for all Christians.

?The second level is the particular, which focuses on the political, social, and religious conflicts in the then English society.

27. Types of poetry

1) Narrative poetry

epic, romance, and ballad

The stress is on action,

e.g. to tell stories and describe actions;

2) Lyric poetry

Elegies ['el?d?i:](挽歌), odes(颂诗,颂歌), sonnets, epigraphs ['epiɡrɑ:f] (铭文, 碑文), etc.

To combine speech and song to express feelings in varying degrees of verbal(口头的,言语的)music.

28. essay(散文,随笔)

As a form of literature, the essay is a composition of moderate length, usually in prose, which deals in an easy way with the external conditions of a subject, and, in strictness, with that subject, only as it affects the writer.

1. Purpose:

Essays is intended for the ambitious Elizabethan and Jacobean youth of upper class, to tell them how to be efficient and make their way in public life.

2.Writing style:four prominent qualities:

preciseness, directness,

tenseness, forcefulness

3. Bacon’s essays

Bacon offers his views on a whole smorgasbord of topics ranging from Truth, Death, Adversity, Marriage & the Single Life, Love, Boldness, Superstition, Friendship, Health, Ambition, Y outh, Beauty to Anger & Fame.

4. Features of Bacon’s essays

Bacon’s essays a re the first example of that genre in English literature and have been recognized as an important landmark in the development of English prose. The essays are famous for the pithy aphoristic style, which he had defended in principle in The Advancement of Learning as proper for the expression of tentative opinions.

E.g. Essays ?培根论文集?“Of Studies”“Of Wisdom”“Of Death”“Of Friendship”“Of T ravel”, etc.

29. Metaphysical(形而上学,超自然,纯哲学) Poets

METAPHYSICAL POETS refer to a school of poets at the beginning of the 17th century England who wrote under the influence of John Donne. The works of the Metaphysical poets are characterized, generally speaking, by mysticism in content and fantasticality in form.

The most eminent poets are John Donne, George Herbert & Andrew Marwell.

30. Metaphysical Poetry

Metaphysical poetry is concerned with the whole experience of man, especially about love, romantic and sensual; about man's relationship with God, and about pleasure, learning and art.

Metaphysical poems are lyric poems of brief but intense meditations, characterized by the striking use of wit, irony and wordplay. Beneath the formal structure (of rhyme, metre and stanza) is the underlying structure of the poem’s argument. In ―To His Coy Mistress,‖ th e explicit argument (Marvell's request that the coy lady yield to his passion) is a stalking horse for the more serious argument about the transitoriness of pleasure.

Rise & Fall of Metaphysical Poetry

?Metaphysical poetry was rarely read in the 17th, 18th and early 19th century.

?In the late 19th century and early 20th century, there was a renewed interest in metaphysical poetry.

?The modernist poets T.S. Eliot, John Ransom and Allen Tate claimed their inf luence by John Donne. So John Donne became a cult figure in the early 20th century English-speaking countries.

31. Conceit (巧妙的词语;别出心裁的比喻)

A conceit is a figure of speech which makes an unusual and sometimes elaborately sustained comparison between

two dissimilar things.

Metaphysical conceit

This type of conceit draws upon a wide range of knowledge, and its comparisons are elaborately(苦心经营地,精巧地)rationalized.

For instance, Donne’s ―The Flea‖ compares a flea bite to the act of love; and in ―A V a lediction: Forbidding Mourning‖ separated lovers are likened to the legs of a compass, the leg drawing the circle eventually returning home to "the fixed foot."

32. Cavalier[,k?v?'l??] Poets(保皇党派诗人)

Cavalier poets are, more often than not, knights and squires, who side with the king against the parliament and the puritans in the English revolution. They mostly deal in short songs on the flitting joys of the day, but underneath their lightheartedness lies some foreboding of impending doom.

? 1. Writing on the courtly themes of loyalty, love, and beauty, the cavalier poets produced finely finished verses.

? 2. The common factor that binds the cavaliers together is their use of direct and colloquial language expressive of a highly individual personality, and their enjoyment of the casual, the amateur(外行的,业余的), the affectionate(充满深情的)poem written by the way.

? 3. They are ―cavalier‖ in the sense, not only of being Royalists, but in the sense that they distrust the over-earnest, the too intense.

? 4. The leading cavalier poets were Robert Herrick, Richard Lovelace, Sir John Suckling, and Thomas Carew.

Most were admirers of Ben Jonson.

33. neoclassicism(新古典主义)

–It found its artistic models in the classical literature of the ancient Greek and Roman writers like Homer, Virgil, Horace, Ovid.

–A partial reaction against the fires of passion blazed in the late Renaissance, especially in the Metaphysical poetry.

--- Prose should be precise, direct, smooth andflexible.

--- Poetry should be lyrical(抒情的), epical(叙事的), didactic(教导的), satiric or dramatic, and each class should be guided by its own principles.

--- Neo-classical writers are: John Dryden, Alexander Pope, Jonathan Swift, Joseph Addison, Richard Steele, Henry Fielding, Samuel Johnson, Oliver Goldsmith, Edward Gibbon, etc.

34. Bourgeoisie[,b???wɑ:'zi:](中产阶级)(the 18th Century Age of Bourgeoisie

35. Enlightenment Movement(启蒙运动)

Under the influence of scientific discoveries (Newton) and flourishing of philosophies, French enlightenment started.

Enlightenment thinkers such as V oltaire伏尔泰, Montesquieu孟德斯鸠, Locke洛克, Hobbes霍布斯, and Rousseau卢梭believed that the world was an object of study and that people could understand and control the world by means of reason and empirical(以观察或实验为依据的)research.

?an intellectual movement beginning in France and then spread throughout Europe

? a continuation of Renaissance in belief in the possibility of human perfection through education

?the guiding princ iple or slogan(标语,标号)is Ration(定量?)/Reason, natural right and equality (American Independence War in 1776; French Revolution in 1789)

?Ration became standard for measurement of everything.

?In religion, it was against superstition(迷信), intolerance(心胸狭窄), and dogmatism(教条主义,独断,武断); in politics, it was against tyranny(暴政,苛政); and in society, it was against prejudice, ignorance, inequality, and any obstacles to the realization of an individual’s full intellectual and physical well-being. At the same time, they advocated(提倡)universal education. In their opinion, human beings were limited, dualistic (二元的), imperfect, and yet capable of rationality(合理性,合理的行为见解)and perfection through education.

The great enlighteners:

?Alexander Pope,

?Joseph Addison,

?Jonathan Swift, and

?Samuel Johnson

36. Prose

1) Biography(传记): James Boswell’s Life of Samuel Johnson

2) Journalism/Periodicals(期刊): Steels and Addison’s literary journals

3) Realist novel(现实主义小说): bourgeois in essence

--- subject matter,

--- readership,

--- didactic purpose,

--- form (prose, comic epic);

37. Gothic novel (from mid-18th century)

--- Devoted to tales of horror and the darker

supernatural forces

--- Derives its name from similarities to

Medieval(中古的,中世纪) Gothic architecture

--- Gothic Horror: A thriller designed not only to

terrify or frighten the audience, but to convey a

sense of moral failure or spiritual darkness.

--- The Gothic in England begins with The Castle of Otranto in 1760, by Horace Walpole, which emphasized the supernatural mixed with the grotesque in a medieval setting.

--- Anne Radcliffe in Mysteries of Udolpho perfected the sentimental gothic in the 1790s.

--- Frankenstein(1817) by Mary Shelley

---influenced the later generations: Coleridge, Keats, Dickens, Bronte sisters, etc.

38. Sentimentality literature伤感文学

--- It was a partial reaction against that cold, logic rationalism which dominated people’s life since the last decades of the 17th century.

--- A ready sympathy and an inward pain for the misery of others became part of accepted social morality and ethics.

--- started by Samuel Richardson’s Pamela

and Clarissa

--- represented in novel form by Laurence Sterne’s A

Sentimental Journey through France and

Italy (1768)

--- represented in poetry by ―The Graveyard School‖:

Thomas Gray, Edward Y oung

--- emphasizing the emotion/heart instead of ration

---gradually merged into Romanticism

39. Satire: A literary manner which blends humor with criticism for the purpose of instruction or the improvement of

humanity.

The necessary ingredients

--- Humor

--- Criticism, either general criticism of humanity or human

nature or specific criticism of an individual or group.

--- Some kind of moral voice: simply mocking or criticism

is not ―satire.‖

The best and most representative works are found in those written by Pope and Swift.

Alexander Pope

?Mock epic: ―The Rape of the Lock‖

?Literary Satire: ―The Dunciad‖

?Jonathan Swift

?―A Modest Proposal‖

?Gulliver’s Travels

40. The Realistic Novel

The English middle-class people were ready to cast away the aristocratic romance and to create a new and realistic literature of their own to express their ideas and serve their interests.

The whole life in its ordinary aspects of the middle class became the major source of interest in literature.

Major novelists: Daniel Defoe, Samuel Richardson, Henry Fielding, Laurence Sterne, Oliver Goldsmith, Tobias George Smollett…

41. Elements of Fiction

1. Theme: the central idea or statement about life that unifies and controls the total work

Identifying the theme

?To avoid confusing a work’s theme with its subject or situation.

?The statement of theme does the work full justice.

?It is fully and completely supported by the work’s other elements.

?The title of the work often su ggests a particular focus or emphasis for the reader’s attention.

2. Plot :The action in fiction, the arrangement of events that make up a story.

?Plots turn on a conflict, or struggle between opposing forces, i.e. how one action leads into another.

?Structure is the design or form of the action, i.e. patterns and the shape of content.

?The classic pattern: exposition, complication, crisis, falling action, and resolution

3. Character:Characters are imaginary people that writers create.

?Concerned with being able to establish the personalities of the characters and to identify their intellectual, emotional, and moral qualities.

?Concerned with the techniques to create and develop characters.

?Concerned with whether the characters are credible and convincing.

The major, or central, character of the plot is the protagonist (主角).

The opponent, the character against whom the protagonist struggles or contends, is the antagonist (反角).

Flat characters are those who embody or represent a single characteristic, trait, or idea, or at most a

very limited number of such qualities. (type characters, one-dimensional characters)

Round characters are just the opposite. They embody a number of qualities and traits, and are

complex multi-dimensional characters of considerable intellectual and emotional depth.

Most importantly, they have the capacity to grow and change.

4. Setting

Setting is both the physical locale that frames the action and

the time of day or year, the climatic conditions, and the

historical period during which the action takes place.

The functions of setting:

?Setting as a background for action.

?Setting as antagonist

?Setting as means of creating appropriate atmosphere.

?Setting as a means of revealing character.

?Setting as a means of reinforcing theme.

5. Point of view

The method of narration that determines the position, or angle of vision from which the story is told.

Commonly used points of view

?Third-person point of view omniscient

?Third-person point of view limited

?First-person point of view

6. Language and style

Style consists of diction (the individual words an

author chooses) and syntax (the arrangement of those

words) , as well as such writing devices as rhythm

and sound, allusion, ambiguity, irony, paradox, and

figurative language.

Each writer’s style is unique. It constitutes his

―signature‖ in a way that sets his work apart.

42. Methods of Characterization

?Characterization through the use of names.

?Characterization through appearance.

?Characterization by the author.

?Characterization through dialogue.

?Characterization through action.

43. Diction(措辞): the type and quality of the individual words that comprise an author’s basic vocabulary.

?The denotative meaning of words,

?The connotative meaning;

?The degree of concreteness or abstractness;

?The degree of allusiveness;

?the parts of speech they represent;

?The length and construction;

?The level of usage they reflect (standard or nonstandard; formal, informal, or colloquial);

?The imagery they contain;

?The figurative devices (simile, metaphor, personification, etc) they embody;

44. Syntax['s?n,t?ks] 句法;句法规则〔分析〕:

The ways the author arranges words into phrases, clauses, and finally whole sentences to achieve particular effects.

?The length—whether they are short, spare, and

economical or long and involved;

?The form—whether they are simple, compound, or

complex;

45. Construction of sentence

?Loose sentences that follow the normal subject-verb-object pattern, stating their main idea near the beginning in the form of an independent clause,

?Periodic sentences工整句that deliberately(故意地,慎重地)withhold(扣留,保留,抑制)or suspend(暂停,终止,悬,吊)the completion of the main idea until the end of

the sentence,

?Balanced sentences(对杖句)in which two similar or antithetical ideas are balanced. 46. Historical novel

?A novel where fictional characters take part in actual historical events and interact with real people from the past.

?Examples:

?Sir Walter Scott: Ivanhoe, Waverly

?James Fennimore Cooper:

The Last of the Mohicans

47. Romanticism

?politically: a reaction against industrial revolution and the social system

?literarily: a reaction against Neo-classicism; concerned with imagination and personal feeling instead of the power of ration / reason

?philosophically: It stresses individualism(个人主义)instead of social order.

①Artistic feature

verse form: lyrics, odes(颂,赋), sonnets, ballads

diction(措辞): fresh, simple, commonly used colloquial language

themes: the beauty and mysticism of nature; simple, common rural life; facts and ideas of revolution ?浪漫主义是对新古典主义的反驳:诗歌内容不再是对现实的反映或道德说教,而是诗人内心涌出的真实感情;诗歌语言不是模仿经典作家去追求高雅精致,而是要贴近普通人的日常用语。浪漫主义诗人崇尚自然,主张返朴归真。浪漫主义是一个比较笼统的概念,每个诗人各有其特征。

②Definition

?Romanticism: a movement in art and literature in the 18th and 19th centuries in revolt against Neoclassicism of the previous centuries.

?Friedrich Schlegel defined it as ―literature depicting emotional matter in an imaginative form.‖

?Victor Hugo’s phrase "liberalism in literat ure" is also apt.

③Characteristics

?Imagination, emotion, and freedom are the focal points of romanticism. Any list of its particular characteristics includes subjectivity and an emphasis on individualism; spontaneity; freedom from rules; solitary life rather than social life; beliefs that imagination is superior to reason and devotion to beauty; love of and worship of nature;

and fascination with the past, especially the myths and mysticism of the middle ages.

④English romantic poets:

William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and John Keats

American romantic poets:

Ralph W. Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Edgar Allen Poe, Henry D. Thoreau, Herman Melville, Walt Whitman

⑤Romantic Literature

a negative attitude toward the existing conditions of political, economic, and social life under the firm rule of the bourgeoisie, though such an attitude came from writers of quite different class stands:

--- some speaking for the feudal aristocracy;

--- some for the patriarchal peasantry;

--- some for the new industrial proletariat.

?Lakers/ Lake Poets (The Passive Romantic Poets): Wordsworth, Coleridge, Southey

?–criticized industrial capitalism by advocating the return to the patriarchal society of the past

?Active Romantic Poets: Byron, Shelley, Keats

?--attacked the tyranny and exploitation of both feudalism and capitalism and called on the oppressed people to rise against their earthly tyrants

The conflict between the two camps was not simply one of personal hatred, but in a way stood for the broad social struggle between the landed aristocracy and the oppressed multitude of the English people.

48. Differences between the 18th & the 19th century; between Neoclassicism & Romanticism:

?reason vs passion

?reason vs imagination

?commercial vs natural

?industrial vs pastoral(田园生活的,农村生活的)

?present vs past

?society vs individual

?order and stability(稳定,稳固)vs freedom

?decorative expression vs simple and spontaneous(天真的,率性的,自发的,无意识的)expression

49. Lakers/Lake Poets:

(Wordsworth, Coleridge, Southey) radical youth; conservative(保守的,传统的)old age

?--had radical inclinations in their youth but later turned conservative and received favors from the great.

?–criticized industrial capitalism (资本主义)by advocating the return to the patriarchal society (男权社会) of the past

?--attacked by Byron

文学名词解释 整理版教学文稿

1、潜在写作:指17年和文革期间,许多被剥夺了正常写作权利的作家们的创作,包括他们当时不能发表的作品和本无发表预期的日记、书信等。如丰子恺的《缘缘堂续笔》,食指的诗,沈从文的家书等。“潜在写作”的相对概念是公开发表的文学作品,两者一起构成了时代文学的整体。潜在写作(又称为地下写作):为了说明当代文学创作的复杂性,即有许多被剥夺了正常写作权力的作家在哑声的时代里,依然保持着对文学的挚爱和创作的热情,他们写作了许多在当时客观环境下不能公开发表的文学作品。一种是作家们自觉的创作,如丰子恺写的《缘缘堂续笔》和食指的诗;另一种是作家们在非常时期不自觉的写作,如日记、书信、读书笔记等。 三突出原则:指的是“文革时期”特定的文学创作原则。根据江青的指示,开始由于会泳在《让文艺舞台永远成为宣传毛泽东思想的阵地》一文中提出的,“在所有人物中突出正面人物来,在正面人物中突出主要英雄人物来,在主要英雄人物中突出中心人物来”的三突出创作原则。后来有姚文元改定为“在所有人物中突出正面人物,在正面人物中突出英雄人物,在英雄人物中突出主要英雄人物”。这种创作原则是企图严格维护的社会政治等级在文学结构上的体现。 2、反思文学:是继“伤痕文学”之后出现的文学现象,因表现出对于社会历史痛定思痛的反思特点而得名。其把揭露与批判的文学承担前溯至五十年代甚至更前,具有较深邃的历史纵深感和较大的思想容量。但理想主义的理性色彩,使反思文学失去了“伤痕文学”刻骨铭心的忏悔与绝望,在某种程度上回避了揭露文化大革命的灾难性实质。代表作家作品有:茹志鹃《剪辑错了的故事》,王蒙的《布礼》、《蝴蝶》,方之的《内奸》等。 3.朦胧派:一九八○年开始,诗坛出现了一个新的诗派,被称为“朦胧派”。以舒婷、顾城、北岛等为先驱者的一群青年诗人,从一九七九年起,先后大量发表了一种新风格的诗。这种诗,有三四十年没有出现在中国的文学报刊上了。最初,他们的诗还仿佛是在继承现代派或后现代派的传统,但很快地他们开拓了新的疆域,走得更远,自成一个王国。朦胧派诗人无疑

英国文学名词解释

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美国文学名词解释

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美国文学史复习提纲 名词解释

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现代文学名词解释

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英国文学名词解释及课后答案

名词解释 Renaissance:The Renaissance indicates a revival of classical (Greek and Roman) arts and sciences in Europe beginning in the 14th century and extending to the 17th century, marking the transition from the medieval to the modern world. Sonnet: A fourteen-line lyric poem, usually written in rhymed iambic pentameter and most often in one of the two rhyme schemes: the Italian(or Petrarchan) or Shakes pearean ( or English ). A sonnet is a 14-line poem with a specific rhyme scheme and meter .It has two main forms :the shakespearean sonnet and the Italian sonnet. Shakespeare Sonnet: a lyric with three quatrains and one couplet, rhyming ababcdcdefefgg, consisting of 14 lines, usually in iambic pentameter restricted to a definition rhyme scheme. A Shakespearean sonnet consists of fourteen lines written in iambic pentameter, in which a pattern of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable is repeated five times. The rhyme scheme in a Shakespearean sonnet is a-b-a-b, c-d-c-d, e-f-e-f, g-g; the last two lines are a rhyming couplet. Enlightenment: the movement was a furtherance of the Renaissance of the 15th and 16th centries, a progressive intellectual movement, reason (rationality), equality & science (the 18th century) The Age of Enlightenment (also called the Age of Reason) refers to the 18th_ century England.The Enlightenment was a progressive intellectual movement.It celebrated reason (rationality), equality, science and human beings’ ability to perfect themselves and their society and it aimed to enlighten the whole world with the light of modern ,philosophical and artistic ideas. Romanticism: it flourished in literature, philosophy, music, and art in Western culture during most if the nineteenth century, beginning as a revolt against classicism. In it, emotion over reason, spontaneous emotion, a change from the outer world of social civilization to the inner world of the human spirit, poetry should be free from all rules, imagination, nature, commonplace. Dramatic monologue: A kind of narrative poem in which one character speaks to one or more listeners whose replies are not given in poem. The occasion is a crucial one in the speaker’s life, and the dramatic monologue reveals the speaker’s personality as

美国文学名词解释

Allegory is a narrative that serves as an extended metaphor. Allegories are written in the form of fables, parables, poems, stories, and almost any other style or genre. The main purpose of an allegory is to tell a story that has characters, a setting, as well as other types of symbols, that have both literal and figurative meanings. One well-known example of an allegory is Dante’s The Divine Comedy.In Inferno, Dante is on a pilgrimage to try to understand his own life, but his character also represents every man who is in search of his purpose in the world. Alliteration is a pattern of sound that includes the repetition of consonant sounds. The repetition can be located at the beginning of successive words or inside the words. Poets often use alliteration to audibly represent the action that is taking place. Aside is an actor’s speech, directed to the audience, that is not supposed to be heard by other actors on stage. An aside is usually used to let the audience know what a character is about to do or what he or she is thinking. Asides are important because they increase an audience's involvement in a play by giving them vital information pertaining what is happening, both inside of a character's mind and in the plot of the play. Gothic is a literary style popular during the end of the 18th century and the beginning of the 19th. This style usually portrayed fantastic tales dealing with horror, despair, the grotesque and other “dark” subjects. Gothic literature was named for the apparent influence of the dark gothic architecture of the period on the genre. Also, many of these Gothic tales took places in such “gothic” surroundings. Other times, this story of darkness may occur in a more everyday setting, such as the quaint house where the man goes mad fro m the "beating" of his guilt in Edgar Allan Poe's “The Tell-Tale Heart.”In essence, these stories were romances, largely due to their love of the imaginary over the logical, and were told from many different points of view. CATHARSIS is an emotional discharge that brings about a moral or spiritual renewal or welcome relief from tension and anxiety. According to Aristotle, catharsis is the marking feature and ultimate end of any tragic artistic work. IMAGERY: A common term of variable meaning, imagery includes the "mental pictures" that readers experience with a passage of literature. It signifies all the sensory perceptions referred to in a poem, whether by literal description, allusion, simile, or metaphor. Surrealism is an artistic movement doing away with the restrictions of realism and verisimilitude that might be imposed on an artist. In this movement, the artist sought to do away with conscious control and instead respond to the irrational urges of the subconscious mind. From this results the hallucinatory, bizarre, often nightmarish quality of surrealistic paintings and writings. Sample surrealist writers include Frank O'Hara, John Ashberry, and Franz Kafka.

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