《专八美国文学》word版
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美国文学主要分为四个时期:㈠The Literature Around the Revolution of Independence(独立革命前后的文学)。
一.殖民地时期(The Literature of Colonial American Colonial Period 1607---1775)1、约翰·史密斯(John Smith):早期英国殖民者、探险家,在弗吉尼亚建立了第一个永久英国殖民地。
被誉为美国文学的第一位作家。
(注:Jamestown, Virginia, was the first permanent English settlement in North America on May, 1607.)代表作:《关于弗吉尼亚的真实叙述》(A True Relation of Virginia)是美国文学第一书。
2、纳撒尼尔·沃德(Nathaniel Ward):被誉为“北美讽刺文学第一笔”。
代表作:《北美的阿格瓦姆鞋匠》(The Simple Cobbler of Aggawam in America)。
3、威廉·布拉福德(William Bradford):被誉为“美国历史之父”。
说起美国人的祖先,一般人都会说是“五月花”号(Mayflower)。
威廉·布拉福特(William Bradford)就是“五月花”号上的领导者,《五月花号公约》Mayflower Compact的主要起草人,后来成为普利茅斯殖民地的总督。
现在,美国的第二号节日“感恩节”就是由他提出来的。
代表作:《普利茅斯种植园史》(History of Plymouth Plantation)。
4、安妮·布拉德斯特里特(Anne Bradstreet):殖民地时期的第一位诗人。
代表作:《最近在北美出现的第十位缪斯》(The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up in America)。
英国文学 (English Literature )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: Caedmon (凯德蒙 610-680) : 《赞美诗》( Anthem) ,大多取材余《圣经》 (Bible )故事。
Cynewulf (基涅武甫 9C): 《十字架之梦》 ( Dream of the Rood)C.Anglo-Saxon prose : Venerable Bede (673-735) 《英吉利人教会史》 (Historian Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum )Alfred the Great (848-901)Father of English Prose 《盎格鲁 -撒克逊编年史》 ( Anglo-Saxon Chronicle ) 2) The Medieval Period 中世纪(1066-ca.1485 / 1500):Cavalier literature 骑士文学A. Romance 中世纪传奇故事(1200-1500): the Middle Ages; 英雄诗歌Sir Gawain and the Green Knight 《高文爵士与绿色骑士》 : Celtic legend; verse-romance; 2530 lines Geoffrey Chaucer (1340-1400): the father of English poetry; Heroic couplet( 英雄双韵体 )The Canterbury Tales; The Parliament of Fowls ;The Book of the DuchessThe House of Fame; Troilus and Criseyde; The Romaunt of the Rose《玫瑰罗曼史》William Langland (朗兰 1332-1400): The Vision of Piers Plowman 《农夫皮尔斯之幻象》B. English ballads ( 15th C) Thomas Malory (1395-1471) : Morte d ' Arthu《r亚瑟王之死》 - 圆桌骑士二、The Renaissance Period英国文艺复兴(1500-1660) :人文主义 humanism; 十四行诗 Sonnets; 无韵诗 Blank verse; 戏剧 Drama; 斯宾塞诗体 Spenserian ;University Wits 大学才子派1)诗歌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 《爱星者与星》 ;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 ' poetThe Shepherd Calendar《牧人日历》; Amoretti《爱情小唱》The Faerie Queen《仙后》: long poem for Queen Elizabeth; Allegory - nine-line verse stanza/ the SpenserianStanza 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)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,散文家,剧作家 & 小说家): Eupheus《尤菲绮斯》Euphuism(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):Essays(论说文集): Of Studies, Of Love, Of Beauty: the first true English prose classicPhilosophical : New Instrument《新工具》 New Atlantis 《新大溪岛》 Advancement of Learning《学术的推进》 Professionals : Maxims of the Law 《法律格言》3)戏剧a. Christopher Marlowe : University Wits 大学才子派First made blank verse(无韵诗:不押韵的五步诗) the principle instrument of English drama The Jew of Malta 《马耳他的犹太人》The 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。
专业英语八级人文知识之美国文学第一阶段独立革命之前(十七世纪中期之前)概述1、美国本土文学(美国印第安传统文学)早在欧洲人闯入北美大陆之前,那里世世代代居住的原始人是印第安人,他们的文化早已在这片土地上流传、存在了几千年之久。
他们创造出了并仍然在创造这优秀的印第安口头文学。
在各种典礼上咏诵的祝词,在劳作中吟唱的歌曲,世世代代交口相传的部落神话故事和英雄故事,刻写在山间岩壁上的象形史诗,都是印第安传统文学的只要内容和形式,也是人类文明的宝贵遗产之一。
后来,随着殖民地的开拓,移民人数的剧增,印第安文化不断遭受重创,从而在17世纪出现断裂。
18世界末又开始以书面文学的形式开始了新的发展。
Three stages of development:1)traditional literature 2)transitional literature 3)modern literature2、北美殖民时期文学(十六世纪末—十七世纪中期)北美殖民文学的开端,以1607年英国在今佛吉尼亚的詹姆斯顿建立第一个永久性殖民点为标志。
从那时起直到1776年美利坚合众国成立,这半个世纪的北美英语文学的发展是外来文学移植、扎根并本土化的一个准备过程。
这一时期的文学作品主要是一些英国的殖民地官员或传道士、冒险家们以日记或游记随笔等形式记录的新大陆的风土人情、自然景色和民间生活等。
John Smith was considered to be the first author in the history of American literature。
3、清教思想的表述最初从欧洲来到美国的定居者被成为“清教徒”,因为他们迁徙的主要目的之一是为了“净化”教堂中的宗教行为。
他们的作品主要以传布清教主义思想的布道文为主。
第二阶段独立革命时期(17世纪中期—18世纪末)概述独立革命前后的美国文学,标志着北美文学产生后的第一次大转折,其主要内容和形式与殖民时期文学截然不同:如果说殖民时期文学主要反映的是清教精神,独立革命时期的文学则充满了浓烈的政治性和思辨性。
24、Ambrose Bierce安布罗斯·毕尔斯1842-1914?⼩品集:The Fiend’s Deligh魔⿁的乐趣;Nuggests and Dust Panned out in California在加利福尼亚淘出的⾦块和⾦粉;Cobwebs from an Empty Skull来⾃空脑壳的蜘蛛短篇⼩说集:Tales of Soldiers and Civilians军民故事;In the Midst of Life在⼈⽣中间;Can Such Things Be?这种事情可能吗?The Devil’s Dictionary魔⿁词典(The Applicant申请者)25、Edward Bellamy爱德华·贝拉⽶1850-1898Looking Backward:2000-1887回顾:从2000看1887年;Equality平等;The Duke of Sockbridge:A Romance of Shay’s Rebellion斯托克布⾥奇的公爵:雪司起义的故事;The Blindman’s World and Other Stories育⼈的世界及其他26、Edwin Charles Markham马卡姆1852-1940The Man With the Hoe荷锄⼈27、Charles Waddell Chesnutt查尔斯·契斯纳特1858-1932The Conjure Woman巫⼥;The Wife of His Youth and Other Stories of the Color Line他青年时代的妻⼦(The Sheriff’s Children 警长的⼉⼥)(the pioneer of the color line);The Marrow of Tradition⼀脉相承28、Hamlin Garland汉姆林·加兰1860-1940Crumbling Idol崩溃的偶像(真实主义veritism);Man Travelled Roads⼤路(The Return of a Private三等兵归来);Rose of Ducher’s Cooly荷兰⼈⼭⾕中的露斯;A Son of the Middle Border中部边地农家⼦29、O·Henry欧·享利(William Sidney Porter)1862-1910The Man Higher Up黄雀在后;Sixes and Sevens七上⼋下30、Edith Wharton伊迪斯·华顿1862-1937The House of Mirth欢乐之家;Ethan Frome;Bunner Sister班纳姐妹;The Age of Innocent天真时代;The Customs of the Country 乡村习俗;A Backward Glance回⾸往事32、George Santayana桑塔亚那1863-1952Scepticism and Animal Faith怀疑主义与动物性信仰;The Realms Being存在诸领域(本质/物质/真理/精神领域:4卷)(Relativity of Knowledge);Three Philosphical Poets三⼤哲学诗⼈;Poems(A Minuet:On Reaching the Age of Fifty⼩步舞曲:五⼗书怀);The Last Puritan最后的清教徒33、William E·B Dubois威廉·艾伯·杜波依斯1868-1963Souls of Black Folk⿊⼈的灵魂(Of Booker T Washington and Others);The Suppression of the African Slave Trade into the USA制⽌⾮洲奴⾪贸易进⼊美国;The Philadephia Negro;John Brown;The Black Flame⿊⾊的⽕焰(三部曲)34、Edgar Lee Masters埃德加·李·马斯特斯1868-1950A Book of Verse诗集;Maximilian马克西⽶连(诗集);Spoon River Anthology斯普恩河诗集(Lucinda Matlock鲁欣达·马物罗克)35、Edwin Arlington Robinson鲁宾逊1869-1935Captain Craig克雷格上尉---诗体⼩说;The Town Down the River河上的城镇;The Man Against the Sky衬托着天空的⼈;Avon’s Harvest沃冯的收成;Collected Poems诗集36、Frank Norris弗兰克·诺⾥斯1870-1902Moran of the Lady Letty茱蒂夫⼈号上的莫兰(romantic);Mc-Teague麦克提格(naturalistic);The Epic of theWheat(realistic)⼩麦诗史(The Octopus章鱼,The Pit⼩麦交易所);A Deal in Wheat and Other Stories of the Old and New West ⼩麦交易所及其他新⽼西部故事37、Stephen Crane斯蒂芬·克莱恩1871-1900Magic:A Girl of the Streets街头⼥郎梅姬(美国⽂学⾸次站在同情⽴场上描写受辱妇⼥的悲惨命运);The Red Badge of Courage红⾊英勇勋章;The Open Boat⼩划⼦;The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky新娘来到黄天镇38、Theodore Dreiser西奥多·德莱塞1871-1945Sister Carrie嘉莉姐妹;Jennie Gerhardt珍妮姑娘;Trilogy of Desire欲望三部曲(Financer⾦融家,The Titan巨⼈,The Stoic);An American Tragedy美国的悲剧(被称为美国最伟⼤的⼩说);Nigger Jeff⿊⼈杰弗39、Paul Laurence Dumbar保尔·劳伦斯·邓巴1872-1906We Wear the Mask我们带着⾯具他是美国第⼀个有成就的⿊⼈诗⼈,被称为“⿊种⼈的桂冠诗⼈”(Poet Laureate of the Negro Race)40、Jack London杰克·伦敦1876-1916The Son of the Wolf狼之⼦,The Call of the Wild野性的呼唤;The Sea-wolf海狼;White Fang⽩獠⽛;The People of the Abyss深渊中的⼈们;The Iron Heel铁蹄;Marti Eden马丁·伊登;How I become a Socialist我怎样成为社会党⼈;The War of the Classes阶级之间的战争;What Life Means to Me⽣命对我意味着什么;Revolution⾰命;Love of Life热爱⽣命;The Mexican墨西哥⼈;Under the Deck Awings在甲板的天蓬下41、Upton Sinclair厄普顿·⾟克莱尔1878-1968Spring and Harvest春天与收获;The Jungle屠场(揭发⿊幕运动的代表作家);King Coal煤炭⼤王;Oil⽯油;Boston波⼠顿;Dragon’s Teeth龙齿42、Irving Babbitt欧⽂·⽩壁德1865-1933(新⼈⽂主义主要代表)Literature and the American College⽂学与美国学院()要求恢复古典⽂学教学;The New Laokoon新拉奥孔;Rousseau and Romanticism卢梭与浪漫主义;Democracy and Leadership民主与领导;On being Creative论创造性。
Part 1. Colonial America 殖民地时期的美国文学Thomas Paine 托马斯·潘恩(1737-1809):The Case of the Officers of Excise税务员问题;Common Sense常识;American Crisis美国危机;Rights of Man:Downfall of Despotism人的权利:专制体制的崩溃;The Age of Reason理性时代Philip Freneau 菲利普·弗伦诺(1752-1832):The Rising Glory of America蒸蒸日上的美洲;The British Prison Ship英国囚船;To the Memory of the Brave Americans纪念美国勇士;The Wild Honeysuckle野生的金银花;The Indian Burying Ground印第安人殡葬地Jonathan Edwards 乔纳森·爱德华(1702—1758):The Freedom of the Will自由意志论;The Great Doctrine of Original Sin defended伟哉原罪论辩;The Nature of True Virtue 真美德的性质Benjamin Franklin 本杰明·富兰克林(1706-1790):A Modest Inquiry into the Nature and Necessity of a Paper Money;Poor Richard’s Almanack穷查理历书;The Way to Wealth致富之道;The Autobiography自传Part 2. American Romanticism 美国浪漫主义文学Washington Irving 华盛顿·欧文(1783-1859):A History of New York纽约的历史——美国人写的第一部诙谐文学杰作;The SketchBook见闻札记;The Legend of Sleepy Hollow睡谷的传说——使之成为美国第一个获得国际声誉的作家;Bracebridge Hall布雷斯布里奇田庄;Talks of Travellers旅客谈;The Alhambra阿尔罕伯拉James Fenimore Cooper 詹姆斯·费尼莫尔·库珀(1789-1851):The Spy间谍;The Pilot领航者;The Littlepage Manuscripts利特佩奇的手稿;Leatherstocking Tales皮裹腿故事集:The Pioneer拓荒者;The Last of Mohicans最后的莫希干人;The Prairie大草原;The Pathfinder探路者;The Deerslayer杀鹿者。
American Literature: A Concise HistoryI.Review1.Wh.wrot.Th.American.(2023).A.Herma.Melville B.Nathanie.Hawthorn.C.Henr.JamesD.Theodor.Dreise.2.Deat.o..Salesma.wa.writte.by____.(2023)lerB.Ernes.HemingwayC.Ralp.EllisonD.Jame.Baldwin3.Th.nove.Fo.Who.th.Bel.Toll.i.writte.by___.(2023)A.Scot.FitzgeraldB.Willia.FaulknerC.Eugen.O’NeilD.Ernes.Hemingway4.Willia.Sydne.Porter.know.a.O’Henry.i.mos.famou.for_____.(2023)A.hi.poemsB.hi.playsC.hi.shor.storiesD.hi.novelsII.Historica.Periods1.Colonia.Period.17th~18t.(fait..reason)2.Romanti.Period.en.o.18t.t.th.Civi.Wa.★3.Th.Ag.o.Realism.1865-189.★4.Th.Ag.o.Naturalism.1890-19005.Moder.Period.1912-194.★6.Postwa.Realism.1950s-1960s7.Postmodernism.1960s-1980sIII.Ke.Figures1.Benjami.Franklin2.Jame.Fenimor.Cooper.Washingto.Irving.Edga.Alla.Poe.Wal.Whitman.Emil.Dickinson/Nathanie.Hawthorne.Herma. Melvill.(R.W.Emerson.H.D.Thoreau)3.O’Henry.Henr.James.Mar.Twai.4.Stepha.Crane.Theodor.Dreiser.Jac.London5.Ezr.Pound.T.S.Eliot.R.L.Frost/Ernes.Hemingway.F.S.Fitzgerald.Sinclai.Lewis.Joh.Steinbeck/Eugen.O’ler6.Jerom.Salinger7.NabokovMark Twain: ①Trend: realism (local colorism) ②Genre: fiction ③Masterpiece: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn ④Distinctive Style: vernacular language ⑤Other Important WorksIV.Sample1.America.literatur.produce.onl.on.femal.poe.durin.th.19t.century.Sh.wa.__________..A.Ann.Bradstreet B.Jan.AustenC.Katherin.Ann.Porte.D.Emil.Dickinson2.Th.firs.America.t.wi.th.Nobe.Priz.fo.Literatur.wa..shar.socia.critic.whos.nam.wa.__________..A.T.S.Elio... B.Sinclai.LewisC.Ernes.Hemingway .D.Willia.Faulkne.3.Whic.o.th.followin.i.NO.include.i.Dreiser’strilogy of desire concerning the ruthlessness ofcapitalists?A.Th.GeniusB.Th.Financie.C.Th.TitanD.Th.Stoi.4.Wit.Howells.James.an.Mar.Twai.activ.o.th.scene._________.becam.th.majo.tren.i.th.seventie.an.eightie.o.th.ninetee nt.century.A.sentimentalismB.romanticismC.realismD.naturalism5.Fro.173.t.1758.Frankli.wrot.an.publishe.hi.famou.__________.a.annua.collectio.o.proverbs.A.AutobiographyB.Poo.Richard’.Almanacmo.SenseD.Th.Genera.Magazine6.“Th.America.Renaissance.i.th.perio.o._____.i.th.histor.o.America.literature.A.loca.colorismB.RomanticismC.TranscendentalismD.Colonism7.________.i.Mar.Twain’.maste.work.th.on.boo.fro.whic.a.Hemingwa.noted.“es”.A.Th.Gilde.AgeB.Lif.o.th.MississippiC.Th.Adventure.o.To.SawyerD.Th.Adventure.o.Huckleberr.Finn8.______.i.th.onl.America.playwrigh.awarde.Nobe.Priz.o.Literature.lerB.Eugen.O’NeillC.Tennesse.WilliamsD.Sinclai.Lewis9.Whic.o.th.followin.doe.NO.belon.t.“Bea.Generation”?A.Jac.KerouacB.F.S.FitzgeraldC.Alle.GinsbergD.Willia.Burroughs10._________.i.identifie.a.th.fathe.o.moder.America.poetry.wh.als.play.a.importan.rol.i.transmittin.Chines.cultur.t.th. English-speakin.world.A.T.S.EliotB.Rober.FrostC.Ezr.PoundD.Wal.WhitmanI.Colonia.Period.17th~18t.The influence of Puritanism on writing:fresh, simple and plaintraceable to the direct influence of the Biblefrequent reference to the technique of symbolismAnne BradstreetThe Tenth Muse Lately Sprung up in AmericaMichael WigglesworthThe Day of DoomEdward Taylor: a metaphysical poetBenjamin Franklin: the spokesman of the American Enlightenment (Age of Reason/Great Awakening); created the image of the Yankeepseudonym: Silence DogoodPoor Richard’s AlmanacAutobiographyThomas Paine (his style: plain)Common Sense—the first pamphlet urging immediate independence from Britain; his most famous pamphlet; the greatest of the Revolutionary pamphletsPhilip FreneauThe first American-born poet; Poet of the American RevolutionTheme: nationalismThe beginning of American RomanticismII.Romanti.Period.1.Earl.RomanticsNew England Poets (Fireside/Schoolroom Poets):Henry Wadsworth LongfellowThe song of Hiawatha—the first American epic in blank verse about the American IndiansThe first American poet to be honored by having his bust placed in the Poets’ Corner of Westminster AbbeyWilliam Cullen Bryant: the American WordsworthThanatopsis (pondering on death)—his greatest poemNovelist:James Fenimore Cooper: the first successful American novelist32 novels3 kinds:about the revolutionary past—The Spyabout the sea—The pilot★abou.th.frontier—Th.Leatherstockin.Tale.(s.o.th.Mohicans.Th.Prairie.Th.Pathfinder.an.Th.Deersl ayer.protagonist.Natt.Bumppo-.“wrence)Story Writer and Prose Stylist:Washington IrvingThe Sketch Book won him international fame“Rip Van Winkle” & “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow”“Crayon” styleIntroduced the familiar essay to AmericaII.Romanti.Period.2.TranscendentalistsNew England Transcendentalism=American RenaissanceFeatures:It stressed the power of intuition.It placed spirit first and matter second.It took nature as symbolic of spirit or God.It emphasized the significance of the individual.It envisioned religion as an emotional communication between an individual soul and the universal “Oversoul”. It held that commerce was degrading.The Transcendental Club & their journal The DialEssayists:Ralph Waldo EmersonTranscendentalism’s most semin al forceThe Lyceum MovementNature—“the manifesto of American transcendentalism”The American Scholar—“America’s Declaration of Intellectual Independence”Henry David ThoreauHis first major influence: nonviolent struggle as expressed in his “Civil Disobedience”His second major influence: call of “Back to Nature”Walden—a classic of American prose; reads like a diary of a nature loverSymbolismII.Romanti.Period.3.Hig.RomanticsEdgar Allan PoeLiterary theories:1) A theory of PoetryTh.mos.importan.purpos.o.poetr.i.th.creatio.o.beaut.(Englis.a..mediu.o.pur.musica.an.rhythmi.beauty).The tone of its highest manifestation is one of sadness.The death of a beautiful woman is the most potential topic.death –predominant theme in Poe’s writing“Po.i.no.intereste.i.anythin.alive.Everythin.i.Poe’.writing.i.dead.”2) About His FictionThe mental world of the people should be illuminated.The principle of concentration and thematic totality should be stressed.Truth rather than beauty is often the aim of the tale.Literary achievements:The Raven—his most famous narrative poemDetective stories, ratiocinative stories & science fictionThe Murders in the Rue MorgueThe Fall of the House of UsherThe Masque of the Red DeathWalt WhitmanLeaves of Grass (9 editions)—America’s first genuine epic poemStyle: free verseThe envelope structure, catalogue technique, thought rhythmRepresents a turning point in the history of American poetryEmily DickinsonFor the whole 19th century she was the only woman poet who enjoys high academic esteem today.PoemsThemes:religion – doubt and belief about religious subjectsdeath and immortalitylove – suffering and frustration caused by lovephysical aspect of desirenature – kind and cruelfree will and human responsibilityNathaniel Hawthorne—the first American romancer; the first major novelist in English to wed morality to artHis novels were perhaps the deepest and most psychological in the 19th century.The Scarlet LetterHester Prynne, Pearl, Chillingworth, DimmesdalePoin.o.view.Evi.i.a.th.cor.o.huma.life.Whereve.ther.i.sin.ther.i.punishment.Si.o.evi.ca.b.passe.fro.generatio.t.generatio n.Herman Meiville—an adventure writer, known as “a man who lived with cannibals”Moby Dick—the first American prose epic; the greatest American novel by some criticsA symbol to represent cruel, brutal, malicious powers of natureThe technique of multiple viewsStyle: highly symbolic and metaphoricalIII.Th.Ag.o.RealismFeatures:truthful description of lifetypical character under typical circumstanceobjective rather than idealized, close observation and investigation of life“Realistic writers are like scientists.”open-ending:ple.an.canno.b.full.understood.I.leave.muc.roo.fo.reader.t.thin.b.themselves.William Dean HowellsProductive except the genre of poetryThe Rise of Silas LaphamWillia.Sydne.Porte.(O.Henry)Th.surpris.endin.i.hi.specialty.e.g.“Th.Co.an.th.Anthem”.Sherwood Anderson: Winesburg, Ohio★Henry James: novels of mannersDeveloped the international novelle.establishe.hi.reputatio.a.hom.an.abroa.(theme.America.innocenc.vs.Europea.sophistication)The Ambassadors: his most “perfect” work of art, claimed by himself3 influential subjects: children, new women and artistsTheory of fiction in his The Art of FictionChief criterion: showing rather than tellinghonors: the first of the “modern psychological novelists”A “realist of the inner life”A bridge of American and European culturesLocal ColorismThe late 1860s to early 1870sTo write or present local characters of their regions in truthful depiction distinguished from others, usually a very small part of the world.Hamlin Garland’s “Under the Lion’s Paw”Harriet Beecher Stowe: Uncle Tom’s Cabin—the greatest of all anti-slavery literatureMark Twain (Samuel Clemens)—“the Lincoln of our literature”; the true father of American literatureOne famous essay: “To the Person Sitting in Darkness”His greatest achievement: The Adventures of Huckleberry FinnOther works: His penname was made famous by “The Notorious Jumping Frog of the Calaverus County”;The Gilded Age: a satire against corruptionThe Adventures of Tom Sawyer; Life on the Mississippicolloquial language, vernacular language, dialectslocal coloursyntactic feature: sentences are simple, brief, sometimes ungrammaticalhumourtall tales (highly exaggerated)social criticism (satire on the different ugly things in society)parisonThemeHowells – middle classJames – upper classTwain – lower classTechniqueHowells –genteel realismJames – psychological realismTwain – local colorism and colloquialismIV.Th.Ag.o.NaturalismRealis.vs.Naturalism:Though naturalists also describe real life, they present harsher reality, usually the violent, sensational, unpleasant, and ugly aspects of life.Their writing style and technique were more innovative.Stephan Crane--pessimismMaggie, A Girl of the Streets—the first naturalistic novel written by an AmericanThe Red Badge of Courage—his most famous book about the American Civil WarStyle: realistic, naturalistic, and impressionisticFrank Norris--optimismMcTeague—the first full-bodied naturalistic American novelThe Octopus—his most impressive prose epicTheodore Dreiser–“the wheelhouse of American naturalism”Sister Carrie: a slave to her heredity and to her environmentAn American Tragedy: his masterpieceStyle: journalistic method of reiteration, word-pictures, sharp contrast, stubborn honestyJack LondonThe Son of the Wolf—first collection of the storiesThe Call of the Wild—an all-time best sellerHis fiction has the unusual and intriguing power of ancient myth.The originator of a new type of writing: rough realismV.Moder.Period.1.PoetrySub-branches:Imagism, symbolism, impressionism, futurism, constructivism, surrealism, etcFeatures:Modernism dramatized discontinuity.Modernists had a sense of fragmentation.I.ha..stron.an.consciou.brea.wit.tradition.(strea.o.consciousness)V.Moder.Perio.1.PoetryEzra Pound—the father of modern American poetryCantos—his major work of poetryCathay—a volume of Chinese translationsStyle: clarity, precision and a direct conversational diction, economy of verseImagismT.S.Eliot—.poet..playwright.an..literar.criticHe declared himself a “classicist in literature, royalist in politics, and Anglo-Catholic in religion”The Waste Land—a central poem of modernism; reads like a manifesto of the “Lost Generation”Five segmentsOrganizing principle: the myth of death and rebirthNew England Poets:E.A.Robinso.wo.Pulitze.fo.thre.times.Robert Lee Frost—the most popular American poet from 1914 to his deathHe won Pulitzer for four times.Pastoral poetryV.Moder.Perio.2.FictionLost Generation:The term was first used by Gertrude Stein.Ernest Hemingway—a Nobel Prize Winner (1954)The Sun also RisesA Farewell to Arms: established his reputation as a great American writerFor Whom the Bell TollsThe Old Man and the SeaTelegraphic styleIceberg theory of writing“the code hero”Francis Scott FitzgeraldThis Side of Paradise—his first novel; the first American novel depicting the casual dissipations of “flaming youth”The Great Gatsby—his best novel which deals with the frustration and despair resulting from the failure of the American dream★Sinclair Lewis—the first American writer to receive the Nobel Prize for literature (1930)Main Street satirizes the smug provincial complacency of the middle classBabbitt—his masterpieceThe word “babbittry” means energetic shallowness and self-satisfactionSatiric monologueJohn Steinbeck—the foremost writer of the Great DepressionThe Grapes of Wrath—his masterpiece, won a Pulitzer PrizeA combination of naturalist and symbolist techniqueV.Moder.Period.3.DramaEugene O’Neill—the founder of modern American drama3 Pulitzer Prizes & the Nobel PrizeIntroduced trends of realism, naturalism and expressionismBeyond the HorizonLong Day’s Journey into NightTennessee WilliamsThe Glass MenagerieA Streetcar Named Desire—won him his first Pulitzer PrizeColloquial southern speechArthur MillerDeath of a Salesman—his masterpiece; an American myth and a contemporary tragedyVI.Postwa.RealismJohn Cheever—short fictionJohn Updike—the most realistic of all the postwar realists; “Olinger” storiesJames Thurber—the greatest American literary humorist of the 20th centuryJerome Salinger—a representative of alienated young Americans; generation gapThe Catcher in the Rye—a modern Huck FinnVII.Post-modernism.FictionModernis.vs.post-modernismUnlike modernism, which suggested a historic period, post-modernism described a sensibility, a feeling for innovation.Controllabl.vs.uncontrollable;Orde.vs.disorderRealisti.vs.nihilisticThe fundamental rule: the absurd and the arbitraryStyle: fragmented, discontinuous, ironic, and full of black humorVladimir Nabokov: LolitaBeat GenerationWomen WritersBlack LiteratureSouthern Literature1.Bea.GenerationThe term is associated with the first half of the 1950s.★Jack Kerouac—the founder of the Beat Generation who first used the term; On the Road★Allen Ginsberg—the poet laureate of the Beat Generation; HowlLawrence Ferlinghetti opened the City Lights Bookstore, the headquarters of the Beats.William BurroughsWomen Writers: 1) Before the 20th CAnne Bradstreet—the first lady of colonial literature in AmericaEmily Dickinson—America’s greatest woman poetMargaret Fuller—Women in the Nineteenth Century: America’s first landmark feminist treatiseWomen Writers: 2) Of the 20th CKatherine Anne PorterJoyce Carol OatesSylvia PlathJoanna RussAlice Walker: a black woman writerBlack LiteratureLangsto.Hughes—th.“ureat.o.Harlem”.“O.Henr.o.Harlem”Richard Wright—protest fiction, Native SonJames Baldwin—race & homosexuality: two themesRalph Ellison—Invisible Man★Toni Morrison (female)—Beloved, Nobel Prize (1993) (the second American woman writer to enjoy the honor) (the first American woman writer to win the Nobel Prize for Literature: Pearl Buck)Southern LiteratureThe South is known as the Bible Belt.★William Faulkner—the foremost southern writer of the 20th C; Nobel Prize (1950)The Sound and the Fury—Stream of ConsciousnessYoknapatawpha CountyWilliam Styron—Sophie’s Choice。
American Literature第一阶段独立革命之前(十七世纪中期之前)The Literature before the Revolution of Independence第一节美国本土文学(美国印第安传统文学)Native American Literature (The Traditional Literature of the American Indians)Three stages of development: traditional literature---transitional literature---modern literature第二节北美殖民时期文学(十六世纪末—十七世纪中)Literature of Colonial SettlementsJohn Smith (1580-1631)---the “first author” in the history of American literature;第一位美国作家---A True Relation with a Description of the Country (1608) 《关于弗吉尼亚的真实叙述》was considered to be the “first book” in American literature.美国文学史上的“第一部作品”第三节清教思想的表述PuritanismAmerican Puritanism stressed predestination, original sin, total depravity, and limited atonement from God’s grace. 第二阶段独立革命时期(17C中期—18C末)The Literature around the Revolution of Independence With Franklin as its spokesman, the literature of this period experienced an age of reason and order. Thomas Jefferson’s attitude, that is, a firm belief in progress, and the pursuit of happiness, is typical of the period we now call Age of Reason.第三阶段浪漫主义时期(十八世纪末—十九世纪中后期)American Romanticism was also called American Renaissance. Romantics shared characteristics: moral enthusiasm, individuality and intuitive perception.第四阶段现实主义时期(十九世纪中期—二十世纪初)American RealismMajor Features: 1) Straightforward or matter-of-fact manner;2) Focus on commonness of the lives of the common people;3) Objective rather than idealistic view of human nature;4) Present moral visions;5) Usually open ending.American industrialization was the first important factor of the development of American Realistic literature. This was the beginning of the Age of Realism, which is also called “the Gilded Age” by Mark Twain.The development of the Far West was the second important factor to promote the literary development. (The Gold Rush)Local color fiction had a brief vogue when Realism first emerged in America.第五阶段现代主义时期(二十世纪初—)American ModernismModernism used to show the literary art possessing outstanding characteristics in conception, feeling, form and style after the WWⅠ. It means cutting off history and a sense of despair and loss. It refused to accept the traditional concept of value and all traditional ideological influences.。
八级模拟美国文学常识1.The first colony was set up in_________ at, ______off the coast of North Carolina; The second colony was more permanent:______, establis hed in________.A.1585 ...Roanoke,...Jamestown (1607)B. Jamestown...1607,...concord, (1609)C. 1492,…New England…1585 …RoanokeD. 1492...New England ...Jamestown (1607)2. ________ wrote the story recounts how Pocahontas, favorite daughte r of Chief Powhatan, saved Captain Smiths life when he was a prisoner of the chief. Later, when the English persuaded Powhatan to give Poc ahontas to them as a hostage, her gentleness, intelligence, and beaut y impressed the English, and, in 1614, she married John Rolfe, an Eng lish gentleman. The marriage initiated an eight-year peace between th e colonists and the Indians, ensuring the survival of the struggling new colony.A. Cristopher ColumbusB. HarioitC. WinthropeD. Captain John Smith3. The_____ definition of good writing was that which brought home a full awareness of the importance of worshipping God and of the spirit ual dangers that the soul faced on EarthA. ProstestantB. PuritanC. CatholicD. Indian4. The link between_________ is Both rest on ambition, hard work, and an intense striving for success.A. Puritanism and consumerismB. Capitalism and commercialismC. Puritanism and capitalismmercialism and capitalism5 The first Puritan colonists who settled _________exemplified the se riousness of Reformation Christianity. Known as the "_________," they were a small group of believers who had migrated from England to Hol land -- even then known for its religious tolerance -- in 1608, durin g a time of persecutions.A. Roanoke…developmentB. Roanoke…progressC. New England… adventureD. New England… pilgrims6. Of Plymouth Plantation was written by ______A.William BradfordB.Captain John SmithC.HariotD.Cristopher Clumbus 7. “If ever two were one, then surely we./If ever man were loved by wife, then th ee;/If ever wife was happy in a man,/Compare with me, ye women, if yo u can./I prize thy love more than whole mines of gold/Or all the rich es that the East doth hold./My love is such that rivers cannot quench (平熄),/Nor ought but love from thee, give recompense./Thy love is su ch I can no way repay,/The heavens reward thee manifold(多种), I pr ay./Then while we live, in love let s so persevere/That when we live no more, we may live ever” is form the first published book of poem s by an American was also the first American book to be published by a woman -- __________(c. 1612-1672). It is not surprising that the bo ok was published in England, given the lack of printing presses in th e early years of the first American coloniesA. Miss BradfordB. Anne BradstreetC. Miss John SmithD. Anne Bradford8. 500-page Metrical History of Christianity was written by______A. Anne BradstreetB. WinthropeC. Edward TaylorD. Captain John Smith9. The 18th-century American ________was a movement marked by an emph asis on rationality rather than tradition, scientific inquiry instead of unquestioning religious dogma, and representative government in p lace of monarchy. Enlightenment thinkers and writers were devoted to the ideals of justice, liberty, and equality as the natural rights of man.A. RenaissanceB. RevolutionC. PuritanismD. Enlightenment10. ________, whom the Scottish philosopher David Hume called America s "first great man of letters," embodied the Enlightenment ideal of h umane rationality. Practical yet idealistic, hard-working and enormou sly successful.A. Captain John SmithB. Edward TaylorC. Benjamin FranklinD. Anne Bradstreet11. ______ lists 13 virtues: temperance, silence, order, resolution, frugality, industry, sincerity, justice, moderation, cleanliness, tra nquility, chastity, and humilityA.JeffersonB. FranklinC. BradstreetD. St. John de Crèvecoeur 12. Common Sense sold over 100,000 copies in the first three months of its publication. It is still rous ing today. "The cause of America is in a great measure the cause of a ll mankind,"_____wrote, voicing the idea of American exceptionalism s till strong in the United States -- that in some fundamental sense, s ince America is a democratic experiment and a country theoretically o pen to all immigrants, the fate of America foreshadows the fate of hu manity at large.A. AnneB. PaineC. FranklinD. Jefferson13. "literary" writing was not as simple and direct as political writ ing. When trying to write poetry, most educated authors stumbled into the pitfall of elegant_________. The epic, in particular, exercised a fatal attraction. American literary patriots felt sure that the gre at American Revolution naturally would find expression in the epic -- a long, dramatic narrative poem in elevated language, celebrating th e feats of a legendary hero.A. RenaissanceB. RationalismC. NeoclassicismD. Classicism14. ______, whose poem "The British Prison Ship" is a bitter condemna tion of the cruelties of the British, who wished "to stain the world with gore." This piece and other revolutionary works, including "Euta w Springs," "American Liberty," "A Political Litany," "A Midnight Con sultation," and "George the Thirds Soliloquy," brought him fame as th e "Poet of the American Revolution."A. Philip FreneauB. Long FellowC. Thomas PaineD. Ben Franklin15. the first professional American writer is _______A.Thomas PaineB. Charles Brockden BrownC. Philip FreneauD. Anne Bradstreet16.No writer was as successful as ___________ at humanizing the land, endowing it with a name and a face and a set of legends. The story o f "Rip Van Winkle," who slept for 20 years, waking to find the coloni es had become independent, eventually became folklore. It was adapted for the stage, went into the oral tradition, and was gradually accep ted as authentic American legend by generations of Americans.A. Jupiter HammonB. Olaudah EquianoC. Washington IrvingD. Robert Beverley17. _________ was the first to sound the recurring tragic note in Ame rican fiction, whose representative work is ________.A. Washington Irving…the Leather-Stocking TalesB. James Fenimor e Cooper…Sketch BookC. Washington Irving…Sketch BookD. James Fenimore Cooper…the Leather-Stocking Tales18. The first African-American author of importance in the United Sta tes, __________, whose work is a sincere expression; it confronts whi te racism and asserts spiritual equality. Indeed, she was the first t o address such issues confidently in verse, as in "On Being Brought f rom Africa to America":A. Phyllis WheatleyB. Susanna RowsonC Hannah FosterD. Judith Sargent Murray19 .________ ideas centered around art as inspiration, the spiritual and aesthetic dimension of nature, and metaphors of organic growth. A rt, rather than science, Romantics argued, could best express univers al truth…. The development of the self b ecame a major theme; self- a wareness a primary method. If, according to Romantic theory, self and nature were one, self-awareness was not a selfish dead end but a mod e of knowledge opening up the universe. If ones self were one with al l humanity, then the individual had a moral duty to reform social ine qualities and relieve human suffering. The idea of "self" -- which su ggested selfishness to earlier generations -- was redefined. New comp ound words with positive meanings emerged: "self-realization," "self-expression," "self- reliance."A. NeoclassicB. TranscendentalistC. RomanticD. Rational20. The _________movement was a reaction against 18th century rationa lism and a manifestation of the general humanitarian trend of 19th ce ntury thought. The movement was based on a fundamental belief in theunity of the world and God. The soul of each individual was thought t o be identical with the world -- a microcosm of the world itself. The doctrine of self- reliance and individualism developed through the b elief in the identification of the individual soul with God.A. NeoclassicB. TranscendentalistC. RomanticD. Rational21. ________was the first rural artists colony, and the first place t o offer a spiritual and cultural alternative to American materialism. It was a place of high-minded conversation and simple living.A. JamestonB. WashingtonC. ConcordD. San Fransisco22. The British critic Matthew Arnold said the most important writing s in English in the 19th century had been Wordsworths poems and _____ ____ s essays, who edited The Dial . A great prose-poet, he influence d a long line of American poets, including Walt Whitman, Emily Dickin son, Edwin Arlington Robinson, Wallace Stevens, Hart Crane, and Rober t Frost. He is also credited with influencing the philosophies of Joh n Dewey, George Santayana, Friedrich Nietzsche, and William James.A. William Ellery ChanningB. Margaret FullerC. Henry David ThoreauD. Ralph Waldo Emerson23. ________ is the most attractive of the Transcendentalists today b ecause of his ecological consciousness, do-it-yourself independence, ethical commitment to abolitionism, and political theory of civil dis obedience and peaceful resistance. His ideas are still fresh, and his incisive poetic style and habit of close observation are still moder n.A. William Ellery ChanningB. Margaret FullerC. Henry David ThoreauD. Ralph Waldo Emerson24. D.H. Lawrence, the British novelist and poet, accurately called _ ______the poet of the "open road." The poems innovative, unrhymed, fr ee-verse form, open celebration of sexuality, vibrant democratic sens ibility, and extreme Romantic assertion that the poets self was one w ith the poem, the universe, and the reader permanently altered the co urse of American poetry.A. Emily DickensonB. Walt WhitmanC. Henry Wadsworth LongfellowD. James Russell Lowell25. ________, professor of modern languages at Harvard, was the best-known American poet of his day. He was responsible for the misty, ahi storical, legendary sense of the past that merged American and Europe an traditions. He wrote three long narrative poems popularizing nativ e legends in European meters "Evangeline" (1847), "The Song of Hiawat ha" (1855), and "The Courtship of Miles Standish" (1858).A . Emily DickensonB. Walt WhitmanC. Henry Wadsworth LongfellowD. James Russell Lowell26. __________is the Matthew Arnold of American literature. He began as a poet but gradually lost his poetic ability, ending as a respect ed critic and educator. As editor of the Atlantic and co-editor of th e North American Review, he exercised enormous influence.A. James Russell LowellB. Oliver Wendell HolmesC. Henry Wadsworth LongfellowD. Walt Whitman27.The first professional woman journalist of not e in America, ____________wrote influential book reviews and reports on social issues such as the treatment of women prisoners and the ins ane. Some of these essays were published in her book Papers on Litera ture and Art (1846). A year earlier, she had her most significant boo k, Woman in the Nineteenth Century. It originally had appeared in the Transcendentalist magazine, The Dial, which she edited from 1840 to 1842.A. Margaret FullerB. John Greenleaf WhittierC. Oliver Wendell HolmesD. Emily Dickinson28. __________s 1,775 poems continue to intrigue critics, who often d isagree about them. Some stress her mystical side, some her sensitivi ty to nature; many note her odd, exotic appeal. One modern critic, R. P. Blackmur, comments that Dickinsons poetry sometimes feels as if "a cat came at us speaking English." Her clean, clear, chiseled poems a re some of the most fascinating and challenging in American literatur e.A. Margaret FullerB. John Greenleaf WhittierC. Oliver Wendell HolmesD. Emily Dickinson29. The Romantic vision tended to express itself in the form Hawthorne called the "________," a heightened, emotional, and symbolic form of the novel. They were not love stories, but serious novels that used special techniques to communicate complex and subtle meanings.A. FableB. RomanceC. AllegoryD. Novella30. For its time, _________was a daring and even subversive book. Haw thornes gentle style, remote historical setting, and ambiguity soften ed his grim themes and contented the general public, but sophisticate d writers such as Ralph Waldo Emerson and Herman Melville recognized the books "hellish" power. It treated issues that were usually suppre ssed in 19th-century America, such as the impact of the new, liberati ng democratic experience on individual behavior, especially on sexual and religious freedom.A. The House of the Seven GablesB. The Blithedale RomanceC. The Scarlet LetterD. The Marble Faun31.__________ has been called a "natural epic" -- a magnificent drama tization of the human spirit set in primitive nature -- because of it s hunter myth, its initiation theme, its Edenic island symbolism, its positive treatment of pre-technological peoples, and its quest for r ebirth. In setting humanity alone in nature, it is eminently American. The French writer and politician Alexis de Tocqueville had predicted, in the 1835 work Democracy in America, that this theme would arise i n America as a result of its democracy:A.Moby-DickB. TypeeC. The Marble FaunD. The Scarlet Letter32. _______a southerner, shares a darkly metaphysical vision mixed wi th elements of realism, parody, and burlesque. He refined the short s tory genre and invented detective fiction. Many of his stories prefig ure the genres of science fiction, horror, and fantasy so popular tod ay.A. Lydia ChildB. Herman MelvilleC. Nathaniel HawthorneD. Edgar Allan Poe33. An activist, ______founded a private girls school, founded and ed ited the first journal for children in the United States, and published the first anti- slavery tract, An Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans Called Africans, in 1833A. Lydia ChildB. Angelina GrimkéC. Elizabeth Cady StantonD. Sojourner Truth34. __________novel; or, Life Among the Lowly was the most popular Am erican book of the 19th century. First published serially in the Nati onal Era magazine (1851- 1852), it was an immediate success. Forty di fferent publishers printed it in England alone, and it was quickly tr anslated into 20 languages, receiving the praise of such authors as G eorges Sand in France, Heinrich Heine in Germany, and Ivan Turgenev i n Russia. Its passionate appeal for an end to slavery in the United S tates inflamed the debate that, within a decade, led to the U.S. Civi l War (1861-1865).A Lydia Child’s…An Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans C alled African.B. Harriet Wilson’s…The Womans BibleC. Harriet Beecher Stowes… Uncle Toms CabinD. Harriet Jacobs’s…the Narrative of Sojourner Truth35. ________the most famous black American anti-lavery leader and ora tor of the era._____ is the best and most popular of many "slave narr atives." The slave narrative was the first black literary prose genre in the United States. It helped blacks in the difficult task of esta blishing an African-American identity in white America, and it has co ntinued to exert an important influence on black fictional techniques and themes throughout the 20th century. The search for identity, ang er against discrimination, and sense of living an invisible, hunted, underground life unacknowledged by the white majority have recurred i n the works of such 20th- century black American authors as Richard W right, James Baldwin, Ralph Ellison, and Toni Morrison.A Lydia Child…An Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans Call ed African..B. Frederick Douglass…Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglas sC. Sojourner Truth…the Narrative of Sojourner TruthD. Elizabeth Cady Stanton…The Womans Bible36. Ernest Hemingways famous statement that all of American literature comes from one great book, _________, indicates this authors toweri ng place in the tradition. Early 19th-century American writers tended to be too flowery, sentimental, or ostentatious -- partially because they were still trying to prove that they could write as elegantly a s the English. His style, based on vigorous, realistic, colloquial Am erican speech, gave American writers a new appreciation of their nati onal voice. He was the first major author to come from the interior o f the country, and he captured its distinctive, humorous slang and iconoclasm. For him and other American writers of the late 19th century, realism was not merely a literary technique: It was a way of speakin g truth and exploding worn-out conventions. Thus it was profoundly li berating and potentially at odds with society. The most well-known ex ample is a poor boy who decides to follow the voice of his conscience and help a Negro slave escape to freedom, even though the boy thinks this means that he will be damned to hell for breaking the law.A. Frederick Douglass’ Narrative of the Life of Frederick Dougla ssB. Twains Adventures of Huckleberry FinnC. Harriet Beecher Stowes Uncle Toms CabinD. Bret Harte’s The Luck of Roaring Camp37. _______once wrote that art, especially literary art, "makes life, makes interest, makes importance." His fiction and criticism is the most highly conscious, sophisticated, and difficult of its era. With Twain, He is generally ranked as the greatest American novelist of th e second half of the 19th century.A. Edith WhartonB. Stephen CraneC. Henry JamesD. Jack London38. is essentially a literary expression of determinism. Associated with bleak, realistic depictions of lower-class life, determinism den ies religion as a motivating force in the world and instead perceives the universe as a machine. Eighteenth-century Enlightenment thinkers had also imagined the world as a machine, but as a perfect one, inve nted by God and tending toward progress and human betterment. _______ __ imagined society, instead, as a blind machine, godless and out of control.The 19th-century American historian Henry Adams constructed a n elaborate theory of history involving the idea of the dynamo, or ma chine force, and entropy, or decay of force. Instead of progress, Ada ms sees inevitable decline in human society.A. Romanticism…RomanticistsB. Neoclassicism…NeoclassicistsC. Transcendentalism…TranscendentalistD.Naturalism…. Naturalists39. _______is one of the best, if not the earliest, naturalistic Amer ican novels. It is the harrowing story of a poor, sensitive young gir l whose uneducated, alcoholic parents utterly fail her. In love and e ager to escape her violent home life, she allows herself to be seduce d into living with a young man, who soon deserts her. When her self-r ighteous mother rejects her, She becomes a prostitute to survive, but soon commits suicide out of despair. The author’s earthy subject ma tter and his objective, scientific style, devoid of moralizing, earma rk the story as a naturalist work.A. Cranes Maggie: A Girl of the StreetsB. Twains Adventures of Huckleberry FinnC. Harriet Beecher Stowes Uncle Toms CabinD. Bret Harte’s The Luck of Roaring Camp40. The autobiographical novel _______ depicts the inner stresses of the American dream as the author experienced them during the meteoric rise from obscure poverty to wealth and fame. The main character, an impoverished but intelligent and hardworking sailor and laborer, is determined to become a writer. Eventually, the writing makes the char acter rich and well-known, but the realizes that the woman he loves c ares only for his money and fame. His despair over her inability to l ove causes him to lose faith in human nature. He also suffers from cl ass alienation, for he no longer belongs to the working class, while he rejects the materialistic values of the wealthy whom he worked so hard to join. He sails for the South Pacific and commits suicide by j umping into the sea. Like many of the best novels of its time, this s tory is an unsuccessful story. It looks ahead to F. Scott Fitzgeralds The Great Gatsby in its revelation of despair amid great wealth.A. Jack LondonB.Martin EdenC. Maggie: A Girl of the StreetsD. Adventures of Huckleberry Finn41.________ displays crushing authority. Its precise details build up an overwhelming sense of tragic inevitability. The novel is a scathi ng portrait of the American success myth gone sour, but it is also a universal story about the stresses of urbanization, modernization, an d alienation. Within it roam the romantic and dangerous fantasies of the dispossessed. The work is a reflection of the dissatisfaction, en vy, and despair that afflicted many poor and working people in Americ as competitive, success-driven society. As American industrial power soared, the glittering lives of the wealthy in newspapers and photogr aphs sharply contrasted with the drab lives of ordinary farmers and c ity workers. The media fanned rising expectations and unreasonable de sires. Such problems, common to modernizing nations, gave rise to muc kraking journalism -- penetrating investigative reporting that docume nted social problems and provided an important impetus to social refo rm.A. Martin EdenB. Maggie: A Girl of the StreetsC. An American TragedyD. A Portrait of a Lady42. Three Midwestern poets who grew up in Illinois and shared the midwestern concern with ordinary people are Carl Sandburg, Vachel Lin dsay, and Edgar Lee Masters. Their poetry often concerns obscure indi viduals; they developed techniques -- realism, dramatic renderings -- that reached out to a larger readership. They are part of the Midwes tern, or ____________that arose before World War I to challenge the E ast Coast literary establishment. The "Chicago Renaissance" was a wat ershed in American culture: It demonstrated that Americas interior ha d matured.Chicago, SchoolA Chicago School.B. Midland SchoolC. Natural SchoolD. New Criticism School43. Two women regional novelists at the turn of the century are __ _____.A Edwin Arlington Robinson and Vachel LindsayB. Ellen Glasgow and Willa CatherC. Edwin Arlington Robinson and Ellen GlasgowD. Willa Cather and Vachel Lindsay44 ________, educator and the most prominent black leader of the p ost-Civil War era, grew up as a slave in Franklin County, Virginia, b orn to a white slave-holding father and a slave mother. His fine, sim ple autobiography, Up From Slavery (1901), recounts his successful st ruggle to better himself. He became renowned for his efforts to impro ve the lives of African-Americans; his policy of accommodation with w hites -- an attempt to involve the recently freed black American in t he mainstream of American society -- was outlined in his famous Atlan ta Exposition Address (1895)..A. Charles Waddell ChesnuttB. James Weldon JohnsonC. W.E.B. Du BoisD. Booker T. Washington45. The large cultural wave of, ______which gradually emerged in E urope and the United States in the early years of the 20th century, e xpressed a sense of a life through art as a sharp break from the past, as well as from Western civilizations classical traditions. Modern l ife seemed radically different from traditional life -- more scientif ic, faster, more technological, and more mechanized.A. NaturalismB. FuturismC. ModernismD.Imagism46.__________ developed an analogue to modern art. A resident of Paris and an art collector (she and her brother Leo purchased works o f the artists Paul Cézanne, Paul Gauguin, Pierre Aug uste Renoir, Pab lo Picasso, and many others), She once explained that she and Picasso were doing the same thing, he in art and she in writing. Using simpl e, concrete words as counters, she developed an abstract, experimenta l prose poetry. The childlike quality of her simple vocabulary recall s the bright, primary colors of modern art, while her repetitions ech o the repeated shapes of abstract visual compositions. By dislocating grammar and punctuation, she achieved new "abstract" meanings as in her influential collection Tender Buttons (1914), which views objects from different angles, as in a cubist painting.A. W.E.B. Du BoisB. Willa CatherC. Ellen GlasgowD. Gertrude Stein47. To analyze such modernist novels and poetry, a school of "____ ____" arose in the United States, with a new critical vocabulary. New critics hunted the "epiphany" (moment in which a character suddenly sees the transcendent truth of a situation, a term derived from a hol y saints appearance to mortals); they "examined" and "clarified" a wo rk, hoping to "shed light" upon it through their "insights."A ChicagoB. RenaissanceC. NaturalismD. New Criticism48. _______was one of the most influential American poets of this century. From 1908 to 1920, he resided in London, where he associated with many writers, including William Butler Yeats, for whom he worke d as a secretary. He drastically edited and improved his friend’s fa mous poem. He was a link between the United States and Britain, actin g as contributing editor to Harriet Monroes important Chicago magazin e Poetry and spearheading the new school of poetry known as Imagism, which advocated a clear, highly visual presentation. After Imagism, h e championed various poetic approaches. He eventually moved to Italy, where he became caught up in Italian Fascism.A. Ezra PoundB. Thomas Stearns EliotC. Ellen GlasgowD. Henry James49. As a critic,________is best remembered for his formulation of the "objective correlative," which he described, in The Sacred Wood, as a means of expressing emotion through "a set of objects, a situati on, a chain of events" that would be the "formula" of that particularemotion. Poems such as "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" (1915) embody this approach, when the ineffectual, elderly Prufrock thinks t o himself that he has "measured out his life in coffee spoons," using coffee spoons to reflect a humdrum existence and a wasted lifetime.A. Ezra PoundB. Thomas Stearns EliotC. Robert FrostD. Henry James50. A charismatic public reader,________ was renowned for his tour s. He read an original work at the inauguration of President John F. Kennedy in 1961 that helped spark a national interest in poetry. His popularity is easy to explain: He wrote of traditional farm life, app ealing to a nostalgia for the old ways. His subjects are universal -- apple picking, stone walls, fences, country roads. Frosts approach w as lucid and accessible: He rarely employed pedantic allusions or ell ipses. His frequent use of rhyme also appealed to the general audienc e.A. William Carlos WilliamsB. Robinson JeffersC. Robert FrostD. Wallace Stevens51. A painter,_______ was the first American poet to recognize tha t poetry had become primarily a visual, not an oral, art; his poems u sed much unusual spacing and indentation, as well as dropping all use of capital letters.A. Edward Estlin CummingsB. Hart CraneC. Marianne MooreD. Langston Hughes52. _______embraced African- American jazz rhythms and was one of the first black writers to attempt to make a profitable career out of his writing. He incorporated blues, spirituals, colloquial speech, a nd folkways in his poetry. An influential cultural organizer, He publ ished numerous black anthologies and began black theater groups in Lo s Angeles and Chicago, as well as New York City. He also wrote effect ive journalism, creating the character Jesse B. Semple ("simple") to express social commentary. One of his most beloved poems, "The Negro Speaks of Rivers" (1921, 1925), embraces his African -- and universal -- heritage in a grand epic catalogueA. Weldon JohnsonB. Claude McKayC. Countee CullenD. Langston Hughes。