英美文学时代背景代表人物及特点缩略
英美文学总结

专八英美文学总结英国文学一、古英语时期的英国文学(499-1066)1、贝奥武夫2、阿尔弗雷德大帝:英国散文之父二、中古英语时期的英国文学1、allegory体非常盛行2、Romance开始上升到一定的高度3、高文爵士和绿衣骑士4、Willian Langlaud 《农夫皮尔斯的幻象》5、乔叟坎特伯雷故事集(英雄双韵体)6、托马斯.马洛礼《亚瑟王之死》三、文艺复兴时期的英国文学(伊丽莎白时代)(14-16世纪)1、托马斯.莫尔《乌托邦》2、Thomas Wyatt 和Henry Howard引入sonnet3、Philips Sidney 《The defense of Poesie》《阿卡迪亚》描述田园生活;现代长篇小说的先驱4、斯宾塞《仙后》诗人中的诗人;斯宾塞体诗节;5、莎士比亚:长篇叙事诗:《维纳斯和阿多尼斯》、《露克丝受辱记》四大悲剧:哈姆雷特、李尔王、奥赛罗、麦克白7、本.琼森风俗喜剧(comedy of manners)《人性互异》8、约翰.多恩“玄学派”诗歌创始人9、George Herbert 玄学派诗圣10、弗朗西斯.培根现代科学和唯物主义哲学创始人之一《Essays》英国发展史上的里程碑《学术的推进》和《新工具》四、启蒙时期(18世纪)1、约翰、弥尔顿:《失乐园》、《为英国人民争辩》2、约翰、班扬:《天路历程》religious allegory3、约翰、德莱顿:英国新古典主义的杰出代表、桂冠诗人;《论戏剧诗》4、亚历山大.蒲柏:英国新古典主义诗歌的重要代表;英雄双韵体的使用达到登峰造极的使用;《田园组诗》是其最早田园诗歌代表作5、托马斯、格雷:感伤主义中墓园诗派的代表人物《墓园挽歌》6、威廉、布莱克:天真之歌、经验之歌;7、罗伯特、彭斯:苏格兰最杰出的农民诗人;8、Richard Steel和Joseph Addison合作创办《The tatler》和《the spectator》9、Samuel defoe 英国现实主义小说的奠基人之一;《鲁滨逊漂流记》;《铲除非国教徒的捷径》,仪表达自己的不满;10、Jonathan Swift 《一个小小的建议》;《格列佛游记》;《桶的故事》;11、Samuel Richardson 英国现代小说的创始人;帕米拉;克拉丽莎;查尔斯.格蓝迪森爵士的历史;12、Henry Fielding 英国现实主义小说理论的奠基人;《约瑟夫。
英国文学7个时期各自特点介绍(范文)

英国文学7个时期各自特点介绍(范文)第一篇:英国文学7个时期各自特点介绍(范文)英国文学7个时期英国文学发端于中世纪,经历了古英语、中古英语、文艺复兴、17世纪、18世纪、19世纪、20 世纪文学 7 个时期,取得了举世瞩目的成就。
古英语文学英国在10世纪以前属于古英语时期,早期的凯尔特等部族及5 世纪入侵的盎格鲁、撒克逊和朱特人,起初都没有留下书面文学。
6世纪末到7世纪末,由于肯特国王阿瑟尔伯特皈依基督教,该教僧侣开始以拉丁文著书写诗,其中以比德所著《英国人民宗教史》最有历史和文学价值。
9世纪,威塞克斯国王阿尔弗雷德为振兴文化,组织人力将各种拉丁文著作译成英语,并倡导以英语撰写《盎格鲁-撒克逊编年史》,其中包括有关盎格鲁-撒克逊和朱特人的英雄史诗《贝奥武甫》和《朱迪斯》,以及一些抒情诗、方言诗、谜语和宗教诗、宗教记述文、布道词。
中古英语文学 11世纪,随着诺曼人入侵,古英语渐渐演化为中古英语,文学上开始流行模仿法国的韵文体骑士传奇,其中以《高文骑士与绿衣骑士》最有艺术价值。
14世纪后半叶是中古英语发展的高峰,出现了似受古英语诗影响的口头韵体诗,最有名的长诗《农夫彼尔斯的幻想》,一般认为是教会人员朗兰德所写,以中世纪梦幻故事的形式探讨人间善恶,讽刺社会丑行,表达对贫苦农民的深切同情。
此时期国王查理第二当政,宫廷开始用盎格鲁-诺曼法语,王室贵族兴起赞助文人之风。
英国文学史上出现的第一位大诗人乔叟以其诗体短篇小说集《坎特伯雷故事集》和其他长短诗集成为英国文学的重要奠基人。
15世纪,有民间歌谣抄本流传至今,最有名的是关于绿林好汉罗宾汉的传说;马洛礼的散文小说《亚瑟王之死》为英国小说的雏形。
文艺复兴时期文学16世纪中叶至17世纪初主要是伊丽莎白女王时代,英国开始文艺复兴运动。
学者纷纷翻译意大利和法国学术、文学名著并自行著述,以托马斯· 莫尔(1477~1535)的《乌托邦》最有价值。
英国文艺复兴文学最突出的是诗歌和戏剧。
英美文学赏析--英国文学部分

英国文学史资料British Writers and Works一.A nglo-Saxon period<Beowulf>贝奥武夫:the national epic of the Anglo-SaxonsEpic:long narrative poems that record the adventures or heroic deeds of a hero enacted in vast landscapes. The style of epic is grand and elevated. (主题严肃,语言庄重)e.g. Homer’s Iliad and OdysseyArtistic features:ing alliteration(押头韵)(该文最大修辞特点,每行第一个词辅音韵)Definition of alliteration: a rhetorical device, meaning some words in asentence begin with the same consonant sound(辅音)ing metaphor(暗喻,隐喻)and understatementDefinition of understatement: expressing something in a controlledway Understatement is a typical way for Englishmen to express theirideas二.The Middle Ages (Medieval Ages)Geoffery Chaucer杰弗里•乔叟1340(?)~1400(首创“双韵体”,英国文学史上首先用伦敦方言写作。
约翰·德莱顿(John Dryden)称其为“英国诗歌之父”The father of English poetry.first time to use ‘heroic couplet’(英雄双韵体) by middle English代表作《坎特伯雷故事集》《The Canterbury tales》。
英美文学后面几个人物简介

英美文学后面几个人物简介第一篇:英美文学后面几个人物简介丹尼尔·笛福Daniel Defoe 英国作家,英国启蒙时期现实主义小说的奠基人,被誉为“小说之父”。
其代表作《鲁滨逊漂流记》Robinson Crusoe闻名于世,鲁滨逊也成为与困难抗争的典型模范,因此他被视作英国小说的开创者之一。
继《鲁滨孙漂流记》后,又写了许多小说,比较有名的有:《辛格顿船长》、Captain Singleton 《摩尔弗兰德斯》、Moll Flanders 《罗克查娜》Colonel Jack and Roxana.、《伦敦大疫记》、《一个骑士的回忆录》等。
但他终生没有混入当时有名的文人圈子里。
这些文人出身的社会地位比他高。
他一生穷困,临死前为了避债不得不离家藏起来。
奥利弗·哥德史密斯Oliver Goldsmith 十八世纪著名的英国剧作家。
不论是诗歌、小说、文章还是剧本,哥德史密的写作格风格均是以嘻笑怒骂的形式,藉以讽刺时弊。
他最著名的两出喜剧是《善性之人》(The Good-Natuser Man, 1768)及《屈身求爱》(She Stoops to Conquer, 1773),他的戏剧以莎士比亚闹剧式的传统结构,企图重建他所谓的「畅笑」喜剧(“laughing” comedy),致力打破当时英国舞台盛行的感伤主义,以提高公众的品味。
哥德史密斯於1774年在伦敦去世,后人均会把他跟另一位著名英国喜剧家谢雷登(Richard Brinsley Sheridan)相提并论。
其他作品有(The Vicar of Wakefield)(The Deserted Village)(The Traveller)(The Good-Naturd Man and She Stoops to Conquer)(The History of Little Two-Shoes)(The Citizen of the world)简·奥斯汀Jane Austen 19世纪英国小说家,世界文学史上最具影响力的女性文学家之一,其最著名的作品是《傲慢与偏见》和《理智与情感》,以细致入微的观察和活泼风趣的文字著称。
英美文学人物

威廉·莎士比亚(William Shakespeare,1564-1616),戏剧家,诗人。
生于艾冯河畔的斯特拉福德,并在那里度过童年和青少年。
1586年左右离开故乡,前往伦敦,在剧场做过一段时间杂活,后来开始参与演出一些不太重要的角色。
从1590年起至1613年,他一共创作了38部(一说39部)戏剧,样式包括喜剧、编年史剧、悲剧、传奇剧等,最著名的戏剧包括《罗密欧与朱丽叶》(Romeo and Juliet, 1595 )、《亨利四世(上篇)》(Henry IV, Part I, 1597)、《威尼斯商人》(The Merchant of Venice, 1596)、《第十二夜》(Twelfth Night, 1600)、《皆大欢喜》(As you like it)、《仲夏夜之梦》(The midsummer night’s dream)、《哈姆雷特》(Hamlet, 1601)、《奥赛罗》(Othello, 1604)、《李尔王》(King Lear, 1605)、《麦克白》(Macbeth, 1606)、《冬天的故事》(Winter’s Tale, 1610)、《暴风雨》(The Tempest, 1 612)等。
莎士比亚还创作有154首十四行诗和7首长诗。
1613年,莎士比亚返回故乡,三年后病逝。
莎士比亚的同代戏剧家本·琼生的“他不属于一个时代,而是属于永远”的赞词,多少表达了数百年来莎士比亚在世界文明和文学中的地位。
约翰·弥尔顿(John Milton,1608-1674),诗人。
弥尔顿的一生和创作大约可分为三个时期:他16岁时入剑桥大学,并开始用拉丁文和英文写诗;1638-39年间,他前往欧洲旅行,并同当时被囚禁的伽利略见过面。
这一时期的主要作品是一些短诗,比较优秀的有《利西达斯》(Lycidas, 1637)等。
1639年,英国革命即将爆发,他返回英国。
英美文学简史及名篇选读

英美文学简史及名篇选读英美文学简史及名篇选读英美文学历史悠久,兼收并蓄,蕴含着丰富的文化底蕴和独特的文学风格。
本文将从文学发展、主要作家及其代表作,以及作品内容等方面,介绍英美文学的发展史和一些著名的文学代表作品。
一、英美文学的发展英美文学的历史可以追溯到古代,但是现代英美文学发展以文艺复兴时期开始,并在18世纪达到顶峰。
19世纪和20世纪,英美文学经历了象征主义、现代主义和后现代主义等派别的影响,作家的风格也日渐多样化。
二、英美文学的主要作家及其代表作1.威廉·莎士比亚威廉·莎士比亚是英国文学史上最著名的作家之一,他的作品包括诸如《麦克白》、《哈姆雷特》、《罗密欧与朱丽叶》等经典作品,在当时非常受欢迎。
2.詹姆斯·乔伊斯詹姆斯·乔伊斯是20世纪最具代表性的小说家之一,其作品以《尤利西斯》和《都柏林人》最为知名,他以流露出来的内心世界和音乐般的语言呈现了人性和命运。
3.欧内斯特·海明威欧内斯特·海明威是20世纪最著名的小说家之一,他的作品以《老人与海》和《太阳照常升起》最为著名。
他以简练而概括的语言,描绘出战争和人性的无边悲剧。
他的作品经常强调男子汉的美德和荣誉感,深受广大男性读者的喜爱。
4.弗朗西斯·司各特·菲茨杰拉德弗朗西斯·司各特·菲茨杰拉德是20世纪最著名的小说家之一,他的代表作品有《了不起的盖茨比》、《钻石大亨》等。
他的作品描绘了20世纪初美国精神和道德的沉沦,抨击了金钱至上的社会价值观。
5.托马斯·品钦托马斯·品钦是20世纪最具代表性的诗人之一,他创作的诗歌以《地狱直到最后一分钟》尤为著名,其风格多以梦幻、神秘和超自然的元素为主。
三、英美文学的代表作1.《为食神授》——乔纳森·斯威夫这是一部富有讽刺意味的小说,反映了社会弊病和人性的扭曲,同时又通过讽刺和幽默的手法进行了批判。
新编英国文学选读知识点梳理

新编英国文学选读知识点梳理【实用版】目录1.英国文学的历史背景及分期2.英国文学的代表作家及作品3.英国文学的风格特点及影响正文英国文学是西方文学的重要组成部分,其历史悠久,传统深厚。
英国文学的发展可分为几个阶段,其中最重要的阶段包括古英语文学、中世纪文学、文艺复兴时期文学、17 世纪文学、18 世纪文学、19 世纪文学和 20 世纪文学。
在古英语文学阶段,最著名的作品是《贝奥武甫》。
在中世纪文学阶段,英国文学受到了欧洲大陆文学的影响,这一时期的代表作品包括《亚瑟王传奇》和《尼伯龙根之歌》等。
在文艺复兴时期,英国文学迎来了黄金时期,莎士比亚、斯宾塞和马洛等文学巨匠的作品至今仍被誉为英国文学的经典。
17 世纪文学以约翰·弥尔顿、约翰·班扬和约翰·德莱顿等人的作品为代表,其中《失乐园》、《天路历程》和《论出版自由》等作品成为这一时期的经典。
18 世纪文学则以丹尼尔·笛福、乔纳森·斯威夫特、理查森·谢里丹和简·奥斯汀等人的作品为代表,这一时期的文学作品反映了工业革命时期的社会变革。
19 世纪文学是英国文学的又一辉煌时期,这一时期的代表作家包括查尔斯·狄更斯、夏洛蒂·勃朗特、艾米丽·勃朗特和托马斯·哈代等。
20 世纪英国文学则以弗吉尼亚·伍尔夫、乔治·奥威尔、威廉·萨默塞特·毛姆和阿加莎·克里斯蒂等作家的作品为代表。
英国文学的风格特点多样,受到了历史、地理和文化等多种因素的影响。
英国文学在语言运用、情节安排和人物塑造等方面都有独特的技巧,使其在世界文学史上具有重要地位。
英国浪漫主义文学作品

英国浪漫主义文学作品摘要:一、英国浪漫主义文学的背景二、英国浪漫主义诗歌的特点三、英国浪漫主义小说的特点四、代表作家和作品介绍五、英国浪漫主义文学的影响正文:一、英国浪漫主义文学的背景英国浪漫主义文学起源于18世纪末,持续到19世纪30年代。
这一文学运动是对启蒙运动的反动,强调情感、自然、个性和想象力。
背景包括法国大革命、拿破仑战争以及英国工业革命等社会政治和经济变革。
二、英国浪漫主义诗歌的特点1.情感丰富:英国浪漫主义诗歌spontaneous(自发)地表达内心强烈的情感,追求真实的感受。
2.想象力丰富:创造一个充满想象的世界,远离现实主义的束缚。
3.回归自然:诗人从自然中汲取创作素材,歌颂大自然的美好。
4.同情弱者:关心社会底层,赞美平凡生活中的美好。
5.表达个性:强调个人天才,突出个性化的创作风格。
三、英国浪漫主义小说的特点1.情感真挚:浪漫主义小说充满激情,关注人物内心世界。
2.想象丰富:创造独特的虚构世界,展现丰富的想象力。
3.自然主义:小说中的人物和场景紧密联系自然,体现人与自然的和谐。
4.关注社会:揭示社会不公,关注普通人的生活和命运。
5.人物塑造:塑造鲜明的人物形象,突出个性特点。
四、代表作家和作品介绍1.威廉·华兹华斯:《抒情歌谣集》、《序曲》2.萨缪尔·泰勒·柯勒律治:《古舟子咏》、《Kubla Khan 》3.乔治·戈登·拜伦:《唐璜》、《恰尔德·哈洛德游记》4.约翰·基茨:《夜莺颂》、《希腊古瓮颂》5.简·奥斯汀:《傲慢与偏见》、《理智与情感》6.沃尔特·司各特:《艾凡赫》、《罗布·罗伊》五、英国浪漫主义文学的影响1.影响了后世文学创作,为现实主义文学奠定基础。
2.推动了文学形式的创新,如叙事诗、小说等。
3.传播了民主、自由的思想,对社会产生深远影响。
4.丰富了人类文化宝库,提供了珍贵的文学遗产。
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◆Chapter 1 The Renaissance PeriodTime: Generally, it refers to the period between the 14th and mid-17th centuries.The Renaissance (文艺复兴): The Renaissance is a historical period in which the European humanist thinkers and scholars made attempts to get rid of those old feudalist ideas in medieval Europe, to introduce new ideas that expressed the interests of the rising bourgeoisie, and to recover the purity of the early church from the corruption of the Roman Catholic Church. Humanism (人文主义): Humanism is the essence of the Renaissance. “Man is the measure of all things.” Thomas More, Christopher Marlowe and William Shakespeare are the best representatives of the English humanists.Mainstream of Literary Forms: In the early stage of the Renaissance, poetry and poetic dram a were the most outstanding literary forms and they were carried on especially by Shakespeare and Ben Jonson. The Elizabethan dram a, in its totality, is the real mainstream of the English Renaissance.◆Chapter 2 The Neoclassical PeriodTime: 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 1798.Social Events: Glorious Revolution (光荣革命); British colonies (Abroad); Acts of Enclosure (圈地运动)(At home); The Enlightenment Movement (启蒙运动).The Enlightenment Movement: The 18th century England is known as the Age of Enlightenment or the Age of Reason. The Enlightenment Movement was a progressive intellectual movement which purpose was to enlighten the whole world with the light of modern philosophical and artistic ideas. The enlighteners celebrated reason or rationality, equality and science. They held that rationality or reason should be the only, the final cause of any hum an thought and activities. They called for a reference to order, reason and rules. They believed that when reason served as the yardstick for the measurement of all hum an activities and relations, every superstition, injustice and oppression was to yield place to “eternal truth,” “eternal justice” and “natural equality”. Great writers like John Dryden, Alexander Pope, Joseph Addison and Sir Richard Steele, the two pioneers of familiar essays, Jonathan Swift, Daniel Defoe, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Henry Fielding and Samuel Johnson.Neoclassicism: In the field of literature, the Enlightenment Movement brought about a revival of interest in the old classical works. This tendency is known as neoclassicism. According to the neoclassicists, all forms of litera ture were to be modeled after the classical works of the ancient Greek and Roman writers. They believed that the artistic ideals should be order, logic res trained emotion and accuracy, and that literature should be judged in terms of its service to hum anity. This belief led them to seek proportion, unity, harmony and grace in literary expression, in an effort to delight, instruct and correct human beings, primarily as social animals. Thus a polite, urbane, witty, and intellectual art developed.Neoclassicists had some fixed laws and rules for almost every genre of literature. Prose should be precise, direct, smooth and flexible. Poetry should be lyrical, epical, didactic, satiric or dram atic; Drama should be written in the Heroic Couplets (英雄双韵体诗).In the last few decades of the 18th century, the neoclassical emphasis upon reason, intellect, wit and form was rebelled against or challenged by the sentimentalists, and was gradually replaced by Rom anticism.Novel: The mid-century was predominated by a newly rising literary form---the modern English novel. Gothic novels---mostly stories of mystery and horror which take place in some haunted or dilapidated Middle Age castles.◆Chapter 3 The Romantic Period(反新古典主义)Time: From 1798 with the publication of Lyrical Ballads to 1832 with Sir Walter Scott’s death and the passage of the first Reform Bill in the Parliam ent.Social Events: French Revolution; English Industrial Revolution.Romantic Movement: The Romantics saw man essentially as an individual in the solitary state and emphasized the special qualities of each individual’s mind. Thus we can say that Romanticism actually constitutes a change of direction from attenti on to the outer world of social civilization to the inner world of the human spirit. In essence, it designates a literary and philosophical theory which tends to see the individual as the very center of all life and all experience.Major Figures: Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelly and Keats.Theme: Imagination and NatureMajor Literary Forms: Poetry (best), prose, novel (Jane Austen and Walter Scott). Drama is less successful.◆Chapter 4 The Victorian PeriodTime: Queen Victoria who ruled over England from 1836 to 1901. The period has bee n generally regarded as one of the most glorious in the English history.Social Events: Reform Bill (改革法案);Chartist Movem ent (宪章运动);Theme: Common sense and moral propriety, which were ignored by the Romanticists, again became the predominant preoccupation in literary works.Theory of “art for art’s sake”: Oscar Wilde and Walter PaterUtilitarianism(功利主义): Utilitarianism was widely accepted and practiced. Almost everything was put to the test by the criterion of utility, that is, the extent to which it could promote the material happiness. Dickens, Carlyle, Ruskin and many other socially conscious writers severely criticized the Utilitarian creed, especially its depreciation of cultural values and its cold indifference towards human feelings and imagination.Major Literary Forms:1. Novel (best): In this period, the novel became the most widely read and the most vital and challenging expression of progressive thought. While sticking to the principle of faithful representation of the 18th century realist novel, they carried their duty forward to the criticism of the society and the defense of the m ass. They were all concerned about the fate of the common people. They were angry with the inhuman social institutions, the decaying social morality as represented by the money-worship and Utilitarianism, and the widespread misery, poverty and injustice.2. Prose: Many of the prose writers joined forces with the critical realist novelists in exposing and criticizing the social reality, a nd som e became very influential in the ideological field.3. Poetry: The poetry of this period was mainly characterized by experime nts with new styles and new ways of expression. “psycho-analytical” element.◆Chapter 5 The Modern PeriodTime: 1850-1910Social Events: First World War; Sun-never-set Empire collapsedNew Theories:1. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels: they put forward the theory of scientific socialism.2. Darwinism: Darwin’s theory of evolution exerted a strong influence upon the people, causing many to lose their religious faith. The social Darwinism, under the cover of “survival of the fittest,” vehemently advocated colon ialism or jingoism.3. Einstein: Einstein’s theory of relativity provided entirely new ideas for the concepts of time and space.4. Freud: Freud’s analytical psychology drastically altered our conception of hum an nature.5. Arthur Schopenhauer: a pessimistic (悲观主义) philosopher, started a rebellion against rationalism(唯理主义), stressing the importance of will and intuition.6. Friedrich Nietzsche: he went further against rationalism by advocating the doctrines of power and superman and by completely rejecting the Christian morality.7. Henry Bergson: He established his irrational philosophy, which put the emphasis on creation intuition, irrationality and unconsciousness. The irrationalist philosophers exerted immense influence upon the major modernist writers in Britain. Modernist Movement: Modernism takes the irrational philosophy and the theory of psycho-analysis as its theoretical base. The major themes of the modernist literature are the distorted, alienated and ill relationships between man and nature, man and society, man and man, and man and himself. The modernist writers concentrate more on the private than on the public, more on the subjective than on the objective. They are mainly concerned with the inner being of an individual. Modernism is a reactio n against realism. It rejects rationalism, which is the theoretical base of realism. As a result, the works created by the mode rnist writers are often labeled as anti-novel, anti-poetry and anti-drama.Major Figures: Kafka, Picasso, Pound, Webern, Eliot, Joyce and Virginia Woolf.Major Literary Forms:1. Modern Poetry: The early poem s of Pound and Eliot and Yeats’s matured poetry marked the rise of “modern poetry”, which was a revolution against the conventional ideas and forms of the Victorian poetry. The mo dernist poets fought against the romantic fuzziness and self-indulged emotionalism, advocating new ideas in poetry-writing such as to use the language of common speech, to create new rhythms as the expression of a new mood, to allow absolute freedom in cho osing subjects, and to use hard, clear and precise images in poems.2. Realistic Novel: The realistic novels in the early 20th century were the continuation of the Victorian tradition, yet its exposing and criticizing power against capitalist evils had been somewhat weakened both in width and depth. Another important aspect of realistic novels in this period is the fact that there rose a few working class writers, who gave a direct portrayal of the working-people’s poverty and sufferings, by singing highly of the heroic struggles against capitalism waged by the working class.3. Modernist Novel: In stimulating the technical innovations of novel creation, the theory of the Freudian and Jungian psycho-analysis played a particularly important role. Writers like Dorothy Richardson, James Joyce and Virginia Woolf concentrated all their efforts on digging into the hum an consciousness. They had created unprecedentedstream-of-consciousness novels such as Pilgrimage by Richardson, Ulysses by Joyce.4. Drama: Oscar Wi lde and G.B. Shaw, who, in a sense, pioneered the modern drama, though they didn’t make so many innovations in techniques and forms as modernist poets or novelists.American Part◆Chapter 1 The Romantic PeriodTime: From the end of the 18th century to the outbreak of the Civil War. It started with the publication of Washington Irving’s “The sketch Book” and ended with Whitman’s “Leaves of Grass”. Being a period of the great flowering of American literature, it is also called “the American Renaissance”.Features: In the most of the American writings in the period there was:1. A new emphasis upon the imaginative and emotional qualities of literature, which included a liking for the picturesque, theexotic, the sensuous, the sensational, and the supernatural.2. The American also placed an increasing emphasis on the free expression of emotions and displayed an increasing attention tothe psychic states of their characters/3. A great interest in external nature in their respective works.American Romanticism is, in a certain way, derivative.Although foreign influences were strong, the great works that demonstrate what American Rom antic writings were are typically American.1. The American national experience of “pioneering into the west”.2. With the growth of American national consciousness, American character types speaking local dialects speared in poetry andfiction with increasing frequency.3. The American Puritanism as a cultural heritage exerted great influences over American moral values. One of themanifestations in the fact that American romantic writers tended more to moralize than their English and European counterparts.4. A preoccupation with the Calvinistic view of original sin and the mystery of evil.New England Transcendentalism: Transcendental ism has been defined philosophically as “the recognition is man of the capacity of knowing truth intuitively, or of attaining knowledge transcending the reach of the senses. This Transcendentalist group includes two of the most significant writers America has produced so far, Emerson and Henry David Thoreau.◆Chapter 2 The Realistic PeriodTime: The period ranging from 1865 to 1914 has been referred to as the Age of Realism in the literary history of the US. Realism: Realism was a reaction against Rom anticism or a move away from the bias towards romance and self-creating fictions, and paved the way to Modernism. After the Civil War, the Americans began to be tired of the sentimental feelings of Romanticism.A new generation cam e up with a new attitude was characterized by a great interest in the realities of life. Instead of thinking about the mysteries of life and death and heroic individualism, people’s attention was now directed to the interesting featur es of everyday existence, to what was brutal or sordid, and to the open portrayal of class struggle.、“The Gilded Age”: People becam e dubious about the human nature and the benevolence of God, which the Transcendentalists cared most. Gone was the frontier and the spirit of the frontiersman, which is the spirit of freedom and human connection, and gone was a place to escape for the American Dream. In place of all this is what Mark Twain referred to as “The Gilded Age.”Major Figures: The three dominant figures of the period are William Dean Howells, Mark Twain, and Henry James. Together they brought to fulfillment native trends in the realistic portrayal of the landscape and social surfaces, brought to perfection the vernacular style, and explored and exploited the literary possibilities of the interior life. Though the three prominent writers wrote more or less at the sam e time, they differed in their understanding of the “truth”. While Mark Twain and Howells seemed to have paid more attention to the “life” of the Americans, Henry James had apparently laid a greater emphasison the “inner world” of man. Howells focused his discussion on the rising middle class and the way they lived, while Twain preferred to have his own region and people at the forefront of his stories. This particular concern about the local character of a region cam e about as “local colorism”, a unique variation of American literary realism.American Naturalism (悲观决定论): The impact of Darwin’s evolutionary theory on the American thought and the influence of the 19th century French literature on American men of letters gave rise to yet another school of realism: American naturalism. The American naturalists accepted the more negative implications of the Darwinism theory and used it to account for the behavior of those characters in literary works who were conceived as more or less complex combinations of inherited attributes, their habits conditioned by social and economic forces.Chapter 3 The Modern PeriodTime: The 20th centurySocial events: 2 World Wars; The Great Economic Depression in 1930s; Ku Klux KlanSpiritual WastelandThe Expatriate Movement: There was a spiritual crisis in this period, but a full blossoming of literary writings. The most recognizable literary movement that gave rise to the 20th century American literature, or we may say, the second American Renaissance, is the expatriate movement. Writers were basically expatriates who left America and formed a community of writers and artists in Paris, involved with other European novelists and poets in their experimentation on new modes of thought and expression. These writers were later named by a American writer, Gertrude Stein, also an expatriate, “The Lost Generation”. Major Figures in Literature: F. Scott Fitzgerald, Earnest Hemingway, and William Faulkner are considered to be the masters in the field of American fiction. The leading playwright of the modern period in American literature, if not the most successful in all his experiments, is E ugene O’Neil.Features:Modern American writings are notable for what they omit---the explanations, interpretations, connections, and summaries. If realistic fiction achieved its effects by accumulation and saturation, modern fiction preferred suggestiveness. Modern American writers in general emphasize the concrete sensory images or details as the direct conveyer of experience. Traditional fiction featured an authoritative narrator in telling a story, while modern fiction tended to employ the first person narration or limit the reader to the “central consciousness” or one character’s point of view。