ImageVerifierCode 换一换
格式:DOC , 页数:15 ,大小:87KB ,
资源ID:4048528      下载积分:7 金币
验证码下载
登录下载
邮箱/手机:
验证码: 获取验证码
温馨提示:
支付成功后,系统会自动生成账号(用户名为邮箱或者手机号,密码是验证码),方便下次登录下载和查询订单;
特别说明:
请自助下载,系统不会自动发送文件的哦; 如果您已付费,想二次下载,请登录后访问:我的下载记录
支付方式: 支付宝    微信支付   
验证码:   换一换

开通VIP
 

温馨提示:由于个人手机设置不同,如果发现不能下载,请复制以下地址【https://www.zixin.com.cn/docdown/4048528.html】到电脑端继续下载(重复下载【60天内】不扣币)。

已注册用户请登录:
账号:
密码:
验证码:   换一换
  忘记密码?
三方登录: 微信登录   QQ登录  
声明  |  会员权益     获赠5币     写作写作

1、填表:    下载求助     留言反馈    退款申请
2、咨信平台为文档C2C交易模式,即用户上传的文档直接被用户下载,收益归上传人(含作者)所有;本站仅是提供信息存储空间和展示预览,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容不做任何修改或编辑。所展示的作品文档包括内容和图片全部来源于网络用户和作者上传投稿,我们不确定上传用户享有完全著作权,根据《信息网络传播权保护条例》,如果侵犯了您的版权、权益或隐私,请联系我们,核实后会尽快下架及时删除,并可随时和客服了解处理情况,尊重保护知识产权我们共同努力。
3、文档的总页数、文档格式和文档大小以系统显示为准(内容中显示的页数不一定正确),网站客服只以系统显示的页数、文件格式、文档大小作为仲裁依据,个别因单元格分列造成显示页码不一将协商解决,平台无法对文档的真实性、完整性、权威性、准确性、专业性及其观点立场做任何保证或承诺,下载前须认真查看,确认无误后再购买,务必慎重购买;若有违法违纪将进行移交司法处理,若涉侵权平台将进行基本处罚并下架。
4、本站所有内容均由用户上传,付费前请自行鉴别,如您付费,意味着您已接受本站规则且自行承担风险,本站不进行额外附加服务,虚拟产品一经售出概不退款(未进行购买下载可退充值款),文档一经付费(服务费)、不意味着购买了该文档的版权,仅供个人/单位学习、研究之用,不得用于商业用途,未经授权,严禁复制、发行、汇编、翻译或者网络传播等,侵权必究。
5、如你看到网页展示的文档有www.zixin.com.cn水印,是因预览和防盗链等技术需要对页面进行转换压缩成图而已,我们并不对上传的文档进行任何编辑或修改,文档下载后都不会有水印标识(原文档上传前个别存留的除外),下载后原文更清晰;试题试卷类文档,如果标题没有明确说明有答案则都视为没有答案,请知晓;PPT和DOC文档可被视为“模板”,允许上传人保留章节、目录结构的情况下删减部份的内容;PDF文档不管是原文档转换或图片扫描而得,本站不作要求视为允许,下载前自行私信或留言给上传者【w****g】。
6、本文档所展示的图片、画像、字体、音乐的版权可能需版权方额外授权,请谨慎使用;网站提供的党政主题相关内容(国旗、国徽、党徽--等)目的在于配合国家政策宣传,仅限个人学习分享使用,禁止用于任何广告和商用目的。
7、本文档遇到问题,请及时私信或留言给本站上传会员【w****g】,需本站解决可联系【 微信客服】、【 QQ客服】,若有其他问题请点击或扫码反馈【 服务填表】;文档侵犯商业秘密、侵犯著作权、侵犯人身权等,请点击“【 版权申诉】”(推荐),意见反馈和侵权处理邮箱:1219186828@qq.com;也可以拔打客服电话:4008-655-100;投诉/维权电话:4009-655-100。

注意事项

本文(对于大卫科波菲尔中人物的形象分析备课讲稿.doc)为本站上传会员【w****g】主动上传,咨信网仅是提供信息存储空间和展示预览,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容不做任何修改或编辑。 若此文所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知咨信网(发送邮件至1219186828@qq.com、拔打电话4008-655-100或【 微信客服】、【 QQ客服】),核实后会尽快下架及时删除,并可随时和客服了解处理情况,尊重保护知识产权我们共同努力。
温馨提示:如果因为网速或其他原因下载失败请重新下载,重复下载【60天内】不扣币。 服务填表

对于大卫科波菲尔中人物的形象分析备课讲稿.doc

1、此文档仅供收集于网络,如有侵权请联系网站删除 An Analysis of Image in David CopperfieldChapter 1IntroductionDavid Copperfield, the masterpiece of Dickens, was a semi-autobiographical work. In May 1849 to November 1850, the installment was published. In the preface, Dickens said: “It is my favorite child.” The novel depict

2、ed Davids experiences which were filled with sufferings and laughters. Dickens portrayed the colorful picture of British society, the typical image of different social classes, especially the endless struggle of David in the face of adversity which left a deep impression on us. David was unable to e

3、ndure the abuse of his stepfather, biting the fingers of his stepfather, savagely beaten. As a result, he was locked in a boarding school. After his mother died, he was sent to the factory as a child by his stepfather. From then on, he lived a hard life, without enough to eat or wear and suffered al

4、l kinds of abuse and torture. However, David did not succumb to the mercy of fate, painstakingly, and finally found his aunt Betsey. The kind-hearted aunt shelter adopted him and let him go to a better school. When he knew that Aunt Betsey was bankrupted, but instead, he studied diligently with pers

5、everance all kinds of abuse and torture. Finally, after making efforts, he became a writer and achieved success. At the same time, other characters were clear and vivid. Peggotty was a nurse who took care of David and Davids mother carefully, she was remarkably loyal. Outwardly, aunt Betsey appeared

6、 a severe woman, but she showed that she was kind by loving David and others. In addition, Ham was noble, brave and honest. Mr.Murdstones was fierce and cruel. Steerforth was selfish and arrogant.1.1 Introduction to the AuthorDickens was the main representative of realism literature in the 19th cent

7、ury. The art of witty words, nuanced psychological analysis and realism were combined together closely in his works. He was particularly famous for his vivid comic characterizations and social criticism. He was the first author who had written of the poor with fidelity and sympathy. His works were f

8、amous during novels of the Victorian age and among the great classics in all fiction. Dickens was born in February, 1812, at Landport, Portsmouth. He was the second of eight children. His father was a clerk, hardworking but imprudent, later caricatured as Mr. Micawber in David Copperfield. In 1822,

9、the family moved to London, where Charles had to leave school to support his impoverished family. In 1824, his father was put into prison for debt. At the age of 12, Dickens was sent to going to work at a factory. He wrapped and labeled for 6 shillings a week. After work, he wandered through the str

10、eets of London, enthralled by the sight of the dockyards, the files of convicts, and vast sections of the city inhabited by the poor. These bitter days remained in his memory and later found expression in his works. Dickens was able to return to school because a small legacy helped release his fathe

11、r from prison. He was an avid reader and spent much time in the reading room of the British Museum. Although he later returned to school for a time, these experiences left a permanent imprint on the soul of Charles Dickens. Even many years later, he had become a successful author, he could not bear

12、to talk about it, or be reminded of his familys ignominy.At the age of fifteen, Dickens began working as an office boy for a law firm. He taught himself and he became a reporter for courts of Doctors Common in 1828. The dull routine of the legal profession never interested him, so he became a newspa

13、per reporter for the Mirror of parliament, the True Sun, and finally for the Morning Chronicle. (John Forster, were later his closest friend and biographer, was also employed at the True Sun.) By the age of twenty, Dickens was one of the best parliamentary reporters all the England. By this time, Di

14、ckens was enjoying the luxurious life he had dreamed of as a child. In 1850, he published the last installments of David Copperfield, a partly autobiographical novel that was his favorite. 1.2 The Introduction to the Background1.2.1 Social background “Like so many parents I have a favorite child in

15、my heart,” wrote Charles Dickens. And his name is David Copperfield. Here, Dickens made good use of his own life experience to expose the social evils that were prevalent in Victorian England and were the miseries of child-labor, the tyranny in schools, the debtors prison, as well as the cruelty and

16、 immortality and the treachery. Thus the novel was not merely a personal record, but a broad picture of the society of the authors day. David Copperfield was a novel written in first-person point of view. It was sometimes referred to as an apprenticeship novel because it centered on the period in wh

17、ich a young person grew up. The type of novels was pioneered by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832) in his novel Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre (Wilhelm Meisters Apprenticeship). Dickens based the book in part on the difficult early years of his own life. The narration changed names, locales, and oth

18、er details of Dickenss life. For example, when Dickens was only a child, he had to leave school to work in a factory. In the novel, David Copperfield had to leave school to work in a warehouse washing and labeling bottles used in the wine trade. Davids initials (D.C.) were, of course, the reverse of

19、 Dickenss (C.D.). Dickens was a master at drawing memorable characters. Some were simple and uncomplicated, like Barkis, Creakle, Murdstone, and Clara Peggotty. Others were complex, like David Copperfield. Throughout the novel, he befriended the wealthy and charming James Steerforth, ignoring his de

20、vious and malevolent side. At the same time, he befriended the good-hearted Tommy Traddles and the humble Peggottys. These two worlds, the world of Steerforth and the world of Steerforth and his family, both attracted David, and his immaturity decided what should constitute his own world. To bring h

21、is characters to life, Dickens invested them with clearly defining virtues or vices and described the characters in a way that enabled the readers to picture them at the scenes in which they appeared.1.2.2 Novels backgroundOf all the Dickens novels, David Copperfield reflected the events of Dickens

22、own life the most. As for David, suffering in the past was adequately made up for a rich, happy marriage and a successful literary career, just like Dickens himself, and the world was still full of hope and sunshine. The plot construction was rather loose, but it also excelled in its vivid image. Th

23、e narration of novel in detail was also worth mentioning, which gave the work truthfulness to the real life.What we could add to was the way in which Dickens time and time again dealt with the progress of a male hero who, as with David in David Copperfield (1849-50) and Pip in Great Expectations (18

24、60-1), came to terms with world as the middle-class values. At the same time, however, Dickens heroes often have uncomfortable doubles: David Copperfield was shadowed by Heep and Steerforth, both of whom revealed the kind of dark sexual urge that David attempted to conceal or deny in his own life. I

25、t was as if, in a new middle-class code, Dickens was equally aware of the precariousness or vulnerability of the new respectable social conception of the self, of the buried life that was hidden beneath the veneer of polite manners.Due to the early success, the public not only gave Dickens an assura

26、nce that made sure increasing powers of poetic expression and narrative technique, but also the confidence to demonstrate his priorities to a point where they contradicted the social assumptions of many of his readers. All his later novels, except A Tale of Two Cities, presented a criticism of the m

27、ost fundamental institutions of the Victorian England.Although David was ignorant of Steerforths treachery, we were aware from the moment we met Steerforth that he didnt deserve of praise which David felt toward him. David didnt know why he hated Heep or why he trusted a boy with a donkey cart who s

28、tole his money and left him in the road, but it was possible for him to realize Heeps inherent evil and the boys real intention. In Davids first-person narration, Dickens conveyed the wisdom of the older man implicitly, through the eyes of a child.Chapter 2Literature Review of the Novel2.1 Some Scho

29、lars Views on the Novel Scholars believed that David Copperfields careers, friendships, love and life, were most highly influenced by Dickens experiences, as well as his time working as a child. Davids involvement with the law profession and later his career as a writer mirror the experiences of Dic

30、kens. Many of Davids friends were based on people who Dickens actually knew, and Davids wives, Agnes Wickfield and Dora, were believed to be based upon Dickens attachment to Mary Hogarth. Dickens keenly felt his lack of education during his time at that factory, and according to the Forster biograph

31、y, it was from these times that he drew Davids working period.British writer Somerset Maugham regarded the book as truly a masterpiece of literary works.One of American literature connoisseurs recommended the novel as one hundreds of the 20th century, distinguishing English novel.The famous Russian

32、writer, Leo Tolstoy, said that the book was the best one among all the English novels and it could help people to build a perfect personality.“David Copperfield was filled with characters of the most astonishing variety, vividness, and originality,” noted Somerset Maugham. “They are not realistic an

33、d yet they abound with life. There never were such people as the Micawbers, Peggotty and Barkis, Traddles, Betsey Trotwood and Mr. Dick, Uriah Heep and his mother.” The story was told almost entirely from the point view of the first person narrator, David Copperfield himself, and was the first Dicke

34、ns novel to do so. Dickens based the book in part on the difficult early years of his own life. 2.2 Main Views of Dickens IdeaInfluenced by Carlyle, Dickens learned to direct his novel to a questioning of social priorities and inequalities, to a distrust of institutions, particularly defunct or malf

35、unctioning ones, and to a pressure for action and earnestness He was prone to take up issues, and to campaign against what he saw as injustice or desuetude, using fiction in his novel. He was not alone in his own time, but his name continued to be popularly associated with good causes and with remed

36、ies because he was quite the wittiest and he has had the most persuasive, and the most influential voice. Dickens was faithful to the teaching, and to the general framework, his thought, his action and above all, for his writing, nevertheless. A critical awareness that there was something deeply wro

37、ng with the society in which he lived disclosed the nature of a novel and gave its distinct political edge. Dickens novels were multifarious, digressive and humorous. In an important way, they reflected the nature of Victorian urban society with all its conflicts and disharmonies, its eccentricities

38、 and its constrictions, its energy and its fertility, both physical and intellectual. But the standard pattern in his novels was the basic conflict between money on the one hand, and loves on the other hand. What this conflict usually revealed was that the people who have greatest love for their fel

39、low humans were also the ones who were most hurt by the world of money, simply because money was power.In his novels, the people who possessed most money and most power seemed incapable of love, whereas the people who were capable of love were remarkably often both poor and powerless. And yet, this

40、gloomy view was emerged by Dickens comic way of dealing with his characters.Chapter 3The Image of main character in David Copperfield3.1 The Image of David3.1.1 Unyielding and diligence of David CopperfieldDavid Copperfield was a kind-hearted, honest, and hard working, pragmatic and progressive inte

41、llectual typically. Since Davids childhood, his father died. Although his mother remarried, she died before long with his stepfather abuse. At that time, he was sent to boarding school, ravaged, and then was sent to the factory as an apprentice humiliation position. He left the factory to the home o

42、f aunt Betsey who adopted him and let him study law. Then, he tried his best to learn day after day. At the same time, his character matured in suffering, frustration, and ultimately on the right path in life. Later he became a writer, and married with his girlfriend. For him, he had acquired much k

43、nowledge in life through the wrong ideas, funny habits, sad moment and the depressing day, and remembered his aunts words in heart, “whatever you do and whenever you do it, you can never be humble, never be hypocritical or cruel.” He thought of this sentence, which always encouraged himself to be st

44、rong and seize the hard-on opportunity to struggle in life. Both the hardships and bitterness in his orphans times or always struggle in his adult time, having experienced calamities and misfortunes, David tasted the joy and warmth of the earth. By his own sincerity, forthright personality, positive

45、 spirit, as well as the purity of love to people in his heart, he persisted and finally succeeded.3.1.2 Innocence and kindness of David Copperfield.David began to love Emily when they accompanied each other in the days in Yarmouth. As for a child, the affection was a more feelings. Neither of them w

46、orried about the future or any other troubles at that time. The best was love in that they were innocent. On the way to Salen House, the writer mentioned an interested incident. With the “simple confidence and natural reliance of a child upon superior years”, David was used by Servant William. David

47、 was bound to lack of some worldly wisdom and was only an innocent child. When David worked at Murdestone and Grinby, he met Mr.Micawber whose clothes were shabby, and had only a shirt collar. However, David did not laugh at him. On the contrary, when he learned about the tragedy and realized Micawb

48、ers financial difficulties, he intended to offer some money to Mr.Micawber in order to help him tide over the difficulties, though he himself was poor at that moment. Innocence was the most valuable and shinning characteristic of David Copperfield.In Davids life, although he met some wicked people l

49、ike Mr. and Miss Murdestone, Mr. Creakle and Uriah Heep, he also gained a lot of friends and helpers who made him kind-hearted. That was to say, though he had known some bad qualities of the people, David remained what he used to be. In Mr. Murdestones house, except his mother, Peggotty was the only one who loved David, and different from his mother

移动网页_全站_页脚广告1

关于我们      便捷服务       自信AI       AI导航        获赠5币

©2010-2024 宁波自信网络信息技术有限公司  版权所有

客服电话:4008-655-100  投诉/维权电话:4009-655-100

gongan.png浙公网安备33021202000488号   

icp.png浙ICP备2021020529号-1  |  浙B2-20240490  

关注我们 :gzh.png    weibo.png    LOFTER.png 

客服