英国文学复习总结
- 格式:docx
- 大小:29.91 KB
- 文档页数:8
Chapter I The Anglo-Saxon Period (450---1066)1.The Anglo-Saxon settlement in England (in the 4th and 5th centuries )---- Small kingdoms were combined into a united kingdom called England ;the three tribes(Angles, Saxon and Jutes) mixed into a whole people called English and the three dialect grew into a single language called Anglo-Saxon---Old English.--- The Anglo-Saxon period witnessed a transition from tribal society to feudalism. 2.“Beowulf” --- the national epic of the Anglo-Saxon and English people.--- a long poem of about 3,000 lines; a folk legend brought to England by the Anglo-Saxons and passed from mouth to mouth for hundreds of years before it was written down in the 10th century.3.The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle--- an important history book as well as a piece ofliterary work (under the guidance of King Alfred)Chapter II The Norman Period (1066--1350)1.The Norman conquest under Duke William in 1066--- The Norman Conquest marks the establishment of feudalism in England2.Middle English--- The English language was greatly enriched by the Norman conquests and a large number of French words were absorbed.3.The Black Death(1348-1349)4.The Romance --- the most prevalent kind of literature in feudal England--- a long composition, sometimes in verse, sometimes in prose, describing the life and adventures of knights.--- the content of romance :love, chivalry and religion--- there are many cycles of Arthurian romances, among which “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight” is most famous and still kept reading.5.“Piers Plowman”--- a long alliterative poem by William Langland--- the story takes the form of an allegory, but it gives a realistic picture of 14th century England.--- a bitter and incise satire directing at the social vices of the time.Chapter III The Age of Chaucer (1350--- 1400)1.The Hundred Year’s War (1337---1453)--- a series of wars fought between the English kings and the French kings for the French throne2.The peasant uprising of 1381--- the direct result of exploitation and oppression of the peasants by the feudal lords.3.Geoffrey Chaucer (1340---1400)--- “the father of English poetry” (by John Dryden) and the founder of English realistic literature: the greatest literate before Shakespeare--- important works:The Romaunt of the Rose,Troilus and Criseyde and The Canterbury TalesOthers: T he House of Fame,The Book of the Duchess4.About “The Canterbury Tales”--- Chaucer’s masterpiece and one of the monumental works in English literature--- a vivid and comprehensive picture of Chaucer’s time--- written in heroic couplet;humor and satireChapter IV The Fifteenth Century (1400---1550)1.The War of the Roses (1455---1485)--- a series of civil wars fought between two great families for the English throne2.Popular Ballads--- one of the main stream of English literature in the 15th century: folk literature--- ballad meter: 4-line stanzas---“Robin Hood Ballads”, dealing with the famous outlaw Robin Hood and his menChapter V The English Renaissance (1550---1642)1.Historical background--- The reign of Queen Elizabeth: a period of peace and prosperity--- The defeat of Spanish fleet “Armada”(1588)--- The enclosure movement: bringing about the development in industry--- The Authorized Version of Bible or the King James Bible (Under the auspices of James I. 1611)--- The Renaissance and Humanism2.Thomas More (1478--- 1535)--- the greatest of the English humanists: the author of “Utopia”, a ideal state: “liberty, Fraternity and Equality”; written in the form of a conversation between More and a returned voyager: the existence of private property is pointed outas the source of all social evils and injustices.3.The Flowering of poetry1) Sir Thomas Wyatt and Earl of Surrey--- Both of them introduced sonnet form Italy to England, one of the most popular verse forms for th e next half century. Surrey, also wrote in his translation of Virgil’s “Aeneid”, the first English blank verse, the form of poetry to be masterly handled byShakespeare and Milton.2) Sir Philip Sidne y--- Well-known as a poet and critic of poetry: Astrophel and Stella --- a collection of love sonnets: Apology for Poetry --- one of the earliest English literary essays.3) Edmund Spenser --- “the Poets‟ poet”--- He had an exceptional command of language, of verbal music, of giving poetry an exalted and dream-like feeling.--- important works:The Shepherd‟s Calendar , Amoetti (a series of 88 sonnets printed with “Epitalamion”)“Faerie Queene” (dedicated to Queen Elizabeth: Spenser‟s masterpiece written in a special verse form which has since been called the Spenserian Stanza) 4) Michael Drayton--- a versatile poet; best known for his beautiful sonnet “Since there’s no help, come let us kiss and part”5) William Shakespeare--- two narrative poems: Venus and Andonis ,The Rape of Lucrece--- a sequece of 154 sonnets (rhyming scheme: abab cdcd efef gg)6)George Chapman:famous for his translation of Homer4.The Flowering of Drama: the highest glory of the English Renaissance1)The early form of drama: miracle play, morality play, interlude and theclassical drama2)The university wits: a dramatic circle ; the immediate predecessors ofShakespeare; furnished the Elizabethan stage with a large part of its repertoire3)Thomas Kyd--- His The Spanish Tragedy, a tragedy of blood and revenge, anticipated Shakespeare‟s“Hamlet”4)Christopher Marlowe: the most gifted of “the university wits”--- important works: Tamburlaine , The Jew of Malta and Doctor Fanstus--- These plays show, in various ways, the spirit of the rising bourgeoisie, its insatiable appetite for power, money an knowledge.--- His masterpiece is Doctor Faustus , in which Dr. Faustus sells his soul to the devil (Mephistopheles) in return for the promise of eternal life.--- It is Marlowe who first made blank verse the principle instrument of English dr ama. He was also famous for his “mighty line”5)Robert Greene: one of the university wits; famous for his attack onShakespeare as “an up-start crow beautiful with our feathers”6)William Shakespeare (1564-1616)--- Plays in chronological order: (see History Book PP.67-68)---important works and their major characters:Henry VII and Henry V(History): Prince Henry, Sir John Falstaff “Romeo and Juliet” (Romantic Tragedy): Romeo, Juliet“Julius Caesar ”(Historical Tragedy): Caesar, Brutus, AntonyThe great comedies:The Merchants of Venice : Portia, Bassanio, Antonio, ShylockAs you like it : Rosalind , Orlando, Celia, Oliver, JacquesTwelfth Night : Viola, Oliva, Malvolio, Sir TobyMuch Ado About Nothing : Beatrice, Benedick, Malaprop, DogberryThe Great tragedies:Othello: Othello, Desdemona, IageKing Lear: king Lear, Corelia, Goneril, RegainMacbeth: Macbeth, Lady Macbeth, Banquo, MacduffHamlet: prince Hamlet, Claudius, Ophelia, PoloniusThe tragic-comedies or romances:The Tempest: Prospero, MirandaCymbelineThe Winter’s TaleShakespeare‟s character portrayal, plot construction, mastery of language as well as his humanist ideasChapter VI The Seventeenth Century (1603-1688)1.Historical background1) The outburst of the English Revolution(1642)2) Charles I was beheaded in 1649 and England became a commonwealth3) The split within the revolutionary camp and the restoration.4) The Glorious Revolution (1688) and England has become a country ofconstitutional monarchy2.Francis Bacon (1561-1626)--- the first great English prose writer; his essays began the long tradition of the English essay in the history of English literature; “the real progenitor of English materialism and experimental sciences of modern times ingeneral” (by Marx)--- Bacon‟s 58 essays were published in 1625. They are the author‟sreflections and comments, mostly on rather abstract subjects, such as “Of Truth” , “Of Friendship”, and “of Riches”. They are known for theirconciseness and brevity, simplicity and forcefulness, practicality andversatility.3. Metaphysical Poets1)The main themes are love, death and religion; characterized bymysticism in content and fantasticality in form. The chief representative of this school was John Donne.2)John Donne (1572-1631)--- His best-known poetry may be divided into two parts --- love poetry and religion poetry. His S ongs and Sonnets are arguments about love: the tone is direct, passionate; the discussion sophisticated. He had a great influence on modern poets such as T.S. Eliot and W.B.Yeats.3)George Herbert : the saint of the metaphysical schoolThe lyrics in The Temple use unusual imagery to express his religions experience4)Andrew Marvell: famous for his lyric “To his Coy Mistress”4. The Cavalier Poets:--- They were lyrical poets, and dealt chiefly with the theme of love and the theme of “Carpe diem”; marked by courtliness, urbanity and polish. The chief representative was Ben Jonson.5. Ben Jonson (1572-1637)1)the best-known contemporary and successor of Shakespeare; a dramatist, apoet laureate and a critic; famous for his comedies of Humor; the representative of the cavalier poets; the author of the beautiful lyric “ To Celia” starting with “Drink to me with thine eyes”2)His important works:“Every Man in His Humor” ,“ The Alchemist” and “Volpone”--- his masterpiece 3)He was an advocate of classic drama and took a firm stand for the “threeunities ”.6. Robert Herrick--- a follower of Ben Jonson, famous for his lyric “To the Virgins” starting with “Gather ye rose buds while ye may”7. John Milton (1608-1674)1)the greatest of all English epic poets; a master of blank verse; a stylistfamous for grand style; the greatest English revolutionary poet and pamphleteer (The revolutionary enthusiasm of the bourgeois revolution and the bitter hatred for the tyrant is best shown in the works of John Milton) 2)His important works:--- Hid prose writings are in the form of pamphlet and they are all for freedom and against tyranny.“Areopagitica” (A defense of the freedom of the press)(The Defense of the English People)“Pro Populo Anglicano Secunda”(The Second Defense of the English People)Both are written in Latin, in answer to the foreign royalists’ attacks upon the commonwealth and the revolution.--- a sequence of 24 sonnets; the best known: “To Mr. Cyriack Skinner Upon His Blindness”--- His major poetical works:“Paradise Lost ”,“Paradise Regained” and “Samson Agonists”8. John Bunyan (1628-1688)--- the greatest fiction writer of the 17th century; best remembered for “Pilgrim‟s Progress”. Though it has generally been read and appreciated as a religious book, it nevertheless contains behind the allegory a series of real examples which give a faithful picture of the English society in Bunyan‟s age. --- Bunyan is also known for his simple and lively prose style.9. John Dryden (1631-1700)--- the most distinguished literary figure of the Restoration Period poet, playwright and critic; the forerunner of the English classical school of the literature.--- His important works:“Absalom and Schitophel” (a long poem), “All for Love” (his best known play, )“An Essay of Dramatic Poesy” (his most famous prose work)--- He established the heroic couplet as one of the principal English verse forms, clarified the English prose and raised English literary criticism to a new level.Chapter VII The Eighteenth Century (1666-1798)1. The Enlightenment--- The 18th century marked the beginning of an intellectual movement in theEurope, known as the Enlightenment, which was, on the whole, an expression of struggle of the bourgeoisie against feudalism.--- The representatives of the Enlightenment in English literature were JosephAddison and Richard Steele (the essayists) and Alexander Pope (the poet) 2. Neo - classicism--- The classicists modeled themselves on Greek and Latin authors, and tried tocontrol literary creation by some fixed laws and rules drawn from Greek andLatin works. They emphasized reason rather than emotion, form rather than content. Most of their writings were didactic and satirical. As elegance,correctness and appropriateness were preferred; the poets found closedcouplet the only possible verse form for serious work. Their literary works mainly appeal to the middle class readers.3. Joseph Addison and Richard Steele--- Richard Steele started a paper “The Tatler”--- Joseph Addison collaborated with Steel in publishing “The Spectator”--- Humour, intimacy and elegance are the striking features of their familiar essays. In their hands, the English essay had completely established itself as a literary genre.4.Alexander Pope (1688---1744)--- the greatest English poet of the classical school in the first half of the 18thcentury; a great satirist; a rather sound critic; bringing the heroic couplet toperfection; Many commonplaces become household sayings under his pen.--- His important works:“An Essay on Criticism” (his masterpiece, a didactic poem in heroic couplets), “The Rape of the Lock”, “The Dunciad ” “An Essay on Man”--- Pope translate the entire “Iliad” and half of the “Odyssey”; he was also ane ditor of Shakespeare‟s plays5.Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)--- a versatile literary genius: the greatest lexicographer, critic, poet, dramatist; “the great charm of literature”; an outstanding representative of classical school.--- His major works:“A Dictionary of the English Language”,“Letter to Lord Chesterfield”, “Lives of the Poets” , “Vanity of Human Wishes”--- He also edited two periodicals, “The Rambler” and “The Idler”6.James BoswellHis “Life of Johnson” had become a classic of English biography.7.Daniel Defoe (1661-1731)--- a pioneer novelist of England; one of the forerunners of the English realistic novel;a true representative of the Enlightenment; a prolific writer on a great variety of subjects .--- His major works:“Robinson Crusoe” (his mas terpiece ),“Captain Singleton” “Moll Flanders” “Colonel Jacque”, “A Journal of the Plague Year”8.Samuel Richardson (16891761)--- an early representative of sentimental school; the first psycho-analytical novelist--- His works and central characters:“Pamela, or virtue Rewarded”: Pamela, Mr. B“Charissa Harlowe ”: Clarissa, Lovelace“Sir Charles Grandison”9.Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)--- “the greatest genius of the age ” (by Addison); “a striking figure who towered above other writers by reason of his more profound imagination, mordant wit and emotional intensity”; a superb satirist (His satire is marked by an outward gravity, and an apparent calmness conceals his bitter irony); one of the greatest masters of English prose (His language is simple, clear and vigorous).--- important works:“The Battle of Books”, “A Take of a Tub”, “The Drapier‟s letters”, “A Modest Proposal”, “Gulliver‟s Travels” (His masterpiece)10.Henry Fielding (1707-1754)--- the real founder of the English realistic novel (He set up the theory of realism in literary creation ); a playwright of high standing; a political pamphleteer; a satirist (Satire abounds everywhere in his works); a master of style.--- His important works: 1) His plays : “Don Quixote in England”,“Pasquin” , “The Historical Register for 1736”2)His novels and central characters:“Joseph Andrews”: Joseph, Lady Booby, Parson Adams“Jonathan Wild the Great”: Jonathan Wild“The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling”: Tom Jones, Blifil, Sophia, Squire Western, Partiridge11.Tobias Smollett (1721-1771)--- He used the form of the picaresque novel (流浪汉小说)and even influenced Charles Dickens--- important works :“Roderick Random”, “Peregine Pickle” , “Humphry Clinker” (his best novel) urence Sterne (1713-1768)--- one of the oddest and most original of English novelist; a novelist of the sentimentalist school--- His literary career is represented by two works:“Tristram Shandy ”(a novel without a regular plot) and “A Sentimental Journey”13.Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816)--- the most important English playwright of the 18th century; His plays are remembered for their verbal detriment and laughter which his well-planned scenes can create. His plays repudiate the high society for its vanity, great and hypocrisy.---important works and characters:“The Rivals” : Lydia, Captain Absolute, Mrs. Malaprop ( From her is derived the term “malapropism‟‟)“The School for Scandal” (his masterpiece, a great comedy of manners 风俗喜剧):Joseph Surface, Charles Surface, Lady Teazel, Lady Sneerwell14.Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)--- a poet, novelist, dramatist and essayist; one of the representatives of English sentimentalism--- his poems: “The Traveller” and “The Deserted Villag e”--- his novels and characters“The Vicar of Wakefield” : Dr. Primrose (the vicar), Thornahill, Sir William--- his plays:“The Good-Natured Man” (a comedy of character)“She stoops to Conquer” (a comedy of manners) : Marlow, Kate--- his essay : “The Citizen of the World”15.Edward Gibbon (1737-1794)--- His “ The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire” is a remarkable product of the Enlightenment of the 18th century and the greatest historical work in English literature. Gibbon is also famous for his style, characterized by precision, lucidity ,economy and elegance.16.Sentimentalism in poetry--- Sentimentalism came into being in the middle of the 18th century. Dissatisfied with reason which classicists appealed to, sentimentalists appeal to sentiment. They turn to the countryside for their material in contrast to classicists who confined themselves to the clubs and drawing rooms of the city. Sentimentalism marks the midway and the transition from classicism to its opposite, Romanticism.--- Thomas Gray : “Elegy Written in a country churchyard” (a model of sentimentalist poetry)--- Edward Young: “Night Thoughts”--- Jame Thompson : “Seasons”--- George Crabble : “The Village”17.Pre-Romanticism in Poetry--- it arose in the latter half of the 18th century , marked by a strong protest against bondage of classicism and by a recognition of the claims of passion and emotion. It was ushered in by Percy(“Reliques of Ancient English Poetry”), Macpherson (“Ossian”) and Chatterton (Rowley Papers), and represented by Blake and Burns.18.William Blake (1757-1827)--- a Pre-Romantic or a forerunner of the Romantic poetry of the 19th century; a symbolist or a mystic (Some of his poems are obscure and can be interpreted only symbolically); politically a radical and supporter of the French Revolution;a prophetic writer looking forward to a time when the human spirit would be liberated from oppression.--- important works:“The Poetical Sketches”, “The Songs of Innocence”, “The Songs of Experience”, “The Prophetic Books”Which includes “The Marriage of Heaven and Hell”, “The French Revolution”, “Milton ”and “Jerusalem”19.Robert Burns (1757-1796)--- the greatest poet Scotland has ever produced; a remarkable lyricist on the theme of love and friendship; a patriotic poet calling for national independence, liberty, equality and fraternity for all the people in the world; a satirist criticizing various social vices, a pe asant poet sharing his people’s feelings and drawing material f rom the folk legends and songs; a great master of language, expressing himself in simple and musical language.--- important works:“Poems, chiefly in the Scottish Dialect”Best known for such poems as “A red, Red Rose”“A Man‟s a Man for a …That‟”, “Auld Lang Syne”, “My Heart‟s in the Highland”etc.。
1 The Anglo-Saxon Period (450-1066)一、不列颠岛上的Settler换了一波又一波Celts(600B.C.)→Romans(55B.C.)→Anglo-Saxons(450A.D.)→Normans(1066A.D.)二、两个流派体裁:Epic来源:based on partly historical and partly legendary materials, brought over by the Anglo-Saxons from their original homes.特点:1. Alliteration 头韵 2. Kenning比喻的复合辞3.Repetition2 The Norman Period (1066-1350)一、1066年The Norman Conquest 诺曼征服Significance: 1. Feudal system was established in England.2. English social life greatly changed.3. Connection of English & French.4. Dividing line of Old English and Middle English二、Romance1. Popular form of literature of the upper class in feudal England in the Medieval Ages;2. Knights are major characters;3. Emphasis of chivalry spirit and loyalty to King;4. Composed by the noble, for the noble and of the noble;课本P12 In subject matters, romance naturally falls under three categories:1.2.3.3 The Age of Chaucer (1350-1400)一、Who is Chaucer?英国摆脱中古时期浪漫主义的第一位现实主义诗人二、两个事件1. The Hundred Years War 百年战争(英VS法)2. The Peasant Uprising of 1381 (打仗没钱了管peasant要,于是peasant揭竿而起)三、John Wycliff1. He was the major person who translated Bible into Middle English, which is important to English Literature and English Language2. He fixed a national standard for English prose to replace various dialects. His works earned him the title of Father of English prose. 普通话第一人四、Geoffery Chaucer 乔叟1. The works of Chaucer are roughly divided into 3 periods 课本P182. The significance of The Canterbury Tales is as follows 课本P194 The Fifteenth Century (1400-1550)一、两个战争和两个事件1. The Hundred Years’ War 百年战争1337 - 14532. The War of the Roses 玫瑰战争1455-14853. The discovery of America and the new sea routes4. Reformation of the Church二、Popular ballads民谣是这一时期主要体裁1. five basic characteristics 课本P362. 重要作品Robin Hood Ballads 侠盗罗宾汉5 The English Renaissance (1550-1642)一、英国文艺复兴时期在位的女王是Queen Elizabeth (1558-1603) 伊丽莎白一世二、思想:Humanism (Man is the measure of all things)1. It was against human nature to sacrifice the happiness of this life for an after life; the pursuit of this life.2. Man should be given full freedom to enrich their intellectual and emotional life.三、Edmund Spenser是英国文艺复兴时期的伟大诗人四、英国文艺复兴时期的主流文学形式是Drama6 The Seventeenth Century (1603-1688)一、Key words of period of Revolution and RestorationBourgeois 资产阶级Anglican Church 英国国教Puritans 清教徒Charles I 查理一世1641年Grand Remonstrance 大抗议书Commonwealth 英联邦Cromwell in 1653 the Lord Protector 护国公克伦威尔The Bill of Rights 权利法案二、King James Version of the Bible(钦定版圣经),是《圣经》的诸多英文版本之一,于1611年出版。
英国文学期末复习资料一、名词解释{5题/10分}1.apostrophe: a figure of speech in which the speaker addresses a dead or absent person,or an animal, object or abstract idea.2.dramatic monologue: a kind of poem in which a single fictional or historicalcharacter other than the poet speaks to a silent listener, revealing unwittingly things about himself or herself.3.satire: a kind of writing that expresses the vices and follies of individuals, institutions,or societies to ridicule and scorn.4.ode: a rhymed lyrical poem which expresses noble feelings often addressed to a person,an object or celebrating an event.5.terza rima: a poetic form consisting of a series of units of three lines rhyming aba,bcb, cdc, ded, etc.6.Byronic hero: a rebel or outlaw who is strong-willed, disillusioned, friendless, alwaysat war with the conventional world.7.parody: the imitative use of words, style, attitude, tone and ideas of an author in such away as to make them ridiculous.8.epistolary novel: a novel written in the form of a series of letters exchanged amongthe characters of the story, with extracts from their journals sometimes included.二、文学史常识:作家作品,相关流派{10题/10分}1.William Wordsworth (华兹华斯1770-1850)【1】作品特点{P6}:Close to nature——he had a profound love for nature. He thought that nature had a moral value and has its philosophical significance.【2】相关作品{P6}:●The Recluse:long poem which illustrated his thinking of life, but it remainsunfinished.●The Prelude (1850): long poem which tells the growth of his mind.●Lyrical Ballads (1798): an important piece of literature criticism in English literature.It can be read as a declaration of romanticism.【3】代表作品{P17}:I Wandered Lonely As a CloudI wandered lonely as a cloudThat floats on high o'er vales and hills, When all at once I saw a crowd,A host, of golden daffodils;Beside the lake, beneath the trees, Fluttering and dancing in the breeze. Continuous as the stars that shine And twinkle on the milky way,They stretched in never-ending line Along the margin of a bay:Ten thousand saw I at a glance, Tossing their heads in sprightly dance. The waves beside them danced; but they Out-did the sparkling waves in glee:A poet could not but be gay,In such a jocund company:I gazed--and gazed--but little thought What wealth the show to me had brought: For oft, when on my couch I lieIn vacant or in pensive mood,They flash upon that inward eyeWhich is the bliss of solitude;And then my heart with pleasure fills, And dances with the daffodils.2.George Gordon Byron (拜伦1788-1824)【1】作品特点:He is interested in democracy【2】关于作者{P41-42}:●Born of a noble blood both on paternal and maternal lines.●He was good friends with Shelly●In the style of Pope, he satirically attacked Wordsworth, Coleridge and Southey,and the Edinburgh critics.●After he attained his M.A. degree, he stayed for some time on his estate and led adissipated(奢靡的) life●From 1809 to 1811, he made a grand tour of the Continent.【3】相关作品:(1)English Bards and Scotch Reviewers: his first important poem(2)Hours of Idleness:a collection of lyrical verse(3)Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage: first two cantos(篇章)(4)Oriental Tales: a series of romantic narrative verses(5)Prometheus, Sonnet on Chillon, and the Prisoner of Chillon.(6)Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage: his third and fourth cantos.【4】代表作品{P59}:She Walks in BeautyShe walks in beauty, like the nightOf cloudlee climes and starry skies: And all that’s best of dark and bright Meet in her aspect and her eyes: Thus mellowed to that tender light Which heaven to gaudy day denies. One shade the more, one ray the less, Had half impaired the nameless grace Which waves in every raven tress,Or softly lightens o’er her face;Where thoughts serenely sweet express How pure, how dear their dwelling place. And on that cheek, and o’er that brow,So soft, so charm, yet eloquent,The smiles that win, the tints that glow,But tell of days in goodness spent,A mind at peace with all below,A heart whose love is innocent!3.Percy Bysshe Shelley (雪莱1792--1822)【1】关于作者{P61-62}:●He eloped with a young girl, Harriet, at last she was committed suicide.●She met Godwin and fell in love with his daughter Mary Godwin. Her mother wasMary Wollstonecraft(1759-1797), a champion for women’s rights and the authoress of A Vindication of the Rights of Woman(1792)●He was drowned in a tempest while sailing in a boat along the coast of Italy. 【3】相关作品:(1)Alastor (1816), The Revolt of Islam(1818), The Mask of Anarchy(1819): allegorical(讽喻的)poems(2)Prometheus Unbound(1820), Hellas(1822),and The Cenci(1819): lyrical dramas.(3)Adonis(1821): a poem he wrote on the death of Keats(4)Ode to the West Wind (1819): the most well-known one.(5)The Defence of Poetry (1821): published in 1840 after the poet’s death.【4】代表作品{P67-70}:Ode to the West Wind1、O Wild West Wind, thou breathe of Autumn’s beingThou, from whose unseen presence the leaves deadAre driven, like ghosts from an enchanter fleeing,Yellow, and black, and pale, and hectic red,Pestilence-stricken multitudes:O thouWho chariltest to their dark wintry bedThe winged seeds, where they lie cold and low,Each like a corpse within its grave, untilThine azure sister of the Spring shall blowHer clarion o'er the dreaming earth, and fill(Driving sweet buds like flocks to feed in air)With living hues and odors plain and hill:Wild Spirit, which art moving everywhere;Destroyer and presserver; hear, oh, hear!4 、If I were a dead leaf thou mightest bear;If I were a swift cloud to fly with thee:A wave to pant beneath thy power , and shareThe impulse of thy strength, only less freeThan thou, O uncontrollable! If evenI were as im my boyhood, and could beThe comrade of thy wanderigs over Heaven,As then, when to outstrip thy skiey speedScarce seem'd a vision; I would ne'er have strivenAs thus with thee in prayer in my sore need.Oh, lift me as a wave , a leaf, a cloud!I fall upon the thorns of life! I bleed!A heavy weight of hours has chained and bowedOne too lke thee: tameless, and swift, and proud.5 、Make me thy lyre, even as the forest is:What if my leavers are falling like its own!The tmult of thy mighty harmoniesWill take from both a deep, autumnal tone,Sweet though in sadness. Be thou, Spirit fierce,My spirit! Be thou me, impetuous one!Drive my dead thoughts over the universeLike witheered leaves to quicken a new birth!And , by the incantation of this verse,Scatter, is from an unextinguished hearthAshes and sparks, my words among mankind!Be through my lips to unawakened earthThe trumpet of a prophecy! O Wind,If Winter comes , can Spring be far behind?4. John Keats (约翰·济慈1795-1821)【1】关于作者{P74}:●Unlike Byron and Shelley, Keats was born in London, of lowly origin.●His parents died early. He was forced to serve his apprenticeship and he worked asthe surgeon’s helper for more than two years.●He died when he was only 25 years old.●Most of his best poems were written in the short three years from 1817 to the time ofhis death.●【2】相关作品:(1)Endymion (1818): his long allegorical poem, about love between a Greek shepherdand the moon goddess(2)In 1817 he abandoned his profession and published his first collection of poems. 【3】作品特点:(1)H is poetry is concerned with joy in the beauty of this world. He had ataste of beauty of nature and works of art.(2)H is poetry is always senshous, colorful and rich in imaginary whichexpress the acuteness of his sense.【4】代表作品{P76}:Ode to a NightingaleI.MY heart aches, and a drowsy numbness painsMy sense, as though of hemlock I had drunk,Or emptied some dull opiate to the drainsOne minute past, and Lethe-wards had sunk:'Tis not through envy of thy happy lot,But being too happy in thine happiness,—That thou, light-winged Dryad of the trees,In some melodious plotOf beechen green, and shadows numberless,Singest of summer in full-throated ease.II.O, for a draught of vintage! that hath beenCool'd a long age in the deep-delved earth,Tasting of Flora and the country green,Dance, and Provencal song, and sunburnt mirth!O for a beaker full of the warm South,Full of the true, the blushful Hippocrene,With beaded bubbles winking at the brim,And purple-stained mouth;That I might drink, and leave the world unseen,And with thee fade away into the forest dim:III.Fade far away, dissolve, and quite forgetWhat thou among the leaves hast never known,The weariness, the fever, and the fretHere, where men sit and hear each other groan;Where palsy shakes a few, sad, last gray hairs,Where youth grows pale, and spectre-thin, and dies;Where but to think is to be full of sorrowAnd leaden-eyed despairs,Where Beauty cannot keep her lustrous eyes,Or new Love pine at them beyond to-morrow.5. Charles Dickens (狄更斯1812-1870)【1】关于作者{P135-136}:●He was once put into prison with his father. Although he was there only for half ayear, this experience of his childhood left such a deep impression on his mind that it became a recurring subject in his novels.●He later became a parliamentary reporter.●In 1858 he began to give public readings which continued until his death.【2】相关作品:(1) 1836:Sketches by Boz;(2) 1836-1837: The Papers of the Pickwick Club: rapidly brought him fame and wealth.(3) 1837-1838: The Orphan in Oliver Twist(雾都孤儿)(4) 1838-1839: Nicholas Nickleby(5) 1840-1841: The Old Curiosity Shop(6) 1843-1844: Martin Chuzzlewit(7) 1843-1845: Christmas stories which included A Christmas Carol, The Chimes and The Cricket on the Hearth: he showed his profound sympathy for the poor and described how the rich were converted after undergoing severe tests. These stories are permeated with the spirit of brotherhood and are regarded as representatives of the spirit of Christmas.(8) After 1844: he began to write novels of bitter social criticism, such as Dombey and Son (1848), Bleak House (1853), Hard Times (1854), Little Dorrit (1857), Our Mutual Friend (1865)(9) 代表作:David Copperfield【3】作品特点:(1)He has a tendency to depict the grotesque (very odd or unusually, fantastically ugly or absurd) characters or events. Most of his characters have a peculiar habit, manner, behavior, dress and catch phrase of his or her own.(2)He loves to instill life into inanimate things and to compare animate beings to inanimate things.(3)He is noted for his description of pathetic scenes that aim to arouse people’s sympathy. Pathos(激起怜悯) is a distinctive quality in his writings.6. William Makepeace Thackeray (萨克雷1811-1863)【1】关于作者{P157-158}:He and Dickens were contemporaries(同时代的). They were both novelists andhumorists and they criticized the Victorian society satirically.●He was born in a well-to-do family.●名家名言【2】代表作品:Vanity Fair(名利场)the Pilgrim’s Progress(天路历程)【3】作品特点:和Dickens相比(1) The world they described was different. Thackeray mainly described the lives of aristocrats and rich businessmen, that is people of the upper classes and middle classes, whereas Dickens mainly described the underdogs and he unprivileged (例:The Orphan in Oliver Twist)(2) Dickens was a sentimentalist. He liked to avail himself of every opportunity to arouse the emotions of his readers. As for Thackeray, he also showed anger and indignation at hypocrisy, vanity, snobbery etc. but he always heid himself under control. He was seldom sentimental, being usually quiet and effective.(3)Dickens was a romantist in many aspects by letting loose his imagination. Thackeray was against affectation, Byronic attitudes.7. Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)【1】关于作者{P191}:●He was born in a clergyman’s family.●He became an inspector of schools after he left Oxford; he was professor of poetry atOxford from 1857 to 1867.●He was both a poet and a literary critic. In his poetry he reflects on the doubt of hisage, and the conflict between science and religion.【2】相关作品:(1)1865 and 1888: Essays in Criticism(2)1889: Culture and Anarchy(无政府状态)(3)特点:He attacked the barbarians(野蛮人)8. Daniel Defoe (丹尼尔·笛福1661-1731)【1】关于作者{上册,P238}:●He is known as a pioneer novelist of England, and also a prolific writer of books andpamphlets (小册子)on a great variety of subjects.●代表作:Robinson Crusoe(鲁滨逊漂流记1719)Moll Flanders(摩尔·弗兰德斯1722)9. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)【1】关于作者{上册,P289}:●He was the greatest English man of letters between Pope and Wordsworth.●He founded a club and many men of letters gatherd around him.●代表作:(1) A Dictionary of the English Language(2) The Rambler: An imitation of Addison’s The Spectator(3)Letter to the Right Honorable The Earl of Chester field (致**爵爷书, 上P 291) 【2】名家名言●The most famous one: Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel(流氓).●Curiosity is one of the permanent and certain characteristics of a vigorous mind.● A man should keep his friendships in constant repair. If a man does not make newacquaintances as he advances through life, he will soon find himself alone.●Praise, like gold and diamond.●What is written without effort is in general read without pleasure.●The true measure of a man is how he treats someone who can do him absolutely nogood.【3】代表作再现Letter to the Right Honorable The Earl of Chester fieldMy Lord,I have been lately informed, by the proprietor of The World, that two papers, in which my Dictionary is recommended to the public, were written by your lordship. To be so distinguished is an honour which, being very little accustomed to favours from the great, I know not well how to receive, or in what terms to acknowledge.When, upon some slight encouragement, I first visited your lordship, I was overpowered, like the rest of mankind, by the enchantment of your address, and could not forbear to wish that I might boast myself Le vainqueur du vainqueur de la terre;—that I might obtain that regard for which I saw the world contending; but I found my attendance so little encouraged, that neither pride nor modesty would suffer me to continue it. When I had once addressed your Lordship in public, I had exhausted all the art of pleasing which a retired and uncourtly scholar can possess. I had done all that I could; and no man is well pleased to have his all neglected, be it ever so little.Seven years, my lord, have now passed, since I waited in your outward rooms, or was repulsed from your door; during which time I have been pushing on my work through difficulties, of which it is useless to complain, and have brought it, at last, to the verge of publication, without one act of assistance , one word of encouragement, or one smile of favour. Such treatment I did not expect, for I never had a patron before.The shepherd in Virgil grew at last acquainted with Love, and found him a native of the rocks.Is not a patrons my lord, one who looks with unconcern on a man struggling for life in the water, and, when he has reached ground, encumbers him with help? The notice which you have been pleased to take of my labours, had it been early, had been kind; but it has been delayed till I am indifferent, and cannot enjoy it: till I am solitary, and cannot impart it; till I am known, and do not want it. I hope it is no very cynical asperity not to confess obligations where no benefit has been received, or to be unwilling that the public should consider me as owing that to a patron, which providence has enabled me to do for myself.Having carried on my work thus far with so little obligation to any favourer of learning, I shall not be disappointed though I should conclude it, if less be possible, with less; for I have been long wakened from that dream of hope, in which I once boasted myself with so much exultation, My Lord,10. 补充几个作家【1】Lord Alfred Tennyson:(1)Break,Break,Break (2)Ulysses(3) Poems by Two brothers (4) The Lady of Shalott(5) Morted’s Arthur【2】Robert Browning:He is famous for dramatic Monologues(1)My Last Duchess (2)Meeting at Night【3】Emily Bronte:Wuthering Heights(呼啸山庄)【4】William Blake: (1)London (2)Tyger【5】Daniel Defoe: Robinson Crusoe(鲁滨逊漂流记)三、简答题:二选一,(要有自己观点)20分【I】浪漫主义特点{下册,P4-5}1. Subjectivism(主观想象主义):●Instead of regarding poetry as “a mirror to nature”, the source of which is in theouter world, romantic poets describe poetry as “the spontaneous(自发的) overflow of powerful feelings” which expresses the poet’s mind”.●The interest of the romantic poets is not in the objective world or in the action ofmen, but in the feelings, thoughts, and experiences of the poets themselves.●In short, romanticism is related to subjectivism, while neo-classicism is related toobjectivism.●The poetry of the Romantic Age in England is famous for its high degree ofimagination.2. Spontaneity (自发性)●Wordsworth defines poetry as “the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings”. Itreflects spontaneity is opposed to the “rules” and “regulations” imposed on the poetsby neoclassic writers.●Romanticism is an assertion(主张) of independence,a departure from theneo-classic rules.● A work of art must be original3. Singularity(奇特性)●Romantic poets have a strong love for the remote, the unusual, the strange, thesupernatural, the mysterious, the splendid, the picturesque, and the illogical.4. Worship of nature (钟爱自然)●The romantic poets are worshipers of nature,especially the sublime(超群的)aspect of a natural scene.●Romantic poets read in nature some mysterious force.●Some even regard nature as the revelation of God.5. Simplicity (简单朴实)●Romantic poets take to using everyday language spoken by the rustic(质朴的) peopleas opposed to the poetic diction used by neo-classic writers.●Under the influence of the American and French revolutions, t here was a growthof democratic feelings, and an increasing belief that every human being is worth being praised.●Many poets had a vision of the brotherhood of mankind, universal sharin g, and theultimate freedom of human spirits.【II】维多利亚小说特点{下册,P132}(要有自己观点)20分四、名家名言{5段/10分}除去前边所有作者涉及到的之外,另附William Blake两篇No.1: London ——William BlakeI wandered through each chartered street, Near where the chartered Thames does flow, A mark in every face I meet,Marks of weakness, marks of woe.In every cry of every man,In every infant's cry of fear,In every voice, in every ban,The mind-forged manacles I hear: How the chimney-sweeper's cryEvery blackening church appals,And the hapless soldier's sighRuns in blood down palace-walls.But most, through midnight streets I hear How the youthful harlot's curseBlasts the new-born infant's tear, And blights with plagues the marriage-hearse.No.2 :Tyger –William BlakeTyger Tyger, burning bright,In the forests of the night;What immortal hand or eye,Could frame thy fearful symmetry?In what distant deeps or skies.Burnt the fire of thine eyes?On what wings dare he aspire?What the hand, dare seize the fire? And what shoulder, & what art, Could twist the sinews of thy heart? And when thy heart began to beat, What dread hand? & what dread feet? What the hammer? what the chain,In what furnace was thy brain?What the anvil? what dread grasp, Dare its deadly terrors clasp!When the stars threw down their spears And water'd heaven with their tears: Did he smile his work to see?Did he who made the Lamb make thee? Tyger Tyger burning bright,In the forests of the night:What immortal hand or eye,Dare frame thy fearful symmetry?五、综合评论题+诗歌分析题50分提示:凭以往积累的知识和能力,自由发挥吧!外院07级英教四班张旭整理2010-7-3一整天。
英国文学选读复习资料英国文学选读复习资料英国文学是世界文学的重要组成部分,涵盖了众多经典作品和文学流派。
对于学习英国文学的学生来说,复习资料的准备是至关重要的。
本文将为大家提供一些关于英国文学选读的复习资料,帮助大家更好地准备考试。
1. 莎士比亚戏剧莎士比亚是英国文学史上最伟大的戏剧家之一,他的作品对世界文学产生了深远的影响。
在复习莎士比亚戏剧时,可以重点关注他的四大悲剧:《哈姆雷特》、《麦克白》、《奥赛罗》和《李尔王》。
这些作品涉及到人性、权力、背叛等主题,是莎士比亚戏剧的代表作。
2. 简·奥斯汀的小说简·奥斯汀是英国文学史上最著名的女作家之一,她的小说以描写社会风俗和爱情婚姻为主题,作品充满了幽默和讽刺。
复习时可以选择她的代表作《傲慢与偏见》、《理智与情感》等,了解奥斯汀小说中的女性形象和社会风尚。
3. 罗伯特·勃朗宁和伊丽莎白·勃朗宁的诗歌罗伯特·勃朗宁和伊丽莎白·勃朗宁是19世纪英国浪漫主义诗歌的代表人物。
他们的诗歌作品充满了情感和想象力,涉及到爱情、宗教、社会等多个领域。
复习时可以选择他们的代表作品,如罗伯特·勃朗宁的《我的最后的那一首诗》和伊丽莎白·勃朗宁的《葡萄牙之歌》。
4. 查尔斯·狄更斯的小说查尔斯·狄更斯是19世纪英国最重要的小说家之一,他的作品揭示了当时社会的阶级分化和人性的复杂性。
复习时可以选择他的代表作《雾都孤儿》、《双城记》等,了解狄更斯小说中的社会批判和人道主义思想。
5. 威廉·莎士比亚的诗歌除了戏剧作品,莎士比亚还有许多优秀的诗歌作品。
他的诗歌涉及到爱情、自然、时间等主题,语言优美、意境深远。
复习时可以选择他的一些著名sonnet,如《十四行诗集》中的第18首和第130首,了解莎士比亚诗歌的特点和主题。
6. 珍·奥斯汀的小说珍·奥斯汀是19世纪英国最重要的女作家之一,她的小说以描写女性生活和婚姻为主题,作品充满了幽默和洞察力。
[标签:标题]篇一:英国文学史复习资料整理(1)? historical background: the making of BritainA. Briton (Celtic tribes)B. the Roman Conquest---Roman Briton1th Julius CaesarA.D.43 ClaudiusC. mid-5th Anglo-Saxons (Angles, Saxons, Jutes)Anglo-Saxon periodD. Danish invasionlate 8th, Daneslate 9th, Alfred the Greatthe literaturethe literature of this period falls naturally isto two divisions—pagan and Christianpagan represents the poetry which the Anglo-Saxons probably brought with them in the form of oral sagasChristian represents the writings developed under teaching of the monks..All of the earliest poetry of England was copied by the monks, and seems to have been more or less altered to give it a religious coloring.The angles, an important Teutonis tribe, furnished the name for the new home, which was called Angle-land afterward shortened into England. The language spoken by these tribes is generally called Anglo-Saxon or Saxon.Literary term★Epic: a long narrative poem telling about the deeds of a great hero and reflecting the values of the society from which it originated. Many epics were drawn from an oral tradition and were transmitted by song and recitation before they were written down.(examples: Iliad, Odyssey, Chanson de Roland)2. Beowulf–national epic★the longest and most monument of A-S poems★the oldest surviving epic in British literature.? oral form (6th), earliest written record (7th or 8th)? set in Denmark and SwedenBeowulf1. 3183 lines2. contents:Beowulf centers on the narration of the exploits of the heroic figure beowulf.3 adventuresMonster---GrendelGrendel’s motherfiery dragonTheme: primitive people’s struggle against hostile forces of the natural world under a wise andmighty leader.Beowulf is not simply a man of great military prowess but he is forever eager to help others in distress and in his last adventure with the dragon he shows himself a worthy leader ready to sacrifice his own life for the welfare of his people.Features:*part-historical and part legendary*heathen tribal society, feudal elements, Christian coloring *A-S or old English; alliteration metaphorIn the year 1066, at the battle of Hastings, the Normans headed by William, Duke of Normandy, defeated the Anglo-Saxons.Brought to England is remarkable for its bright, romantic tales of love and adventure.England literature is also a combination of French and Saxon elements.The three chief effects of the conquest were1. the bringing of Roman civilization to England2. the growth of nationality a strong centralized government, instead of the loose union of Saxon tribes3. the new language and literature were proclaimed in Chaucer1 the Norman conquest accelerated the development of feudalism. ? on land: the ruling class possessed large tracts of land? on society: distinct class division, miseries of peasants? on language: scholar wrote in French and Latin; eiched English.The development of romance and knights’legends★Romance: A long composition, sometimes in verse, sometimes in prose, describing the life and adventures of a noble man. The central character is the Knight, who has a noble birth, is skillful in the use of weapon and devotes to the church or King. The rules governing the manners and morals of a knight are known as chivalry.? Themes of romance:the matter of Britain—king Arthur and his knights of the Round Table (Arthurian romances) the matter of France—Charlemagne and his knights (Chanson deRoland)the matter of Rome—from the Trojan War to Alexander the GreatKing Arthur:*historical figure of Celts; mythological figure in Welsh literature; *legendary hero in? Geoffery of Monmouth: “History of the Kings of Britain”? Layamon: “Brut”? Sir Tomas Malory: “Le Morte D?Arthur”? Anglo-Saxon? Later legends about a hero named Arthur were placed in this period of violence. The invaders were variously Angles, Saxons, Frisians, Jutes, but were similar in culture and eventually identified themselves indifferently as Angles or Saxons.The most outstanding single romance on the Arthurian legend—―Sir Gawain and the Green Knight‖(four sections)a.The fight between Sir Gawain and the Green Knight at King Arthur?s Christmas feast.b. Gawain?s adventures on the way to find the Green Knight of the Green Chapel篇二:英国文学史及选读__复习要点总结《英国文学史及选读》第一册复习要点1. Beowulf: national epic of the English people; Denmark story; alliteration, metaphors and understatements (此处可能会有填空,选择等小题)2. Romance (名词解释)3. “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight”: a famous roman about King Arthur’s story4. Ballad(名词解释)5. Character of Robin Hood6. Geoffrey Chaucer: founder of English poetry; The Canterbury Tales (main contents; 124 stories planned, only 24 finished; written in Middle English; significance; form: heroic couplet)7. Heroic couplet (名词解释)8. Renaissance(名词解释)9.Thomas More——Utopia10. Sonnet(名词解释)11. Blank verse(名词解释)12. Edmund Spenser“The Faerie Queene”13. Francis Bacon “essays”esp. “Of Studies”(推荐阅读,学习写正式语体的英文文章的好参照,本文用词正式优雅,多排比句和长句,语言造诣非常高,里面很多话都可以引用做格言警句,非常值得一读)14. William Shakespeare四大悲剧比较重要,此外就是罗密欧与朱立叶了,这些剧的主题,背景,情节,人物形象都要熟悉,当然他最重要的是Hamlet这是肯定的。
英国Chapter1 The Renaissance period(14世纪至十七世纪中叶)文艺复兴1. Humanism is the essence of the Renaissance.人文主义是文艺复兴的核心。
2. the Greek and Roman civilization was based on such a conception that man is the measure of all things.人文主义作为文艺复兴的起源是因为古希腊罗马文明的基础是以“人”为中心,人是万物之灵。
3. Renaissance humanists found in then classics a justification to exalt human nature and came to see that human beings were glorious creatures capable of individual development in the direction of perfection, and that the world they inhabited was theirs not to despise but to question, explore, and enjoy.人文主义者们却从古代文化遗产中找到充足的论据,来赞美人性,并开始注意到人类是崇高的生命,人可以不断发展完善自己,而且世界是属于他们的,供他们怀疑,探索以及享受。
4. Thomas More, Christopher Marlowe and William Shakespeare are the best representatives of the English humanists.托马斯.摩尔,克利斯朵夫.马洛和威廉.莎士比亚是英国人文主义的代表。
5. Wyatt introduced the Petrarchan sonnet into England.怀亚特将彼特拉克的十四行诗引进英国。
英国文学期末一.The contributions of Geoffrey Chaucer.1.The first to present a comprehensive and realistic picture of the English society of his time and created a whole gallery of vivid characters from all works of life in his masterpiece The Canterbury Tales.2.Introduced from France the rhymed stanzas of various types to replace the Old English alliterative verse the first to use heroic couplet.3.Contributed to the establishment of English as the literary language of England, based on London dialect. He raised the language to the higher literary level by writing with a polish and ease.二.The feature of humanism.1.It believed that man is the measure of all things, it stands for devotion to the humane values represented in classical literature.2.Against the medieval feudal value and blind faith in after-life, the humanists believed in man's capability of self perfection and emphasized the importance of personal worth and the joy of the present life.三.The character of Shylock.1.Shylock's demand for a pound of flesh has made him one of literature's most memorable villains, but many readers and play gores have found him a powerful and sympathetic figure.Shakespeare makes him seem more human by showing that his hatred is born of the mistreatment he has suffered in a christian society.2.At the same time, when the Merchant of Venice was created, anti-semitism prevailed in England.Traits of the stereotyped Jews:greedy, miserly, cruel, full of hatred and revenge, devoid of gentility and interests in music and poetry.3.In a word,he is a Jews usurer,mean, greedy,cunning,cruel,vengeful,merciless,a,sophist,but also a victim of racial discrimination and religious persecution.四.Metaphysical conceit.A conceit is a figure of speech which makes an unusual and sometimes elaborately sustained comparison between two dissimilar things.五.Features of Neoclassicism.1.Reason emphasized: it is inartistic to show unrestrained emotion in lit,reason,order,regularity are admired rather than fancy and imagination.2.Form is stressed rather than content: craftsmanship, balance,proportion,harmony,grace,poetic diction; "what oft was thought, but never so well expressed."(pope)3.Didactic and satirical: writer had the duty to educate as well as entertain people, satire being an effective means of correcting people's folly and weakness.4.City life and man-made object preferred: city life gives a sense of order while rural wild life, natural landscape were coarse, chaotic and disorderly.六.The character of Robinson Crusoe.A real hero, a typical 18th century English middle class man, with a great capacity for work, inexhaustible energy, courage, patience and persistence in overcoming obstacles, in struggling against hostile natural environment and also against human fate.七.Gulliver's Travels.1.Four travels:a. Lilliput (6-inch high people):An allegory of English politics in the early 18th century when the Whigs and Tories were fighting bitterly for the control of the country.Exposure of the corruption,political and religious strife and social vices.b.Brobdingnag,a mock utopia. The inhabitants of the country are gentle and peace,loving and ruled by a fair and merciful king; Gulliver,in contrast,seems petty,vindictive and cruel;The giants are superior the human beings both in wisdom and in humanity.c.The kingdom of Laputa, a flying island and its colonies;the so called philosophers and scientists engrossed in abstract speculation and useless experiments;containing criticism of the malpractices and false illusions about science,philosophy,history and immortality in early 18th C.d.The land of the Houyhnms,the horse are governed totally by reason and created a society perfectly ordered and peaceful the Yahoos are greedy,envious,cruel anddisgusting bruts.The Yahoos represent the worst traits in human nature,and the lowest level to which man might sink.2.The significance of this book.Gulliver's Travel is a biting satire,both humorous and critical,attacking British and European society through its description of imaginary countries.As a whole,the book is one of the most effective and devastating satires of all aspects in the English and European life......socially,politically,religiously, philosophical scientifically and morally.Caused critical controversy,often mistaken for a misanthropist.八.The significance of Tom Jones.The novel is admirable for the panoramic view of the 18th C English society;about 40 characters are portrayed from nearly all classes of society;the setting is wide-ranging and varied, shifting from the country to the city.The superb plot contruction; 18 books equally divided into 3 sections,clearly marked out by the change of scenes; classical effect of balance.九.The features of Romanticism.1.A strong reaction and protest against the bondage of rules and conventions;favored innovations in subject and form.2.Turned the nature,particularly the rural,wild landscape, for its poetic imagery and subject matter.3.Admired passion and imagination;regarded passion, imagination and originality as something crucial for true poetry.4.Interested in the ancient, the exotic,the uncivilized way of life;turned the the primitive literature for inspiration and models.5.Emphasis upon the individuality of people as against the neoclassicist s’ stress on social virtues.十.Wordsworth's Theory.In the preface the the second edition of lyrical Ballads he explained his poetic theory.It is regarded as the declaration of Romanticism.1.Good poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings.mon life as subject,scenes and events of everyday life,joys and sorrows of thecommon people most suitable for poetry.3.Simple language:the fresh ,living everyday speech is most suitable for poetry.4.Return the nature,nature as a teacher,the stepping stone between God and Man.十一.What's Byronic Hero?1.The Byronic Hero is an idealized but flawed character exemplified in the life and writings of Lord Byron.2.This Byronic Hero would shoulder the burden of righting all the wrongs in the world and fight alone against any type of tyranny.十二.What's the author's opinion about marriage in Pride and Prejudice?1.We must have good judgment if we want to form good relationships in life.2.Our first impression ually wrong.Maturity is achieved through the loss of illusions.3.She regarded love and marriage as the typical theme of her novel,her ideal marriage have three elements:true love ,personal merits and money.十三.Features of Dickens' work.1.His works offer a most complete and realistic picture of the English society of his age.2.He believed in the moral self-perfection of class contradictions.There is a tendency for a reconciliation of class contradictions.3.Almost all his novels have happy endings.4.He drew a lot from the experiences of his childhood.5.As a humorist, his novel are full of humor and laughter.十四.Theme of the Vanity Fair.Selfishness and corruption of the upper classes;Showing a society which judges people on money and appearance and ignores the true virtues.十五.The character of Jane Eyre.1.Jane is intelligent,well educated,industrious,compassion:ate,and morally upright,with an independent spirit.2.A woman of high principle,religious faith self-respect and moral strength.3.Desire for independence,self-identification and self-fulfilment.4.For this Charlotte is considered a forerunner of feminism and Jane Eyre a feminist novel.十六.有特殊地位的作家1.Geoffrey Chaucer:Father of English Literature.2.William Shakespeare:The master of language.3.John Donne: Father of the Metaphysical poetry.4.John Milton:The greatest poet of 17th C.5.Three poet laureate:William Wordsworth ; Alfred Lord Tennyson ; Southey6.Daniel Defoe: Father of English novel.7.Charles Dickens: The greatest representative of critical realism.8.James Joyce: Father of stream of consciousness novel.9.Henry Fielding: Father of English realistic novel.10.William Blake: The forerunner of Romanticism.ke poets:William Wordsworth; Coleridge; Southey十七.各个时期的文学潮流1.The Anglo-Saxon period and The Anglo-Norman period: epic and romance.2.The renaissance:humanism.3.The period of revolution and restoration: metaphysical poets.4.The age of Enligtenment: neoclassicism; Gothic novel ; sentimentalism ; Pre-romantic poetry ; drama ; chivalry.5.The romantic period: lake poets ; Byronic hero ; ode6.The victorian age: critical realism; romantically and realistically; novel。
英国文学知识点整理不同的分类,会有交叉。
有交叉,才能理解,才能清晰,才能快速记忆,这才是真正的笔记。
(一)各个时期的文学创作术语中世纪文学时期Medieval Literature英雄双韵体the heroic couplet【特点】两行两行押韵,也被称作五步抑扬格iambic pentameter【创始人】杰弗里·乔叟Geoffrey Chaucer文艺复兴时期Renaissance十四行诗sonnet【特点】1韵律:一行隔一行押韵一节中的最后一行又与下一节的第一行押韵第四节只有两行独自押韵,一共十四行。
例一:abab bcbc cdcd ee例二:abab bcbc efef gg 2行数:十四行【创始人】威廉·莎士比亚William Shakespeare斯宾塞诗体Spenserian【特点】1韵律:韵律复杂,具有音乐性2行数:每节九行【创始人】埃德蒙·斯宾塞Edmund Spenser 素体诗blank verse没有押韵道德剧Morality Play神秘剧Mystery Play奇迹剧Miracle Play抑扬格四音步iambic tetrameter书信体意识流stream of consciousness(二)各种荣誉称谓"之父"称号Title作家主要作品时代流派英国诗歌之父Father of English Poetry杰弗里·乔叟Geoffrey Chaucer坎特伯雷故事集The Canterbury TalesMedieval Literature 十四世纪英国小说之父Father of English Novels丹尼尔·笛福Daniel Defoe鲁宾逊漂流记The Life and Strange Surprising Adventures of Robinson CrusoeEnlightenment 18世纪Realistic西欧历史小说之父The Father of Western European Historical Novel沃尔特·司各特Walter Scott密得洛西恩监狱The Heart of MidlothianRealistic Literature十九世纪Romanticism桂冠诗人Poet Laureate约翰·德莱顿John Dryden阿尔弗雷德·丁尼生Alfred Tennyson【作品】记忆方式伊诺克·阿登。
I. Old English Literature & the Late Medieval Ages<Beowulf>贝奥武夫:the national epic of the Anglo-SaxonsGeoffrey Chaucer 杰弗里•乔叟1340(?)~1400The father of English poetry.①<The Canterbury Tales>坎特伯雷故事集:first time to use ‘heroic couplet’(双韵体) by middle English②<Troilus and Criseyde>特罗伊拉斯和克莱希德③ <The House of Fame>声誉之宫II The Renaissance PeriodA period of drama and poetry. The Elizabethan drama is the real mainstreamof the English Renaissance.Renaissance: the activity, spirit, or time of the great revival of art, literature, and learning in Europe beginning in the 14th century and extending to the 17th century, marking the transition from the medieval to the modern world.Three historical events of the Renaissance – rebirth or revival:1.new discoveries in geography and astrology2.the religious reformation and economic expansion3.rediscovery of ancient Roman and Greek cultureThe most famous dramatists:Christopher MarloweWilliam ShakespeareBen Johnson.William Shakespeare威廉•莎士比亚1564~1616①Historical plays:Henry VI 亨利六世; Henry IV : Richard III 查理三世; Henry V ;Richard II;Henry VIII②Four Comedies: <As You Like It>皆大欢喜; <Twelfth Night>第十二夜;< A Midsummer Night’S Dream>仲夏夜之梦;<Merchant Of Venice>威尼斯商人③Four Tragedies: <Hamlet>哈姆莱特; <Othello>奥赛罗;<King Lear>李尔王; <Macbeth>麦克白④Shakespeare Sonnet :154 <The Sonnets>Three quatrain and one couplet, ababcdcdefefggA sonnet is a lyric consisting of 14 lines, usually iniambic pentameter restricted to a definition rhyme scheme.⑤the comedy of errors 错中错,Titus Andronicus泰特斯·安特洛尼克斯,The Taming of the shrew 驯悍记Love's labour's lost (爱的徒劳)Romeo and Juliet 罗密欧与朱丽叶Much ado about nothing(无事生非)The merry wives of Windsor. 温莎的风流娘们King John 约翰王All's well that ends well 终成眷属Measure for measure(一报还一报)Bacon: Of Studies;Of Beauty; Of Marriage and Single Life EnglishBourgeois Revolution,<The Advancement of Learning>学术的推进III:the period of the English bourgeois revolution.Milton:1608~1674Paradise Lost; Samson Agonistes (力士参孙);On the morning of Christ’s Nativity,<Paradise Regained>复乐园<On His Blindness>我的失明<Areopagitica>论出版自由<The Defence of the English People>为英国人民声辩Bunyan: 1628~1688①Religionary Allegory:<The Pilgrim’s Progress>天路历程Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinner;the Holy WarJohn Don: the Metaphysical poet(玄学派诗人).Metaphysical Poetry(玄学诗):(用语)the diction is simple, the imagery is from the actual, (形式)the form is frequently an argument with the poet’s beloved, with god, or with himself.(主题:love, religious, thought)The Flea; 跳蚤Forbbiding Mourning,Songs And Sonnets歌与十四行诗,emergent occasions 突变引起的诚念Hely sonnetsIV The 18th Century:EnlightenmentA revival of interest in the old classical works, order, logic, restrained emotion(抑制情感) and accuracyThe Age of Enlightenment/Reason: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)小说崛起:In the mid-century, the newly literary form, modern English novel rised(realistic novel现实主义小说)Gothic novel(哥特式小说):mystery, horror, castles(from middle part to the end of century)Jonathan Swift乔纳森•斯威夫特1667~1745(十八世纪杰出的政论家和讽刺小说家a master satirist。
英国文学复习笔记整理1 Although Geoffrey Chaucer was essentially a medieval writer, he bore marks of humanism and anticipated a new era of literature to come.2 Romance, which uses narrative verse or prose to tell stories of Knightly adventures or other heroic deeds, is a popular literary form in the medieval period.The Renaissance PeriodEdmund Spencer / Christopher Marlowe / William ShakespeareFrancis Bacon / John Donne / John Milton1. Renaissance: between 14th and mid-17th century.2. Renaissance means rebirth or revival is actually a movement stimulated by a series of historical events, such as:The rediscovery of ancient Roman and Greek culture,The new discoveries in geography and astrology,The religious reformation and the economic expansion.3. The Renaissance, therefore in essence is a historical period in which the European humanist thinkers and Scholars made attempt to get rid of those old feudalist ideas in Medieval Europe, to introduce new ideas that expressed the purity of the rising bourgeoisie, and to recover the purity of the early church from the corruption of the Roman Catholic Church.The religious reformation in the early 16th-century England was a reflection of the class struggles waged by the rising bourgeoisie against the feudal class and its ideology4. Humanism is the essence of the RenaissanceThe essence of humanism is to emphasize human qualities(1) Capable of individual development in the direction of perfection.(2) They inhabited was theirs not to despise by to question, explore and enjoy.(3) Tomas More, Christopher Marlowe and William Shakespeare are the best representative of the English humanist.5 Metaphysical poetry:Metaphysical is characterized by passionate thought succession of concentrated image, exercise of elaborate ingenuity and “wit”, John Donne was the famous of the Metaphysical poet. The Metaphysical Poets were men of learning and to show their learning was their endeavor.Edmund SpenserMasterpiece: The Faerie Queene (allegory)Christopher Marlowe (University wits)1 Important plays: Tambulaine, Dr.Faustus, The Jew of Malta2 Marlowe voiced the supreme desire of the man of the Renaissance of infinite powers and authority(1) Perfected the blank verse.(2)Creation of the Renaissance hero to English drama, it embodies Marlowe’s ideal of human dignity and capacity.3Dr.Faustus: aspiring for knowledge, the play’s dominant moral is human rather than religious,it celebrates the human passion for knowledge, power and happiness, it also reveals man’s frustration in r ealizing the high aspiration in a hostile moral order and the confinement to time is the cruelest fact of man’s condition.4 The statement that a man gained the whole world but lost his own soul makes a good summary of the main plot of The Tragic History of Doctor FaustusWilliam Shakespeare1.Works: 154 sonnets, 38 plays, 2 long poemsComedy: Merchant of Venice.2 4 great tragedies: Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, MacbethEach portrays some noble hero, who face the injustice of human fate is closely connected with the fate of the whole nation; each hero has his weakness of nature.Hamlet, the melancholic scholar-prince, faces the dilemma between action and mind:Othello’s inner weakness is made use of by the outside evil force;old King Lear who is unwilling to totally give up his power makes himself suffer from treachery(背叛) and infidelity(失真)Macbeth’s lust for power stirs up his ambition and leads him to incessant crime.3 statements best illustrates the theme of Shakespeare’s Sonnet 18 :The)2 Novum Organum: most impressive display of Beacon’s intellect. The argument is for the use of inductiveness of reason in scientific study.3 Beacon suggests the inductive reasoning,i.e. proceeding from the particular to the general, in place of the Aristotelian method, the deductive reasoning, i.e. proceeding from the general to the particular.4 Beacon’s essays are famous for their brevity, compactness and powerfulness.John DonneMetaphysical poetryThe most striking feature of Donn e’s poetry is precisely its tang of reality, in the sense that it seems to reflect life in a real rather than a poetical world.Donne frequently applies conceits.John MiltonThree major poetical works:Paradise lost, Paradise Regained, Samson AgonistsThe freedom of the will is the key tone of Milton’s creed.Paradise LostThe epic is the masterpiece of John MiltonThe story is drawn from the Old Testament of the Bible, which tells how Satan, after being defeated in his rebel against God, tempts Adam and Eve to eat the apples for the Forbidden Tree, and causes the Fall of Man. The Neoclassic PeriodJohn Bunyan / Alexander Pope / Daniel Defoe / Jonathan SwiftHenry Fielding / Samuel Johnson / Richard Brinsley SheridanTomas Gray1 Between the return of the Stuarts to the English throne in 1660 and the full assertion of Romanticism which came with the publication of lyrical Ballads by Wordsworth and Coleridge in 17982 Enlightenment or the Age of reasonThe Enlightenment movement was a progressive intellectual movement, which flourished in France and swept the whole Western Europe at the timeIts propose was to enlighten the whole world with the light of modern philosophical and artistic ideas. The enlightenment celebrated reason or rationality, equality and science. They called for a reference to order, reason and rule, yield place to “eternal truth” “eternal justice” and “natural equality”They believed that human beings were limited, dualistic and imperfect literature at the time, heavily didactic and moralizing.They believed in self-restraint, self-reliance and hard work. To work, to economize and to accumulate wealth constitutes the whole meaning of their life. This aspect of social life is best-formed in the realistic novels of the 18th century.3 In the field of literature, they believed that the artistic should be order, logic, restrained emotion and accuracy. Seek proportion, unity, harmony and grace in literary expression, in an effort to delight, instruct and correct human beings.4 Neoclassicism. In English literature and, the stylistic trend between the Restoration and the advent of romanticism at the beginning of the 19th century is referred to as Neoclassicism.5 Heroic: It is a pair of rhymed lines of iambic pentameter. The form was introduced into English by Chaucer and widely used subsequently.John Bunyan1. Masterpiece: The pilgrim’s progress2.The “vanity fair” symbolizes human wor ld; for all that comth is vanityeverything and anything in this world is vanity, having no value and no meaning.3.In The Pilgrim’s Progress, John Banyan describes The Vanity Fair in asatirical tone.The phrase "to urge people to abide by Christian doctrines and to seek salvation through constant struggles with their own weaknesses and all kinds of social evils" may well sum up the implied meaning ofThe Pilgrim’s ProgressAlexander Pope1 Pope, a very sensitive man, would strike back hard, and in the constant verbal battles he developed a style of biting satire.2 He was one of the first to introduce rationalism to England, but was not entirely blind to the rapid moral, political and cultural deterioration.3 For him the supreme values were order-cosmic order, political order, social order, aesthetic order, and this emphasis an order expression in all of his works. Pope made his name as a great poet with the publication of an Essay on Criticism in 1711.4 Pope strongly advocated Neoclassicism, emphasizing that literary works should be judged by classical rule of order, reason, logic, restrained emotion, good taste and decorum.Daniel DefoeMasterpiece: Robinson CrusoeHis language is smooth, easy, colloquial (口语的)and most vernacular. Defoe glorifies human labor and the puritan fortitude. It refers the enterprising sprit of the middle class.Jonathan Swift1. Chief works:A Tale of a Tub, The battle of the books, The Drapier’s letters, Gulliver’s Travel and a modest proposal.2. Swift is almost unsurpassed in the writing of simple, direct, precise prose. He defined a good style as “proper words in proper places” clear, simple, concrete, diction, uncomplicated sentence structure and economy and concise use of language mark all his writing-essay, poems and novels.3. As a whole, the book is one have the most effective and devastating criticism and satires of all aspects in the then English and European lifesocially, politically, religiously, philosophically, scientifically and morally.Henry Fielding1. Masterpiece: A History of Tom Jones, a Foundling2. Fielding has been regarded by some as “Father of the English Novel” for his contribution to the establishment of the form of the modern novel.3. Fielding’s lang uage is easy, unlabored and familiar but extremely vivid and vigorous.4. Of all the 18th century novelist, he was the first to set out both in theory and practice. To write specially a “comic epic in poem” the first to give the modern novels its structure and story; he use epistolary form and “the third-person narration”.5. In planning his stories, he tries to retain the grand, epical of the classical works but at the same time keeps faithful to his realistic presentation of common life as it is.Samuel Johnson1. Lexicographer: the author of the first English dictionary by an English man---A Dictionary of the English Language (1755)2. To the Right Honorable the Earl of----Chesterfield3. He was particularly fond of moralizing, and didacticism. His language in characteristically general, often Latinate and frequently polysyllabic. Richard Brinsley Sheridan1 Masterpiece: The school for scandal.2 Sheridan has the only important English dramatist of the 18th century; important link between Shakespeare and Bernard Shaw.3 In his play, morality is the constant theme.He is much concerned with the current moral issue and harshly at the social life of the day.Tomas Gray1. His masterpiece, “Elegy in a Country Churchyard” was published in 1751; the poem once and for all established his fame as the leader of the sentimental poetry of the day especially”the Graveyard School”2. In his poem, Gray reflects on death, the sorrow of life and the mysteries of hum a touch of his Personal Melancholy.3. His poems, as a whole are mostly devoted to a sentimental lamentation or mediation on life, past and present. His poems are characterized by an exquisite sense of form. His style is sophisticated and allusive. His poems are often marked with the trait of a highly artificial diction and a distorted word order.Romantic PeriodWilliam Blake / William Wordsworth / Samuel Taylor Coleridge George Gordon/ ByronPercy/ Bysshe Shelley /John Keats / Jane Austen1. Major Romantic Points(1) A rebellion against neo-classicism(2) Express on imagination(3) Priorities been given to passion, emotion and feeling(4) Being close to nature for its purity while the society is corrupting5) Tremendous interest in something remote in term of space and time(6) Favor of modernism(7) Supremacy of freedom2 Romantic Period began in 1798 with the publication of Wordsworth and Coleridge’s lyrical Ballads and have ended in 1852 with Sir Walter Scott’s death and the passage of the first Reform Bill in the Parliament. 3. It was in effect a revolt of the English imagination against the neoclassical reason, which prevailed from the days of Pope to those of Johnson1. Jean-Roseau: exploration new idea about Nature, society, Education.4The Romantic Movement expressed a more or less negative attitude the existing social and political conditions that came with industrial lization and the growing importance of the bourgeoisie.5 Thus, we can say that Romanticism actually constitutes a change of direction attention to the outer world of social civilization to the inner world of the human spirit6 Nature to Wordsworth is a source of mental cleanliness and spiritual understanding.7 Poetry has been traditionally regarded as an art governed by rules; but for Romantics, Poetry should be free from all rules.8 Gothic novels: its principal elements are violence, horror and supernatural, which strongly appeal to the reader’s emotion.9 How is Romanticism different from Neoclassicism? Provide brief evidence from the literary works you know best.a. Neoclassicists upheld that artistic ideals should be order, logic, restrained emotion and accuracy, and that literature should be judged in terms of its service to humanity, and thus, literary expressions should be of proportion, unity, harmony and grace. Pope’s An Ess ay on Criticism advocates grace, wit ( usually though satire/ humor ), and simplicity in language (and the poem itself is a demonstration of those ideals, too); Fielding’s Tom Jones helped established the form of novel; Gray’s Elegry Written in a country C hurchyard” displays elegance in style, unified structure, serious tone and moral instructions.b. Romanticism tended to see the individual as the very center of all experience, including art, and thus, literary work should be “spontaneous overflow of stron g of feeling”and no matter how fragmentary those experience were ( Wordsworth’s “I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud,” or “The Solitary Reaper,) 0r Coleridge’s “ Keble Khan”), the value of the work link lied in the accuracy of presenting those unique feelings and particular altitude.c. In a word, Neoclassicism emphasized rationality and form but Romanticism attached great importance to the individual’s mind ( emotion, imagination, temporary experience.)William Blake1 (1)The songs of Innocence is a lovely volume poems, presenting a happy and innocent world, though not without its evil and sufferings. (2) The songs of Experience paints a different world, a world of misery, poverty, disease, war and repress with melancholy tone(3) The two books hold the similar subject-matter, but the tone, emphasis and conclusion differs.2 Blake’s Marriage of Heaven and Hell (1790) marks his entry into maturity.Blake explains the relationship of the contraries.“without contraries, there is no progression.The marriage to Blake means the reconciliation of the contraries, not the subordination of the one to the other.3 Blake writes his poem in plain and direct language, his poem often carries the lyric beauty with immense compressing of meaning. He distrusts the abstractness and tends to embody his views with visual images; symbolism in wide range is also a distinctive feature of his poetry.William WordsworthThe poetic view of William Wordsworth can be best understood from his remark about poetry, that is, "all good poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings."William Wordsworth, a romantic poet, advocated all the followingA.the use of everyday language spoken by the common peopleB. the expression of the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelingC. the use of humble and rustic life as subject matter1 William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Robert Southey, the three man known as the “Lake Poets”2 Wordsworth is regarded as a “worshiper of nature”3 Wordsworth thinks that common life is the only subject of literary interest.4 Wordsworth see the word freshly, sympathetically and naturally.5 The most important contribution Wordsworth has made is that he has not only started the modern poetry of the growing inner self,but also changed the course of English poetry by using ordinary speech of the language and by advocating a reform to nature.Samuel Taylor Coleridge1 Coleridge’s portion (work) was to deal with super nature thing for he was more interested in something remote strange on foreign.2 Two divers group: the demonic and the conversational(1) The demonic group: beyond the control of reason. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner “Christabel” “Kubl a Khan”(2) The conversational group: “Frost at Midnight”3 Coleridge is one of the first critics to give close critical affection to language, maintaining that the true end of poetry is to give pleasure “through the medium of beauty”4 He was recognized as a lyrical poet and literary critic of the first rank. His poetic themes range from the super nature to the domestic.His treatises, lectures, and compelling conversational powers made him one of the most influential English literary critics and philosophers of the 19th century.George Gordon Byron1 Masterpiece: Don Juan, Childe Ha rold’s Pilgrima ge“I awake on e morning and found myself famous.”2 Byron invests in Juan the moral positives like courage, generosity and franknessThe unifying principal in Don Juan is the basic ironic theme of appearance and reality.3 Byron has enriched European poetry with an abundance of ideas, images, artistic forms and innovation.4 Byronic heroThe creation of the Byronic hero is Byron’s chief contribution to English Poetry, such a hero is a proud, mysterious rebel figure of noble origin. Passionate and powerful, he is to right all the wrongs in a corrupt society and he would fight single-handedly against all the misdoings, political, religious moral. Thus this figure is a rebellious individual social systems and customs. Because Byron’s poetry is one of t he experiences on the whole, such a hero is more or less a surrogate of himself; He appears first in Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage and then further develops in later works such as the “Oriented Tale” “Manfred” and “Don Juan”.Percy Bysshe Shelley1 In 1813 he published his first long serious work. Queen Mab: A Philosophical Poem.2 Masterpiece “The Cenci” “Prometheus unbounded”Lyrics: “The Cloud” “To a Skylark” “Adonais”3 He held a life-long aversion to cruelty, injustice, authority, institutional religion and the formal shames of respectable society, condemning war, tyranny and exploitation.4 Shelley expressed his love for freedom and his hatred toward tyranny in several of his lyrics such as: Ode to Liberty,” “Ode to Naples,” “Sonnet: England in 1819” and so on.5 Best of all the well-known lyric pieces is his “Ode to the west win d” it is rhapsodic and declamatory.6 Shelley’s style abounds in personification and metaphor and other figure of speech, which describe vividly what we see and feel, or express what passionately moves us.John Keats1. Work: Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St.Agnes2. The Odes are generally regarded as Keats’s most important and mature works.Ode on Melancholy, Ode on a Grecian Urn, Ode to a Nightingale, Ode to Psyche3. Keats’s poetry is always sensuous, colorful and rich in imagery, which expresses the acuteness of his senses,sights, sound, scent, taste and felling are all taken in to give an entire understanding of an experience of others either human or animal.4."Beauty is truth, truth beauty."is taken from John Keats’ Ode on a Grecian Urn5 Ode on a Grecian Urn" shows the contrast between the (permanence. ) of art and the (transience ) of human passion.Jane Austen1 Works: Pride and Prejudice. Sense and Sensibility. Northanger Abbey2 And in style, she is a neoclassicism advocator,upholding those traditional ideals of order, reason, proportion and gracefulness in novel writing.The Victorian PeriodCharles Dickens / Charlotte Bronte / Emily Bronte/Alfred Tennyson / Robert Browning1. The Victorian Period roughly coincides with the reign of Queen Victorian from 1836 to 1901, the most glorious in the English history. (Inthis period, the novel became the most widely read and the most vital and challenging expression of progressive thought, criticism of the society and the defense of the mass. ----they are all concerned about the fate of common people.)2 Towards the mid-19th century, England had reached it’s highly point of development as a world power.3 Darwin’s The origin of species and The De scent of Man shook theoretical basic of traditional faith. Utilitarianism was widely accepted and practiced.4 Famous novelists like Charles Dickens, William Makepeace Thackery, Charlotte Bronte, Emily Bronte, Mrs. Gaskell and Anthony Trollope.5 typical feature of the English Victorian literature is that writers becamegreatest critical realist writers of the Victorian Age2 In language, he is often compared with Shakespeare for his adeptness with the vernacular and large vocabulary with which he brings out manya wonderful verbal picture of man and scene.3 His humor and wit seem inexhaustible; character portrayal is the most distinguished feature of his work.4 His best-depicted characters are those innocent, virtuous, persecuted helpless child characters.5 Dickens work are also characterized by a mingling of humor and pathos. He seems to believe that life is itself a mixture of joy and grief.The Victorian Age was largely and age of (epic prose),eminently represented by Dickens and Thackeray.The Bronte sistersCharlotte Bronte1 Masterpiece: Jane Eyre2 The success of the novel is also due to its introduction to the English novel the first governess heroine, Jane Eyre, description of her intense feeling and her thought and inner conflicts brings her to the heart of the audience.Emily Bronte1 Masterpiece: Wuthering Heights2 As a love story, this is one of the most misery: the passion between Heathcliff and Cathrine proves the most intense, the most beautiful and at the same time, the most horrible passion are to be found in human being.Alfred Tennyson1. His poetry voices the doubt and the faith, the grief and the joy of English people in an age of fast social change.2. In 1850, Tennyson was appointed the poet laureate.3. Tennyson is a real artist. He has the natural power of linking visual picture with musical expression, and these two with the feelings.Robert Browning1 Dramatic MonologueA kind of narrative poem in which one character speaks to one or more listeners whose reply is not given in the poem. The occasion is usually a crucial one in the speaker’s life, and the dramatic monologue reads the speaker’s personality as well as the incident that is the subject of the poem; a n experience of a dramatic monologue is “My Last Duchess” by Robert Browning.2“My Last Duchess”: this dramatic monologue is the duke’s speech addressed to the agent who comes to negotiate the marriage. In this talk about “Last Duchess” the du ke reveals himself as a self-conceited, cruel and tyrannical man. The poem is written is heroic couplet,but with no regular metrical system. In reading, it sounds like bland verse.George Eliot (pseudonym of Mary Ann Evans)1 her popular novels, Adam Bede, The Mill on the floss ,Silas Marner, all drawn from her lifelong knowledge of English country life and notable for their realistic details , pungent characterization and high moral tone.11。
英国文学史资料British Writers and Works一、中世纪文学(约5世纪—1485)•《贝奥武甫》(Beowulf)•《高文爵士和绿衣骑士》(Sir Gawain and the Green Knight )杰弗利·乔叟(Geoffrey Chaucer)“英国诗歌之父”。
(Father of English Poetry)《坎特伯雷故事》(The Canterbury Tales)二、文艺复兴时期文学(15世纪后期—17世纪初)•托马斯·莫尔(Thomas More )《乌托邦》(Utopia)•埃德蒙·斯宾塞(Edmund Spenser)《仙后》(The Faerie Queene)•弗兰西斯·培根(Francis Bacon)《论说文集》(Essays)克里斯托弗·马洛 Christopher Marlowe•《帖木儿大帝》(Tamburlaine)•《浮士德博士的悲剧》(The Tragical History of the Life and Death of Dr. Faustus)•《马耳他岛的犹太人》(The Jew of Malta)威廉·莎士比亚William Shakespeare喜剧《仲夏夜之梦》(A Midsummer Night’s Dream)、《威尼斯商人》(The Merchant of Venice)悲剧《罗密欧与朱丽叶》(Romeo and Juliet)、《哈姆莱特》(Hamlet)、《奥赛罗》(Othello)、《李尔王》(King Lear)、《麦克白》(Macbeth)历史剧《亨利四世》(Henry IV)传奇剧《暴风雨》(The Tempest)本·琼生 Ben Johnson•《人人高兴》(Every Man in His Humor)•《狐狸》(Volpone)•《练金术士》(The Alchemist)三、17世纪文学约翰·弥尔顿 John Milton《失乐园》(Paradise Lost)《复乐园》(Paradise Regained)诗剧《力士参孙》(Samson Agonistes)•约翰·班扬(John Bunyan)《天路历程》(The Pilgrim’s Progress)•威廉·康格里夫(William Congreve)《以爱还爱》(Love for Love)《如此世道》(The Way of the World)四、启蒙时期文学(17世纪后期—18世纪中期)18世纪初,新古典主义成为时尚。
英国文学简史归纳总结英国文学的历史源远流长,可以追溯到中世纪。
在这个长达几个世纪的发展过程中,英国文学经历了多个时期的变迁和演变。
下面将对英国文学的简史进行总结。
中世纪文学中世纪是英国文学的起源时期,主要以口头传承的方式存在。
这个时期的文学作品主要包括史诗、英雄传说和宗教作品。
其中最著名的作品是《贝奥武夫》和《亚瑟王传奇》。
这些作品描绘了英国的历史和传统,同时也反映了当时社会的价值观和信仰。
文艺复兴时期文艺复兴时期是英国文学的重要阶段,也是一段充满创新和变革的时期。
在这个时期,人们开始对古希腊和罗马文化产生兴趣,并以之为灵感创作文学作品。
著名的作家包括威廉·莎士比亚和约翰·米尔顿。
莎士比亚的戏剧作品被广泛演出和阅读,对后世文学产生了深远的影响。
米尔顿则以史诗《失乐园》而闻名,该作品探讨了人类的自由意志和神的正义。
启蒙时期启蒙时期是18世纪英国文学的重要时期,也是理性和科学思想兴起的时期。
启蒙作家们通过批判和思考来探索人类的本质和社会问题。
著名的作家包括弗朗西斯·培根和亚历山大·蒲柏。
培根是一位哲学家和科学家,他的作品强调实证主义和科学方法。
蒲柏则以《人类理解论》和《社会契约论》等作品提出了关于政治和社会组织的思想。
浪漫主义时期浪漫主义时期是19世纪英国文学的重要时期,反映了对情感和想象力的追求。
浪漫主义作家们强调个体的感受和内心世界。
著名的作家包括威廉·华兹华斯和塞缪尔·柯勒律治。
华兹华斯的《抒怀诗集》和柯勒律治的《抒情诗》被视为浪漫主义的经典作品,表达了对自然和人类情感的热爱。
维多利亚时代维多利亚时代是19世纪末到20世纪初的英国文学时期,以女王维多利亚的统治命名。
这个时期的作品反映了社会的变革和工业化进程。
著名的作家包括查尔斯·狄更斯和奥斯卡·王尔德。
狄更斯的《雾都孤儿》和王尔德的《道林·格雷的画像》等作品揭示了社会的不公和道德问题。
(完整word版)英国文学选读复习资料Part I The Middle AgeChapter 1 the Anglo-Saxon period (449-1066)1. Beowulf(贝奥武甫): England’s national epic.(第一部民族史诗)2. artistic feature: ① using alliteration② using metaphor and understatementChapter 3 Geoffrey Chaucer (ca1343-1400)1.Geoffrey Chaucer is the father of English poetry and one of the most greatest narrative(叙事)poets of England.2.首创双韵体. tonico-syllabic verse. 运用London dialect.3. writing style: wisdom, humor, humanity.4.代表作:The Canterbury Tales-----In this book, Chaucer created a strikingly brilliant and picturesque panorama of his time and his country. In this poem Chaucer’s realism, trenchant irony and freedom of views reached such a high level of power that it had no equal in all the English literature up to the 16th century. But Chaucer was not entirely devoid of medieval prejudices. [乔叟为他那个时代和国家勾勒出一幅生机勃勃而又充满诗情画意的社会百态图。
英国文学史资料British Writers and Works一、中世纪文学(约5世纪—1485)•《贝奥武甫》(Beowulf)•《高文爵士和绿衣骑士》(Sir Gawain and the Green Knight )杰弗利·乔叟(Geoffrey Chaucer)“英国诗歌之父”。
(Father of English Poetry)《坎特伯雷故事》(The Canterbury Tales)二、文艺复兴时期文学(15世纪后期—17世纪初)•托马斯·莫尔(Thomas More )《乌托邦》(Utopia)•埃德蒙·斯宾塞(Edmund Spenser)《仙后》(The Faerie Queene)•弗兰西斯·培根(Francis Bacon)《论说文集》(Essays)克里斯托弗·马洛Christopher Marlowe•《帖木儿大帝》(Tamburlaine)•《浮士德博士的悲剧》(The Tragical History of the Life and Death of Dr. Faustus)•《马耳他岛的犹太人》(The Jew of Malta)威廉·莎士比亚William Shakespeare喜剧《仲夏夜之梦》(A Midsummer Night’s Dream)、《威尼斯商人》(The Merchant of Venice)悲剧《罗密欧与朱丽叶》(Romeo and Juliet)、《哈姆莱特》(Hamlet)、《奥赛罗》(Othello)、《李尔王》(King Lear)、《麦克白》(Macbeth)历史剧《亨利四世》(Henry IV)传奇剧《暴风雨》(The Tempest)本·琼生Ben Johnson•《人人高兴》(Every Man in His Humor)•《狐狸》(V olpone)•《练金术士》(The Alchemist)三、17世纪文学约翰·弥尔顿John Milton《失乐园》(Paradise Lost)《复乐园》(Paradise Regained)诗剧《力士参孙》(Samson Agonistes)•约翰·班扬(John Bunyan)《天路历程》(The Pilgrim’s Progress)•威廉·康格里夫(William Congreve)《以爱还爱》(Love for Love)《如此世道》(The Way of the World)四、启蒙时期文学(17世纪后期—18世纪中期)18世纪初,新古典主义成为时尚。
以下为英国文学史第二册的知识点总结个别知识点会有错误或者遗漏请在复习的时候自主补充愿大家都能取得好成绩———VictoriaJPart V The Romantic PeriodThe romantic period began in 1798 the publication of Wordsworth and Coleridge’s <Lyrical Ballads>, and end in 1832 with Sir Walter Scott’s death. Wordsworth华兹华斯Coleridge 柯尔律治Southey 骚塞The Lake Poets1.William Wordsworth威廉•华兹华斯1770~1850Poet Laureate(桂冠诗人)a leader of the romantic movement in England.①Lyrical Ballads 《抒情歌谣集》(with Samuel Taylor Coleridge)It marked the beginning of the Romantic revival in England(1)This is a joint work of Wordsworth and his friend Coleridge.(2)The publication of Lyrical Ballads in 1798 marks the beginning of the RomanticMovement in England.(3)It begins with Coleridge’s long poem “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner”(“古舟子咏”; “老水手之行”)and ends with Wordsworth’s “Tintern Abbey”(“丁登寺”).(4)Many of the subjects of these poems deal with elements of nature such as birds,daffodils and simple rural folk.(5)The majority of poems in this collection were written by Wordsworth.The poems in Lyrical Ballads are characterized by a sympathy with the poor, simple peasants, a passionate love of nature and the simplicity and purity of the language.(6) Some of the best poems in the collection are:“Lines Written in Early Spring”(“早春诗行”),“The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” (“古舟子咏”; “老水手之行”)“Lines Composed A Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey” (“丁登寺”).②Lucy Poems 《露西组诗》③“I Wondered Lonely as a Cloud” “独自漫游似浮云”=“The Daffodils”“水仙”Theme: 1.Nature embodies human beings in their diverse circumstance. It is nature that give him “strength and knowledge full of peace”2. It is bliss to recall the beauty of nature in poet mind while he is in solitude.Comment: The poet is very cheerful with recalling the beautiful sights. In the poem on the beauty of nature, the reader is presented a vivid picture of lively and lovely daffodils(水仙) and poets philosophical ideas and mystical thoughts.④“The Solitary Reaper”“孤独的收割者”⑤The Prelude 《序曲》or Growth of a Poet’s Mind⑥The Excursion 《远足》《漫游》Wordsworth’s Principles of Poetry(feelings,commonplace things,the real language of man and deliberate simplicity,inner self, changed the ordinary speech of the language → return to nature.)2.George Gordon Byron乔治•戈登•拜伦1788~18241)Hours of Idleness 《闲暇时刻》《消闲时光》dealing with childish recollections andearly friendship, showing the influence of 18th century traditions。
英国文学史上期末复习英国文学简史General introduction of English literature1. 1) Old English Literature (449-1066) 古英语时期文学——The Song of Beowulf 《贝奥武甫》2) Medieval English Literature (1066-15th century) 中世纪英语时期文学——Geoffrey Chaucer (1340_1400) 杰弗里·乔叟代表作:French influence:Romance of the Rose《玫瑰传奇》The Book Of Duchess《公爵夫人之书》Italian influence:The Legend of Good Women《良妇传说》The House of Fame《声誉之堂》The Parliament of Fowls《百鸟议会》Troilus and Criseyde 《特罗勒斯与克莱西》Maturity:The Canterbury Tales《坎特伯雷故事集》2.Renaissance English literature (late 15th century ~ early 17th century) 文艺复兴-------Thomas More 托马斯.莫尔Utopia 乌托邦(1516)---he gave a profound and truthful picture of the people’ssufferings and put forward his ideal of a future happy society.——Francis Bacon 弗朗西斯·培根(1561--1626)The philosophical---The Advancement of Learning《学术的推进》The literature -----Essays《随笔》The professional works------Thomas Wyatt托马斯怀亚特(1503--1542)The first to introduce the sonnet into English literature(引入十四行诗的第一人)Lyrical poetry------Edmund Spenser 埃德蒙斯宾塞(1552--1599)Poet’s poet 诗人中的诗人The Faerie Queene 《仙后》(the greatest epic poem 史诗)The Shepheardes Calendar《牧人月历》——William Shakespeare 威廉·莎士比亚(1564--1616)The most popular and the most wildly respected writer in all English literature四大悲剧:HamletOthelloKing LearMacbeth四大喜剧:A Midsummer Night’s DreamThe merchant of VeniceAs you like itTwelfth Night——Christopher Marlowe 克里斯托弗·马洛The greatest of the pioneers of English dramaThe one who first made blank verse the principal instrument of English drama English Literature of the Revolution and Restoration Period (1640-1688) 资产阶级革命与王朝复辟时期的文学-------John Donne约翰多恩(a metaphysical poet 玄学诗人)代表作:‖the flea‖(跳骚)—love poem―Song‖(歌)―A Valediction: Forbidden Morning‖(别离辞:节哀)―Death be not proud‖(死神,你莫骄傲)死亡时永恒的,不要害怕死亡,人死后可以超生,到天堂―The Canonization‖(封圣)——John Milton约翰·弥尔顿(puritan)Paradise Lost《失乐园》Paradise Regained《复乐园》Samson Agonistes《力士参孙》On his blindnessOn His Deceased Wife《悼念我的亡妻》——John Bunyan 约翰·班扬The Pilgrim’s Progress《天路历程》---is written in the old-fashioned, medieval form of allegory and dream.4. 18th century English literature-the age of Enlightenment 启蒙运动时期——Daniel Defoe丹尼尔·笛福Robinson Crusoe《》The Review《评论》Moll FlandersA Journal of the Plague Year《大疫年日记》Roxana——Jonathan Swift乔纳森·斯威夫特Gulliver’s Travel《格列夫游记》The Battle of Books《书籍之战》The Tale of a Tub《一直桶的故事》The Drapier’s Letter《布商的来信》A Modest Proposal《一个温和的建议》Journal to Stella《给斯戴拉的日记》——Henry Fielding亨利·菲尔丁–the father of English novel--the first to write specially a ―comic滑稽的epic史诗in prose‖, the first to give the modern novel its struct ure and style The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling《弃儿T om Jones》—— Thomas Gray托马斯格雷Rural poetryElegy written in a Country Churchyard《墓园哀歌》In the 18th century English literature, the representative poets of Pre-romanticism were William Blake and Robert Burns.-------William Blake威廉·布莱克诗集《天真之歌》Songs of Innocence: The Lamb, The Chimney Sweeper1789诗集《经验之歌》Songs of Experience:The Tiger, London, The Chimney Sweeper1794——Robert Burns罗伯特·彭斯--―The poet of the peasants‖(1) Political poems ---The tree of Liberty(2) Satirical poems ---Holy Willie’s Prayer, Two Dogs(3) Lyrics-- Red, Red Rose 《一朵红红的玫瑰》Auld Lang Syne《友谊地久天长》My Heart’s on the Highland《我的心在高原》一、The Anglo-Saxon period (449-1066)1、这个时期的文学作品分类:pagan(异教徒) ,Christian(基督徒)2、代表作:The Song of Beowulf《贝奥武甫》( national epic 民族史诗) 采用了隐喻metaphor手法3、Alliteration 头韵(写作手法)4,main characters: Beowulf—the heroKing of Sweden—Beowulf’s uncleHrothgar---the king of Danish nationGrendel --- a sea-monsterGrendel’s motherFire fragan二、The Anglo-Norman period (1066-1350) 盎格鲁—诺曼时期1、romance 传奇文学2、In terms of matters there are mainly three classes:(1)、the matter of France the Song of Roland(2)、the matter of Greece and Rome about Alexander and the fall of Troy(特洛伊战争)he(3)、the matter of Britain about King Arthur and his knights of the Round Table.3、代表作:Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (高文爵士和绿衣骑士) 是一首押头韵的长诗.三、Geoffrey Chaucer (1340-1400) 杰弗里·乔叟时期1、the father of English poetry 英国诗歌之父2、heroic couplet 英雄双韵体:a verse unit consisting of two rhymed(押韵) lines in iambic pentameter(五步抑扬格)3、代表作:The Canterbury Tales 《坎特伯雷的故事集》(英国文学史的开端) ---masterpieceHe had given us a picture of contemporary English lifeA collection of 20 complete stories and 4 fragmentsChaucer’s The Canterbury Tales is written in the style of __Rhymed stanzas__ instead ofalliteration in the Anglo-Saxon period.The Canterbury Tales opens with a General Prologue4,贡献:Chaucer’s contribution to English literature and languageA, He is the ―father of English poetry‖ and the greatest narrative poet in English poetry.B, He did much in making the dialects of London the foundation for the modern English language.C, He was the most significant poet in English literature history to write in Middle English. Chaucer’s creative works vividly reflected the changes which had taken root in Englishculture.D, the ―heroic couplet‖4、Popular Ballads 大众民谣:a story hold in 4-line stanzas with second and fourth line rhymedBallads are anonymous narrative songs that have been preserved by oral transmission 歌谣是匿名叙事歌曲,一直保存着口头传播的方式代表人物:Bishop Thomas Percy 托马斯·珀西主教代表作:Robin Hood and Allin-a-Dale 侠盗罗宾汉和阿林代尔其他作品:Get up and Bar the DoorSir Patrick Spens四、The Renaissance (16世纪) 文艺复兴时期The 16th century in England was a period of breaking up of feudal relations and the establishing of thefoundations of capitalism.1、key word: humanism 人文主义:admire human beauty and human achievement2、代表人物:1)、Thomas More 托马斯·莫尔Utopia2)、Francis Bacon 弗朗西斯.培根第一个散文家(essayist)Francis Bacon was praised by Marx as ―the progenitor of English Materialism‖3)、Thomas Wyatt 托马斯.怀亚特引入十四行诗的第一人4)、Edmund Spenser 埃德蒙·斯宾塞poet’s poet(诗人中的诗人) The Fairy Queen《仙后》(epic poem)5)、Christopher Marlowe 克里斯托弗·马洛blank verse(无韵体)是十六世纪英国戏剧的主要表现形式。
英国文学史Part one: Early and Medieval English LiteratureChapter 1 The Making of England1. The early inhabitants in the island now we call England were Britons, a tribe of Gelts.2. In 55 ., Britain was invaded by Julius Caesar.The Roman occupation lasted for about 400 years.It was also during the Roman role that Christianity was introduced to Britain.And in 410 ., all the Roman troops went back to the continent and never returned.3. The English ConquestAt the same time Britain was invaded by swarms of pirates海盗. They were three tribes from Northern Europe: the Angles, Saxons and Jutes.And by the 7th century these small kingdoms were combined into a United Kingdom called England, or, the land of Angles.And the three dialects spoken by them naturally grew into a single language called Anglo-Saxon, or Old English.4. The Social Condition of the Anglo-SaxonTherefore, the Anglo-Saxon period witnessed a transition from tribal society to feudalism.5. Anglo-Saxon Religious Belief and Its InfluenceThe Anglo-Saxons were Christianized in the seventh century.Chapter 2 Beowulf1. Anglo-Saxon PoetryBut there is one long poem of over 3,000 lines. It is Beowulf, the national epic of the English people. Grendel is a monster described in Beowulf.3. Analysis of Its ContentBeowulf is a folk lengend brought to England by Anglo-Saxons from their continental homes. It had been passed from mouth to mouth for hundreds of years before it was written down in the tenth century.4. Features of BeowulfThe most striking feature in its poetical form is the use of alliteration, metaphors and understatements.Chapter 3 Feudal England1 The Norman Conquest2. The Norman ConquestThe French-speaking Normans under Duke William came in 1066. After defeating the English at Hastings, William was crowned as King of England.The Norman Conquest marks the establishment of feudalism in England.3. The Influence of the Norman Conquest on the English LanguageBy the end of the fourteenth century, when Normans and English intermingled, English was once more the dominant speech in the country.3 The Romance1. The Content of the RomanceThe most prevailing kind of literature in feudal England was the romance.4. Malory’s Le Morte D’ArthurThe adventures of the Knights of the Round Table at Arthur’s court Chapter 5 The English Ballads2. The BalladsThe most important department of English folk literature is the ballad.A ballad is a story told in song, usually in 4-line stanzas, with the second and fourth lines rhymed.Of paramount importance are the ballads of Robin Hood.3. The Robin Hood BalladsChapter 6 Chaucer1. LifeGeoffrey Chaucer, the founder/father of English poetry.3. Troilus and CriseydeTroilus and Criseyde is Chaucer’s longest complete poem and his greatest artistic achievement.But the poet shows some sympathy for her, hitting that her fault springs from weakness rather than baseness of character.4. The Canterbury TalesThe Canterbury Tales is Chaucer’s masterpiece and one of the monumental works in English literature.6. His LanguageChaucer’s language, now called Middle English, is vivid and exact. Chaucer’s contribution to English poetry lies chiefly in the fact that he introduced from France the rhymed stanza of various types, especially the rhymed couplet of 5 accents in iambic meter the “the heroic couplet” to English poetry, instead of the old Anglo-Saxon alliterative verse.The spoken English of the time consisted of several dialects, and Chaucer did much in making dialect of London the standard for the modern English speech.Part Two: The English RenaissanceChapter 1 Old England in Transition1. The New MonarchyThe century and a half following the death of Chaucer was full of great changes.And Henry 7, taking advantage of this situation, founded the Tudor dynasty, a centralized monarchy of a totally new type, which met the needs of the rising bourgeoisie and so won its support.2. The ReformationProtestantismThe bloody religious persecution came to a stop after the church settlement of Queen Elizabeth.3. The English BibleWilliam TyndallThen appeared the Authorized Version, which was made in 1611 under the auspices of James I and so was sometimes called the King James Bible.The result is a monument of English language and English literature.The standard modern English has been fixed and confirmed.4. The Enclosure Movement5. The Commercial ExpansionChapter 2 More1. LifeThomas More2. UtopiaUtopia is More’s masterpiece, written in the form of a conversation between More and Hythlody, a returned voyager.The name “Utopia” comes from two Greek words meaning “no place”.3. Utopia, Book OneBook One of Utopia is a picture of contemporary England with forcible exposure of the poverty among the laboring classes.4. Utopia, Book TwoIn Book Two we have a sketch of an ideal commonwealth in some unknown ocean, where property is held in common and there is no poverty.Chapter 3 The Flowering of English Literature3. Edmund Spenser1 LifeThe Poet’s Poet of the period was Edmund Spenser.In 1579 he wrote The Shepher’s Calendar, a pastoral poem in twelve books, one for each month of the year.2 The Faerie Queene masterpieceSpenser’s greatest work, The Faerie Queene published in 1589-1596, is a long poem planned in 12 books, of which he finished only 6.iambic feet Spenserian Stanza4. Francis Bacon father/founder of English essaythe founder of English English materialist philosophyBacon is also famous for his Essays. When it included 58 essays.Bacon is the first English essayist.Chapter 4 Drama7. The PlaywrightsThere was a group of so-called “university wits” Lyly, Peele, Marlowe, Greene, Lodge and Nash.Chapter 5 Marlowe1. LifeThe most gifted of the “university wits” was Christopher Marlowe.2. WorkMarlowe’s best includes three of his plays, Tamburlaine,The Jew of Malta and Doctor Faustus.3. Doctor FaustusMarl owe’s masterpiece is The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus.5. Marlowe’s Literary AchievementMarlowe was the greatest of the pioneers of English drama.It is Marlowe who first made blank verse rhymeless iambic pentameter the principal instrument of English drama.Chapter 6 Shakespeare1. LifeWilliam Shakespeare was born on April 23, 1564, in Stratford-on-Avon.After his death, two of his above-mentioned fellow-actors, Herminge and Condell, collected and published Shakespeare’s plays in 1623. To this edition, which has been known as the First Folio.4. The Great ComediesA Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Merchant of Venice, As You Like It and Twelfth Night have been called Shakespeare’s “great comedies”.6. The Great TragediesShakespeare created his great tragedies, Hamlet, Othello, King Lear and Macbeth.7. Hamletthe son of the Renaissance9. The Poems1 Venus and Adonis2 The Rape of Lucrece3 Shakespeare’s Sonnets10. Features of Shakespeare’s DramaShakespeare and the Authorized Version of the English Bible are the two greatest treasuries of the English language.Shakespeare has been universally acknowledged to be the summit of the English Renaissance.Part Three: The Period of the English Bourgeois RevolutionChapter 1 The English Revolution and the Restoration5. The Bourgeois Dictatorship and the Restorationin 1688 Glorious Revolution6. The Religious Cloak of the English RevolutionPuritanism was the religious doctrine of the revolutionary bourgeoisie during the English Revolution. It preached thrift, sobriety, hard work and unceasing labour in whatever calling one happened to be, but with no extravagant enjoyment of the fruits of labour.Chapter 2 Milton1. Life and WorkParadise Lost, Paradise Regained and Samson Agonistes.2. Paradise Lost1 Paradise LostParadise Lost is Milton’s masterpiece.blank verse.Chapter 3 Bunyan1. LifeThe Pilgrim’s Progress was published in 1678.2. The Pilgrim’s Progress1The Pilgrim’s Progress is a religious allegory.Chapter 4 Metaphysical Poets and Cavalier Poetsa school of poets called “Metaphysical” by Samuel Johnson.by mysticism in content and fantasticality in formJohn Donne, the founder of the Metaphysical school of poetry.Chapter 6 Restoration Literature2. John DrydenThe most distinguished literary figure of the Restoration Period was John Dryden.Dryden was the forerunner of the English classical school of literature in the next century.Part Four: The Eighteenth CenturyChapter 1 The Enlightenment and Classicism in English Literature1. The Enlightenment and 18th Century England2 The Enlightenment in EuropeThe 18th century marked the beginning of an intellectual movement in Europe, known as the Enlightenment, which was, on the whole, an expression of struggle of the bourgeoisie against feudalism. The enlighteners fought against class inequality, stagnation, prejudices and other survivals of feudalism.3 The English EnlighternersThe representatives of the Enlightenment in English literature were Joseph Addison and Richard Steele, the essayists, and Alexander Pope, the poet. Chapter 2 Addison and Steele1. Steele and The TatlerRichard SreeleIn 1709, he started a paper, The Tatler, to enlighten, as well as to entertain, his fellow coffeehouse-goers.His appeal was made to “coffeehouses,” that is to say, to the middle classes, for whose enlightenment he stood up.“Issac Bickerstaff”2. Addison and The SpectatorThe general purpose is “to enliven morality with wit, and to temper wit with morality.”They ushered in the dawn of modern English novel.Chapter 3 Pope1. LifeAlexander Pope, the most important English poet in the first half of the 18th century.3. Workmanship and LimitationPope was an outstanding enlightener and the greatest English poet of the classical school in the first half of the 18th century.Pope is the most important representative of the English classical poery. But he lacker the lyrical gift.Chapter 4 Swift3. Bickersta f f Almanac 1708Swift wrote his greatest work Gulliver’s Travels in Ireland.Chapter 5 Defoe and the Rise of the English Novel1. The Rise of the English Novelthe realistic novel: Defoe, Swift, Richardson and FieldingSwift’s world-famous novel Gulliver’s Travel sDefoe’s Robinson Crusoe the forerunner of the English realistic novel Richardson: Pamela, Clarissa and Sir Charles GrandisonFielding was the real founder of the realistic novel in England.The novel of this period …spoke the truth about life with an uncompromising courage.” The novelists of this period understood that “the job of a novelist was to tell the truth about life as he saw it.”Ibid. This explains the achievement of the English novel in the 18th century.4. Robinson Crusoe1 Today Defoe is chiefly remembered as the author of Robinson Crusoe, his masterpiece.Chapter 6 RichardsonSamuel RichardsonPamela was, in fact, the first English psycho-analytical novel.After Pamela, Richardson wrote two other novels: Clarissa Harlowe and Sir Charles Grandison.Clarissa is the best of Richardson’s novel.Chapter 7 Fielding the father of English novel1. LifeHis first novel Joseph Andrews was published in 1742.His Jonathan Wild appeared in 1743. It is a powerful political satire. In 1749, he finished his great novel Tom Jones.Amelia was his last novel. It is inferior to Tom Jones, but has merits of its own.3. Joseph Andrews4. Tom Jones1 The StoryFielding’s greatest work is The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling.6. Summary2 Fielding as the Founder of the English Realistic NovelAs a novelist, Fielding is very great. He is the founder of the English realistic novel and sets up the theory of realism in literary creation. He has been rightly called the “father of t he English novel.”Chapter 10 Johnson1. LifeSamuel Johnson, lexicographer, critic and poet.2. Johnson’s DictionaryIn 1755 his Dictionary was published.His Dictionary also marked the end of English writers’ reliance on the patronage of noblemen for support.Chapter 13 Sentimentalism and Pre-Romanticism in Poetry1. LifeThomas Gray2. Pre-RomanticismIn the latter half of the 18th century, a new literary movement arose in Europe, called the Romantic Revival.Pre-Romanticism was ushered in by Percy, Macpherson and Chatterton, and represented by Blake and Burns.Chapter 14 Blake1. LifeWilliam Blake2. Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience4. Blake’s Position in English LiteratureFor these reasons, Blake is called a Pre-Romantic or a forerunner of the Romantic poetry of the 19th century.Chapter 15 Burns1. LifeHis Poems Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect were printed. masterpieceThe Scots Musical Museum and Select Collection of Original Scottish Airs 2. The Poetry of Burns1 Burns is remembered mainly for his songs written in the Scottish dialect on a variety of subjects.3. Features of Burns’ PoetryBurns is the national poet of Scotland.Part Five: Romanticism in EnglandChapter 1 The Romantic Periodthe Industrial Revolution the French RevolutionAmid these social conflicts romanticism arose as a new literary trend. It prevailed in England during the period 1798-1832.These were the elder generation of romanticists, sometimes called escapist romanticists, including Wordsworth, Coleridge and Southey, who have also been called the Lake Poets.Active romanticists represented by Byron, Shelley and Keats.The general feature of the works of the romanticists is a dissatisfaction with the bourgeois society, which finds expression in a revolt against or an escape from the prosaic, sordid daily life, the “prison of the actual”under capitalism.Poetry, of course, is the best medium to express all these sentiments. The only great novelist in this period was Walter Scott.Scott marked the transition from romanticism to the period of realism which followed it.Chapter 2 WordsworthColeridgeIn 1798 they jointly published the Lyrical Ballads.The publication of the Lyrical Ballads marked the break with the conventional poetical tradition of the 18th century, ., with classicism, and the beginning of Romantic revival in England.The Preface of the Lyrical Ballads served as the manifesto of the English Romantic Movement in poetry.Wordsworth, Coleridge and Southey have often been mentioned as the “Lake Poets” because they lived in the Lake District in the no rthwestern part of England.His deep love for nature runs through such short lyrics as Lines Written in Early Spring, To the Cuckoo, I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud, My Heart Leaps Up, Intimations of Immortality and Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey. The last is called his “lyrical hymn of thanks to nature”.Wordsworth’s poetry is distinguished by the simplicity and purity of his language.Chapter 3 Coleridge and Southey1. ColeridgeColeridge’s best poems, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.Chapter 4 Byron1. LifeChilde Harold’s PilgrimageHe finished Childe Harold, wrote his masterpiece Don Juan.2. Childe Harold’s PilgrimageThis long poem contains four cantos. It is written in the Soenserian stanza.3. Don JuanByron remains one of the most popular English poets both at home and abroad. Chapter 5 Shelley4. Promethus UnboundShelley’s masterpiece is Promethus Unbound, a lyrical drama in 4 acts.6. Lyrics on Nature and LoveOde to the West WindChapter 6 Keats2. Long PoemsKeats wrote five long poems: Endymion, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, Lamia and Hyperion.5 The unfinished long epic Hyperion has been regarded as Keat’s greatest achievement in poetry.3. Short Poems1 His leading principle is: “Beauty in truth, truth in beauty.”3 Ode to Autumn, Ode on Melancholy, Ode on a Grecian Urn and Ode to a NightingaleChapter 10 Scott2. His Historical NovelsScott has been universally regarded as the founder and great master of the historical novel.According to the subjet-matter, the group on the history of Scotland, the group on English history and the group on the history of European countries. In fact, Scott’s literary career marks the transition from romanticism to realism in English literature of the 19th century.Part Six: English Critical RealismChapter 2 DickensCharles Dickens critical realismDickens: Pickwick Papers, American Notes, Martin Chuzzlewit and Oliver Twist4 Dickens has often been compared Shakespeare for creative force and range of invention. “He and Shakespeare are the two unique popular classics that England has given to the world, and they are alike in being remembered not for one masterpiece but for creative world.”David CopperfieldChapter 3 Thackeray2. Vanity Fair: A Novel Without a HeroVanity Fair is Thackeray’s masterpiece. characters: Amelia Sedley and Rebecca Becky SharpThackeray can be placed on the same level as Dickens, as one of the greatest critical realists of 19th-century Europe.Chapter 4 Some Women Novelists1. Jane Austen 1775-1817She herself compared her work to a fine engraving made upon a little piece of ivory only two inches square.Jane Austen wrote 6 novels: Northanger Abbey, Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Mansfield Park, Emma and Persuasion.2. The Bronte SistersCharlotte’s maiden attempt at prose writing, the novel Professor, was rejected by the publisher, but her next novel Jane Eyre, appearing in 1847, brought her fame and placed her in the ranks of the foremost English realistic writers. Emily’s novel Wuthering Heights appeared in 1847.Anne: Agnes Grey4. George EliotMary Ann Evansthree remarkable novels: Adam Bede, The Mill on the Floss and Silas Marner 3 Silas Marner:Critical realism was the main current of English literature in the middle of the 19th century.Part Seven: Prose-Writers and Poets of the Mid and Late 19th Century Chapter 1 Carlylethe Victorian AgeChapter 3 Tennysonthe Victorian Age prose especially the novel1. Tennyson’s Life and CareerAlfred Tennyson, the most important poet of the Victorian Age.In the same year 1850 he was appointed poet laureate in succession to Wordsworth.Chapter 7 Literary Trends at the End of the Century1. NaturalismNaturalism is a literary trend prevailing in Europe, especially in France and Germany, in the second half of the 19th century.2. Neo-RomanticismStevenson was a representative of neo-romanticism in English literature. Treasure Island masterpiece3. AestheticismAestheticism began to prevail in Europe at the middle of the 19th century. The theory of “art for art’s sake” was first put forward by the French poet Theophile Gautier.The two most important representatives of aestheticists in English literature are Walter Pater and Oscar Wilde.2 Oscar Wilde dramatistLady Windermere’s Fan, 1893; A Woman of No Importance, 1894; An Ideal Husband and The Importance of Being Earnest, 1895The Importance of Being Earnest is his masterpiece in drama.Part Eight: Twentieth Century English LiteratureModernismChapter 2 English Novel of Early 20th Century3. Henry JamesHe is regarded as the forerunner of the “stream of consciousness” literature in the 20th century.Chapter 3 Hardy1. Life and WorkAmong his famous novels, Tess of the D’Urbervillies and Jude the Obscure.2. Tess of the D’Urbervilliescharacters: Tess, Alec D’Urbervillies and Angel ClareChapter 6 Bernard ShawChapter 8 Modernism in Poetry1. ImagismEzra PoundThe two most important English poets of the first half of 20th century are W. B. Yeats and T. S. Eliot.2. W. B. YeatsThe Wild Swans at Coole, Michael Robartes and the Dancer, The Tower and The Winding StairT. S. E liot has referred to Yeats as “the greatest poet of our age-certainly the greatest in this . English language.”3. T. S. EliotThe Waste Land 1922 is dignifying the emergence of Modernism.T. S. Eliot was a leader of the modernist movement in English poetry and a great innovator of verse technique. He profoundly influenced 20th-century English poetry between World Wars 1 and 2.Chapter 9 The Psychological Fiction1. D. H. LawrenceSons and Lovers1913, the first of Lawrence’s important novel s, is largely autobiographical.This shows the influence of Freud’s theory of psychoanalysis,especially that of the “Oedipus complex.”The Rainbow, Women in Love and Lady Chatterley’s Lover3. James JoyceUlysses 1922June 16, 1904character: Leopold BloomJames Joyce was one of the most original novelists of the 20th century. His masterpiece Ulysses has been called “a modern prose epic”.His admirers have praised him as “second only to Shakespeare in his mastery of the English language.”4. Virginia Woolf“high-brows” the Bloomsbury GroupVirginia Wolf’s first two novels, The Voyage Out and Night and Day. Jacob’s Room, Mrs. Dalloway, To the Lighthouse and OrlandoPart Nine: Poets and Novelists Who Wrote both before and after the SecondWorld WarChapter 5 E. M. ForsterEdward Morgan Forster the Bloomsbury Groupfour novels: Where Angels Fear to Tread, The Longest Journey, A Room with a View and Howards EndA Passage to India, published in 1924, is Forster’s masterpiece.In 1927, Forster published a book on the theory of fiction, Aspects of the Novel.Chapter 10 William GoldingWilliam Gerald GoldingHis first novel Lord of the FliesChapter 11 Doris LessingGolden Notebook。
莎士比亚莎士比亚(W. William Shakespeare;1564~1616)英国文艺复兴时期伟大的剧作家、诗人,欧洲文艺复兴时期人文主义文学的集大成者。
莎士比亚的代表作有四大悲剧:《哈姆雷特》(英:Hamlet)、《奥赛罗》(英:Othello)、《李尔王》(英:King Lear)、《麦克白》(英:Mac Beth)。
著名喜剧:《仲夏夜之梦》《威尼斯商人》《第十二夜》《皆大欢喜》(《As you like it》)。
历史剧:《亨利四世》《亨利五世》《查理二世》。
正剧:《罗密欧与朱丽叶》。
还写过154首十四行诗,二首长诗。
本·琼森称他为“时代的灵魂”,马克思称他和古希腊的埃斯库罗斯为“人类最伟大的戏剧天才”。
虽然莎士比亚只用英文写作,但他却是世界著名作家。
他的大部分作品都已被译成多种文字,其剧作也在许多国家上演。
儒略历1616年4月23日(公历1616年5月3日)病逝,出生日期与逝世日期恰好相同。
莎士比亚和意大利著名数学家、物理学家、天文学家和哲学家、近代实验科学的先驱者伽利略同一年出生。
被人们尊称为“莎翁”。
The course of true love never did run smooth. (A Midsummer Night’s Dream 1.1)真爱无坦途。
——《仲夏夜之梦》/真诚的爱情之路永不会是平坦的。
Things base and vile, holding no quantity, love can transpose to from and dignity: love looks not with the eyes, but with mind. (A Midsummer Night’s Dream 1.1)卑贱和劣行在爱情看来都不算数,都可以被转化成美满和庄严:爱情不用眼睛辨别,而是用心灵来判断/爱用的不是眼睛,而是心。
——《仲夏夜之梦》Lord, what fools these mortals be! (A Midsummer N ight’s Dream 3.2)上帝呀,这些凡人怎么都是十足的傻瓜!——《仲夏夜之梦》The lunatic, the lover and the poet are of imagination all compact. (A Midsummer Night’s Dream 5.1)疯子、情人、诗人都是想象的产儿。
新编英国文学选读知识点梳理摘要:一、概述新编英国文学选读的重要性二、整理新编英国文学选读的主要知识点1.早期英国文学概述2.英国文艺复兴时期文学3.英国浪漫主义时期文学4.维多利亚时期文学5.20世纪英国文学6.当代英国文学三、分析历年考试试题类型及应对策略四、提供学习建议和考试技巧正文:一、概述新编英国文学选读的重要性新编英国文学选读作为一门高校英语专业课程,旨在帮助学生深入理解英国文学的发展脉络,掌握各个时期的重要作家和作品。
通过学习新编英国文学选读,学生能够丰富自己的文学素养,提高英语阅读和分析能力。
二、整理新编英国文学选读的主要知识点1.早期英国文学概述:包括早期英国文学的起源、盎格鲁-撒克逊时期、诺曼征服后的英国文学等。
2.英国文艺复兴时期文学:介绍莎士比亚、斯宾塞、马洛等著名作家,以及他们的代表作品。
3.英国浪漫主义时期文学:分析华兹华斯、骚塞、拜伦、雪莱等诗人的创作特点和作品。
4.维多利亚时期文学:探讨狄更斯、萨克雷、特罗洛普等现实主义作家的社会批判精神。
5.20世纪英国文学:涵盖叶芝、艾略特、乔伊斯等现代主义作家的创新表现。
6.当代英国文学:关注贝克特、品特、石黑一雄等后现代主义作家的实验性创作。
三、分析历年考试试题类型及应对策略历年考试试题主要以选择题、填空题、简答题和论述题为主。
针对不同题型,学生应掌握以下策略:1.选择题:熟练掌握各个时期作家的代表作品、风格特点、生平事迹等基本知识。
2.填空题:对重要作品的主题、情节、人物关系等细节有深入了解。
3.简答题:能够概括作者的创作背景、文学地位和作品的主题思想。
4.论述题:具备对文学作品进行深入分析、评价的能力,并能结合社会历史背景进行探讨。
四、提供学习建议和考试技巧1.制定学习计划:合理安排学习时间,确保系统地学习每个时期的文学知识。
2.积累资料:整理历年考试试题,归纳总结出高频考点和易错点。
3.加强练习:多做模拟试题,提高自己的应试能力和文学分析能力。
A Brief RevisionGeoffrey ChaucerGeoffrey Chaucer is the“father of English poetry”and one of the greatest narrative poets of England. He was buried in Westminster Abbey. Chaucer ’ s language, now called Middle English,is vivid and exact. Geoffrey Chaucer is the first great poet who wrote in the English language.Chaucer must be ranked among the most learned and accomplished of English poets.The Canterbury Tales is his masterpiece and one of the monumental works in English literature.The Book of the Duchess was composed by Chaucer probably as a memorial poem for theDuchess of Lancaster, who died of the plague.The Canterbury TalesThe Canterbury Tales should be an immense work of 124 stories but only 24 were written.Incomplete as they are, The Canterbury Tales covers practically all the major types ofmedieval literature. The Canterbury Tales was written in heroic couplet.General tone: happy, easy, lively, humorous.Terms:Rhyme: the repetition of sounds at the ends of words is called rhyme. When words rhyme at theend of lines of poetry it is called end rhyme.Heroic couplet: Iambic pentameter lines rhymed in pairs. It is called heroic because in England,especially in the 18 th century, it was much used for heroic (epic) poems.Iambic pentameter is a meter in poetry, consisting of an unrhymed line with five iambs or feet,felt by many to be the most powerful of all metrical forms in English poetry.RenaissanceGenerally, it refers to the period between the 14th and mid-17th centuries. The Renaissancemarks a transition from the medieval to the modern world. It first started in Italy, with the floweringof painting, sculpture, architecture, and literature. The Renaissance, therefore, in essence, is ahistorical period in which the European humanist thinkers and scholars made attempts to get ridof those old feudalist ideas in medieval Europe, to introduce new ideas that expressed theinterests of the rising bourgeoisie, and to recover the purity of the early church from the RomanCatholic Church.Humanism is the essence of the Renaissance. By emphasizing the dignity of human beings andthe importance of the present life, The Renaissance humanist thinkers voiced their beliefs thatman did not only have the right to enjoy the beauty of this life, but had the ability to perfecthimself and perform wonders.Renaissance in EnglandThe 16th century in England was a period of the breaking up of feudal relations and theestablishment of the foundations of capitalism. Because of the War of Roses within the countryand its weak and unimportant position in world trade, Renaissance came later in England thanother European countries. But when it did come, it was to produce some towering figures in theEnglish, and — world literary heritage — William Shakespeare, Edmund Spenser, Sir ThomasMore, Francis Bacon and a number of humanist scholars.William ShakespeareWilliam Shakespeare is one of the most remarkable playwrights and poets the world has everknown. He was man of the late Renaissance who gave the fullest expression to humanist ideals.With his 37/38/39 plays, 154 sonnets and 2 long poems, he has established his giant position inworld literature. His works have been translated into every major language in the world. He has beengiven the highest praises by various scholars and critics in the world over. His contemporarypoet and dramatist Ben Jonson dedicated a poem in praise of him:“he was not of an age, bufor all tim e! ”That is definitely true.Shakespeare was born in Stratford-on-Avon, a small town to the northwest of London.Shakespeare ’ s achievements1.Shakespeare represented the trend of history in giving voice to the desires and aspirationsof the people.2.Shakespeare ’ s humanism: More important than his historical sense of his time, Shakespeareinhis plays reflects the spirit of his age.3. Shakespeare’ s characters are“ round” , in the sense that they have many aspects or dimensions.4.Shakespeare ’ s originality: Shakespeare drew most of his materials from sources that wereknown to his audience; some from Roman dramas, some from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, andsome from other writers ’ plays. But his plays are original because he instilled into the oldmaterials a new spirit that gives new life to his plays.5.Shakespeare as a great poet: Shakespeare was not only a great dramatist, but also a great poet.6.Shakespeare as master of the English language: Shakespeare was the master of the Englishlanguage.HamletHamlet is considered to be the summit of Shakespeare ’ s art. It is the profoundestpressionexofShakespeare ’ s humanism and his criticism of contemporary life.Romeo and JulietRomeo and Juliet It is Shakespeare’ s first romantic tragedy.Sonnet: a 14-line poem, predominantly in iambic pentameter. The English (or Shakespearean)sonnet is usually arranged into 3 quatrains and a couplet, rhyming abab cdcd efef gg. Thecouplet is usually the conclusion.Some important works of Shakespeare:1) Comedies: The Comedy of Errors, The Two Gentlemen of Verona, The Taming of the Shrew,Love ’ s Labour’ s Lost, A Midsummer Night’ s Dream, The Merchant of Venice, Much Ado about Nothing 无事生非 , As You Like It 皆大欢喜 , Twelfth Night, The Merry Wives of Windsor, All’ s well That Ends Well 终成眷属 , Measure for Measure 一报还一报 .2)Tragedies: Romeo and Juliet, Julius Caesar, Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, Macbeth, Antonyand Cleopatra, Troilus and Cressida .4)Histories: Henry IV, Henry VI.ThemeThe theme of Hamlet is revengeThe theme of King Lear is vanity.The theme of Othello is jealousy.The theme of Macbeth is desire.Francis BaconBacon is the founder of modern science in England. He, a philosopher, scientist and essayist, laysthe foundation for modern science with his insistence on scientific way of thinking and freshobservation rather than authority as a basis for obtaining knowledge.Essays58 essays were included in Bacon Essays’s. They are famous for their brevity, compactness, and powerfulness. These essays cover a wide variety of subjects concerning various aspects of life, suchas love, truth, friendship, parents and children, beauty, studies, riches, youth and age, garden, death,and many others. They have won popularity for their precision, clearness, brevity and force.The 17th century was one of the most turbulent periods in English history. It was a period whenabsolute monarchy impeded the further development of capitalism in England and the bourgeoisiecould no longer bear the control of the landed nobility. The contradictions between the feudalsystem and the bourgeoisie had reached its peak and resulted in a revolutionary outburst.The English revolution took place in the middle of 17th century. Among the causes of thisrevolution was the growth of capitalism, the break-up of serfdom and Puritan movement.In 1642, the Civil War broke out between the king and the Parliament. With the support of thepeople and the leadership of Oliver Cromwell, the English bourgeoisie won the victory. In 1649 Charles I was captured and beheaded. England became a commonwealth under the leadership of Oliver Cromwell. After his death, monarchy was again restored by King Charles II in 1660. It was called a period of the RestorationThere were two leaders in the English Revolution. Cromwell was the man of action and Miltonthe man of thought.John MiltonIn English literature John Milton ranks with Shakespeare and Chaucer. During his retirementfrom public life,he produced his masterpieces: the epic Paradise Lost, its sequel, Paradise Regained; and the poetic tragedy Samson Agonistes.Paradise LostParadise Lost is long epic poem divided into 12 books. The theme is the fall of men: man’ s disobedience and the loss thereupon of Paradise. In this epic poem Satan is the most successfully portrayed character. He was evil, rebellious, courageous, heroic and tragic.Milton’ s styleMilton is difficult to read, because of his involved style with frequent inversion (probably owingto the influence of Latin syntax)and very complicated sentence structures. His sentences are often long, sometimes running into a dozen, or even more lines. To express his sublimity of thought, he wrote in a style that is unsurpassed in its sonority, eloquence, majesty and grandeur. Daniel DefoeDaniel Defoe is considered one of the greatest fiction writers of 18 th-century England. Defoe wasa very good story-teller. His sentences are sometimes short, crisp and plain, and sometimes longand rambling, while leave on the reader an impression of casual narration. His language is smooth, easy, colloquial and mostly vernacular. There is nothing artificial in his language: it is commonEnglish at its best.Robinson CrusoeThe story of Robinson Crusoe is well-known throughout the world. It tells of how RobinsonCrusoe, an English mariner, having shipwrecked on an island, managed to struggle for live for 28 years there and rescued a black man, whom he named Friday, from the cannibals (person whoeats human flesh). Later, Robinson got hold of a ship and sailed home. The book ’“s realistic”touch and ingenuity(originality)aroused great interest from the readers both in England and abroad.Robinson is here a real hero: a typical eighteenth-century English middle-class man, with a great capacity for work,inexhaustible energy, courage, patience and persistence in overcoming obstacles, in struggling against the hostile natural environment. He is the very prototype of theempire builder, the pioneer colonist.Jonathan SwiftJonathan Swift is a master satirist.Gulliver s Travels’Gulliver s Travels’is his best work, a social and political prose satire, in the form of a book oftravels. It is partly burlesque of travelers tales,’ and partly realistic wonder-book with a very different satirical aim. As a whole, the book is one of the most effective and devastating criticismand satires of all aspects in the then English and European life —socially, politically, religiously, philosophically, scientifically, and morally. Its social significance is great and its exploration intohuman nature profound. The book is also an artistic masterpiece.Jonathan Swift himself is one of the greatest masters of English prose. His language is simple,clear, and vigorous. There are no ornaments in his writing, but it becomes homes to the reader.RomanticismRomanticism was a movement in literature, philosophy, music and art which developed in Europein the late 18 th and early 19 th centuries. Starting from the ideas of Rousseau in France and fromthe Storm and Stress Movement in Germany, it held that classicism, dominant since the 16thcentury, failed to express man’ semotional nature and overlooked his profound inner forces. Romanticism emphasized individual values and aspirations above those of society. As a reactionto the industrial revolution, it looked to the Middle Ages and to direct contact with nature for inspiration. It gave impetus to the national liberation movement in 19 th-century Europe.The features of Romanticism were:1) The romantics were against the modes of thinking in the 18th century which saw man as asocial animal.2)They emphasize the special qualities of each individual3)So Romanticism actually constitutes a change of direction from attention to the outer world ofsocial civilization to the inner world of human spirit.4)In essence it tends to see the individual as the very center of life and all experience. They alsoplace the individual at the center of art and make literature most valuable as an express of his orher unique feelings and particular attitudes, and value its accuracy in portraying the individual’ s experiences.Attitudes towards Individualism:Middle ages: emphasize on God; man lived chiefly for the future worldRenaissance period: man is the center of all concern; emphasized on the dignity of man andthe importance of the present lifeEnlightenment: saw man as social man; the general or universal characteristics of human behavior were more suitable subject matterRomanticism: Saw man as an individual in the solitary state; Emphasized the specialqualities of each individual mind;’s Value the exploration and evaluation of the inner self; A prominence of first-person lyric poem “ I ”the–direct person of the poet; A change of direction from attention to the outer world of social civilization to the inner world of the human spiritWilliam BlakeLiterarily William Blake was the first important romantic poet, showing contempt for the rule ofreason, opposing the classical tradition of the 18th century, and treasuring the individual ’ s imagination. He is considered to be a forerunner of the Romantic poetry of the 19 th century.William WordsworthWordsworth is the most representative poet of English Romanticism. Wordsworth ’poetrys is distinguished by the simplicity and purity of his language. He was a worshipper of nature fromhis childhood. In 1842, he received the government pension and in the following year, he succeeded Southey as Poet Laureate. In 1798, Wordsworth and Coleridge jointly published theLyrical Ballads . The publication of this book marked the break with the conventional poeticalthtradition of the 18 century, i.e., with classicism, and the beginning of the Romantic revival in Definition of a poet and poetryHe (poet) is a man speaking to men: a man, it is true, endowed with more lively sensibility, moreenthusiasm and tenderness, who has a greater knowledge of human nature, and a morecomprehensive soul, than are supposed to be common among mankind.Poetry is thespontaneous overflow of powerful feeling;Samuel Taylor ColeridgePoets are born and not made. A poem should not be judged as a mirror of truth—as we judgescience--but as a thing in itself, almost as a living organism. Poems should be judged onlyaccording to their own lights and not according to any established precept or precedent.Lake PoetsWordsworth, Coleridg e and Southey have often been mentioned as the“ Lake Poets”because they lived in the Lake District in the northwestern part of England. The three traversed the same pathin politics and in poetry, beginning as radicals and ends as conservatives.Jane AustenThe major theme of her novel is love and marriage toward which she holds on a practicalidealism— love should be justified by reason and disciplined by self-control.Generally speaking, Jane Austen was a writer of the 18 th–century, though she lived mainly inthe 19th century.Her works show clearly her firm belief in the predominance of reason over passion, the sense ofresponsibility, good manners and clear-sighted judgment over the Romantic tendencies of emotionand individuality. She shows contemptuous feelings towards snobbery, stupidity, worldliness andvulgarity through subtle satire and irony. Austen ’ s main literary concern is about human beings intheir personal relationships. In her works, she characterizes a human being not atmoments of crisis, but in the most trivial incidents of everyday life. Her characteristic theme is thatmaturity is achieved through the loss of illusions. Faults of character are corrected whenthrough tribulation, lessons are learned.Because of her sensitivity to universal patterns of human behavior, Jane Austen has brought theEnglish novel, as an art of form, to its maturity, and she has been regarded as one of thegreatest of all novelists.George Gordon ByronHe is well known in China. Don Juan, the long satirical epic, is generally considered hismasterpiece. As a leading Romanticist, Byron ’ s chief contribution is his creati Byronic of the hero”, aproud, mysterious rebel figure of noble origin. With immense superiority in his passions and powers,this Byronic hero would carry on his shoulders the burden of righting all the wrongsin a corrupt society, and would rise single-handedly against any kind of tyrannical rules either ingovernment, in religion, or in moral principles with unconquerable wills and inexhaustible energies.The conflict is usually one of rebellious individuals against outworn social systems andconventions. The Byronic hero became an idol of the young.Percy Bysshe ShelleyOne of the leading Romantic poets, an intense and original lyrical poet in the English languageHe is known to Chinese readers mainly for his Ode to the West Wind (1820), whose ending“ Ifwinter comes, can spring be far behind? ” has given courage to many revolutionaries faced with reverses, even death.John Keats (1795-1821)The one artistic aim in Keats’poetry was to create a beautiful world of imagination as opposed to the sordid reality of his day.His leading principle is“ beauty is truth, truth is beauty.”That is,“ What the imaginat Beauty must be truth, whether it existed before or not said by the poet”.George G. Byron, Percy B. Shelley and John Keats were called positive romantic poetsVictorian novelistsThe Victorian period roughly coincides with the reign of Queen Victoria who ruled over Englandfrom 1836 to 1901. The period has generally regarded as one of the most glorious in the Englishhistory. Victorian literature, as a product of its age, naturally took on its quality of magnitude anddiversity. It was many-sided and complex, and reflected both romantically and realistically the greatchanges that were going on in people ’lifes and thought. Charlotte Bronte, William Thackeray, CharlesDickens, Thomas Hardy were representatives of Victorian novelists.Charlotte Bronte (1816-1855)Jane Eyre is one of the most popular and important novels of the Victorian Age.It is noted for its sharp criticism of the existing society, that is, the religious hypocrisy of charityinstitutions. The social discrimination Jane experiences first as a dependent at he r aunt ’ s houseand later as a governess at Thornfield, and the false social conversation as concerning love andmarriage.At the same time, it is an intense moral fable, Jane, like Mr. Rochester, has to undergo a seriesof physical and moral tests to grow up and achieve her final happiness.Jane Eyre, taking the form of autobiographies written by authoritative and reliable narrators tellsa story of a child’ s development and maturation.Helen Burns ’ deathrecalls the death of Charlotte’ s sisteBridgesat.CowanIt is a work of critical realism as well as the first and one of the most popular works of theworking middle- class women.Jane ’experiences originates from Charlotte owns’ experience. It is the first governessnovel in the history of English literature.Jane is an orphan who grows up lonely without anybody caring for her.Jane is a small, plain and poor governess of Victorian era instead of the rich, gentle, frail,beauties of the conventional heroine.Jane only has an intense feeling, a ready sympathy and a strong sense of equality andindependence.Critical Realism1.Time: the middle of the 19 th century2.Representatives: Charles Dickens and William Thackeray etc.3.Background: Industrial Revolution (1760 – 1840) (employment of machines; extremelywealthy and extremely poor; unemployment); Chartist movement (1838 –1848) ( 宪章运动;workers ’unions to require for political rights; The People ’Charter;s several petitions toParliament but failed; great influence to the society)4. Featuresintroduction of a new set of characters from the working classstrong hatred for vices existing in the societyan illusion of bringing about social justice and harmony by reformsan interest in the theme of woman emancipation (mainly Charlotte Bronte)Charles Dickens (1812-1870)He is one of the greatest critical realist writers of the Victorian Age, “theexpression of theconscience of his age”.In 1837, the publication of The Posthumous Papers of Pickwick Clublifted him into a position of fame and fortune.Dickens is one of the greatest critical realist writers of the Victorian Age. It is his serious intentionto expose and criticize in his works all the property, injustice, hypocrisy and corruptness he sees all around him. Dickens is a humorist. To match his humorous genius, Dickens is also noted for his picture of pathos. Dickens ’ works are also characterized by a mingling of humor and pathos. He seems to believe that life is itself a mixture of joy and grief. Life is delightful because it is at once comic and tragic.The first child hero Dickens created was Oliver Twist.Thomas Hardy (1840-1928)Thomas Hardy is one of the greatest literary figures of the 19th century,“Shakespeare of British novels”, “the greatest tragedy master of British fictions .”His literary genius is apparent in his poems and novels. His novels had an indelible impact during his time and also till date many of his novels inspire theatre productions as well as films. His novels, which reflect the Victorian society with all its idiosyncrasies, were perceived as irreligious. Nevertheless, current scholars believe Hardy to be one of the greatest tragic novelists of English literature.The theme of Tess of theD’ UrbervillesA fierce attack on the hypocritical morality of the bourgeois societyThe capitalist invasion into the country and destruction of the English peasantryTess as a pure woman is a bused and destroyed by both Alec and Angel, agents of thedestructive force of the societyModernismModernism is an omnibus term for a number of tendencies in the arts which were prominent in the first half of the 20 th century; in English literature, it is particularly associated with the writings of T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, W. B. Yeats and F. M. Ford. Broadly, Modernism reflects the impact upon literature of the psychology of Freud and the anthropology of Sir J. Frazer. A sense of cultural relativism is pervasive in much modernist writing, as is an awareness of the irrational and the workings of the unconscious mind. Technically, it was marked by a persistent experimentalism. It rejected the traditional framework of narrative, description, and rational exposition in poetry and prose, in favor of stream-of-consciousness presentation of personality, a dependence on the poetic image as the essential vehicle of aesthetic communication, and upon myth as a characteristic structural principle.It takes the irrational philosophy and the theory of psycho-analysis as its theoretical base.Concentrate more the private than the public, more on subjective than the objectiveMore concerned with the inner being of an individualMain writers of ModernismOscar Wilde (1854-1900); George Bernard Shaw (1854-1900); T. S. Eliot(1888-1965); James Joyce(1882-1941); D.H. Lawrence (1879-1970); Virginia Woolf(1882-1930)Robert BrowningRobert Browning is famous for his Dramatic Monologue.Oscar WildeKnown for his barbed and clever wit, he was one of the most successful playwrights of late Victorian London, and one of the greatest celebrities of his day.Art for Art’ s SakeArt for Art’ sisSakethe theory that the fine arts are independent of social-historical reality andhave nothing to do with moral or religious purposes. A work of art is free to seek beauty and its values are aesthetic. Oscar Wilde is a most famous writer practicing this theory.George Bernard ShawA brilliant dramatistHe regarded the establishment of socialism by the emancipation of land and industrial capital from individual and class ownership as the final goal. He was against the means of violent revolution or armed struggle in achieving the goal of socialism; he also had a distrust of the uneducated working class in fighting against capitalists. He held that only those superior intellects could have the ability to shoulder this task. And it was his ideal to bring about evolutionary socialism by legal and democratic means, by revealing the evil capitalists and by educating the common people.This reformist view caused him a painful, conscious, inner conflict between his sincere desire forthe new world and his inability to break out of the snobbish intellectual isolation throughout hislife and work.On literature, he was against“ art for art’ s sakert”shouldand servethoughtsocith a lt purposesa by reflecting human life, revealing social contradictions and educating the common people.Shaw followed the great traditions of realism. As a realistic dramatist, he took the modern social issues as his subjects with the aim of directing social reforms. Most of his plays are concerned with political, economic, moral, or religious problems, thus can be termed as problem plays.One feature of Shaw’ scharacterization is that he makes the trick of showing up one character vividly at the expense of another. His plays have plots but they do not work by plots, the plot is usually the disregarded backbone to one long, unbroken conversation. It is the vitality of the talk that takes primacy over mere story.Problem play: a play that explores a controversial social issue of its day.T. S. EliotAchievementT. S. Eliot was the most dominant literary figure between the two world wars. Poet William Carlos Williams describes the effect of The Waste Land as that of an atom bomb. He conceives a poem as an object, an organic thing in itself, demanding a fusion and concentration of intellect, feeling, and experience. He suggests that, through cultural memory, a poet unconsciously continues the tradition of his culture. His poetry presents difficulties of numerous allusions, use of foreign language, use of metaphysical conceit, and an absence of obvious narrative structure. The Waste Land, considered being a remarkable and extraordinary achievement, deals with the failure of Western civilization as shown by World War I.styleEliot ’styles in the Waste Land was deliberately impersonal, concrete, fragmentary, and discontinuous. (1) Impersonality means that an author does not express his own experience and emotion. At least, he does not voice it as his own, but describes things, invents, characters, or creates dramatic scenes, and thus embodies emotion objectively in the particulars he renders. (2) These particulars are concrete in the sense that they render sensations and actions as opposed to general ideas. (3) But in the Waste Land such concrete particulars are only fragments. The poem does not give complete descriptions, quotations, conversations, or actions, but only bits and pieces of them. (4)Such fragments are juxtaposed in unpredictable ways, and since each presents a different voice, action, emotion, and style, their sequence is at first disorienting (confusing). Gradually one finds interrelations within this discontinuity, but the interrelation is by leitmotifs (主旋律) .。
英国文学复习总结详解 Part one:Early and medieval English literature 1.Beowulf《贝奥武甫》------the national epic of the English people ,it is also the epic of the Anglo-Saxon.(P3) 2.The name of the terrible monster------Grendel(格伦德尔)(P3) 3.the most striking feature in its poetical form is the use of alliteration(头韵),others are metaphor (暗喻)and understatement(保守陈述)(P5) 4The Norman Conquest (诺曼征服)marks the establishment of feudalism in England. (P6) 5.The romance(传奇文学)(P8) The most popular of literature in fedual England was the romance. It was a long composition, sometimes in verse, sometimes in prose, describing the life and adventures of a noble hero. The hero of the romance was the the knight, a man of noble birth, skilled in the use of weapons. It was written for the noble class(贵族的文学) Romances falls into three cycles : “matters of Britain”( adventures of King Arthur and his knights of the Round Table), “matters of France” (Emperor Charlemagne and his peers) “matters of Rome”. (Alexander the Great and so forth) 6. William Langland威廉·朗兰------ Piers the Plowman《耕者皮尔斯》(P11) 7.The ballads(民谣)(P17) The most important department of English folk literature is the ballad.It is a story told in song ,usually in 4-line stanzas [ˈstænzə],with the second and fourth lines rhymed. It was written for common people(平民文学). The subjects of ballads are various in kind,as the struggle of young loves against their feudal-minded families,the conflict between love and wealth ,the cruelty of envy,the criticism of the civil war,and the matters of class struggle. The most famous ballads are the ballads of Robin Hood. 8. Geoffrey Chaucer’ Contributions <1>Father of English poetry in 14th century. Chaucer introduces from France the rhymed stanzas of various types instead of the old Anglo-Saxon alliterative verse,especially the rhymed couplet of 5 accents in iambic meter(the heroic couplet) to English poetry.(P26) <2>Chaucer is the first great poet who wrote in the English language. His production of so much excellent poetry is an important factor in establishing English as the literary language of the country.He did much in making the dialect of London the standard for the modern English speech.(P26) <3>the founder of English realism(P23) The Prologue(序言) suppies a miniature of the English society of Chaucer’s time <4>. he forerunner of humanisim (P24 倒数第二行) 9. Geoffrey Chaucer died in 1400 and was buried in Westminster Abbey(威斯敏斯特教堂)thus founding the “Poets’ Corner”..(P20) 10.The Romaunt of the Rose(translated from Franch)《玫瑰传奇》 Troilus and Criseyde(adapted from the Italian)《特洛勒斯和克莱西》 10. Geoffrey Chaucer 杰弗里·乔叟------The Canterbury Tales 《坎特伯雷故事集》 The tales of the Knight,the Pardoner(卖赎罪券者),the Nun’s Priest (尼姑的牧师),the Wife of Bath,together with the Prologue,are the best of the whole collection.(P24)(了解一下) Part two:The English renaissance 1.historical background 1.The Reformation(宗教改革) 2. the Authorized Version(钦定版圣经) 3. The Enclosure movement(圈地运动) 4 The commercial expansion(贸易扩张)5 The war with Spain(与西班牙战争)6 Renaissance(文艺复兴)7 Humanism(人文主义)(P27-30) 2.Thomas More托马斯·莫尔 Utopia《乌托邦》 Utopia is More's masterpiece, written in the form of a conversation between More and a returned sailor.It is divided into two books.(P37) Book I of " Utopia" is a picture of contemporary social conditions of England. BookⅡwe have a picture of an ideal commonwealth (Utopia )in some unknown ocean.(P37) 3. Thomas Wyatt(托马斯·韦阿特): He first introduced the sonnet into England from Italy. Surrey(萨里),in his tranlation Virgil’s Aeneid《埃涅伊德》,wrote the first English blank verse(无韵诗),later masrerly handled by Shakepeare and Milton. 4 Philip Sidney(菲利普·锡德尼)Astrophel and Stella《爱星者与星星》Apology for Poetry《为诗辩护》 5.WalterRaleigh(华尔特·罗利) Discovery of Guiaana《发现圭亚那》,Historty of the world 6. "the poets' poet" of the period was Edmund Spenser. The Shepherd’s Calendar《牧羊人日记》,Epithalamion《新婚颂歌》,masterpiece The Faerie Queen《仙后》 7. The Faerie Queen《仙后》(P42) <1>Spenser’s grestest work,is a long poem planned in 12 books,he only finished 6.the work was dedicated to Queen Elizabeth. <2>each guest has a knight,each knight represents a virtue(美德),as Holiness(圣洁),Temperance(温和),Chastity(贞洁),Friendship,Justice (正义)and Courtesy(谦恭). <3>The knight as a whole symbolize England,the evil figures stand for his enemies,as King Philip of Spain,Mary Queen of Scots(both Catholics) or church of Rome. <4>The thoughts of the poem are nationalism,humanism,puritanism <5> The Faerie Queen is written in a special verse form ,consisits of 8 iambic pentameter lines followed by a ninth line of six iambic feet (an alexandrine亚历山大诗行),with the rhyme scheme abab bcbc c , the form called "Spenserian Stanza"(斯宾塞诗节) (P43) 8.John Lyly(约翰·黎里)------Euphues《优弗依斯》was written in a peculiar style known as "Euphuism"(优弗依斯体或绮丽体)(P44) 9. Francis Bacon(弗朗西斯·培根)the founder of English materialist philosophy(唯物主义) and modern science(P45) <1>Advancement of Learning 《学问的演进》 <2> New Instrument《新工具》---a statement of what is called the Inductive Method (归纳法) <3>Eassy《随笔》 These essays cover a wide variety of subjects, such as love, truth, friendship, parents and children, beauty, studies, riches, youth and age, garden, death and many others. (P46) Of study《论读书》 10.The Miracle Play(奇迹剧)(P46) The miracle were simply plays based on Bible stoies,such as the creation of the world,Noah(诺亚)and the flood, and the birth co Christ.They were at first performed in the churches.But after the actors introduced secular(世俗)and even commercial elements into the performance,it was forbidden inside the church ,so it got into the market place.