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高英Lesson10(Book-2)-The-Sad-Young-Men教学内容.ppt

1、单击此处编辑母版标题样式,*,单击此处编辑母版文本样式,第二级,第三级,第四级,第五级,Unit 10,The Sad Young Men,by Rod W.Horton&Herbert W.Edwards,Teaching Points,I.Background knowledge,II.Introduction to the passage,III.Text Analysis,IV.Rhetorical devices,V.Questions,I.Background Knowledge,A.The Author,-Rod W.Horton(1910-),Born in White Pla

2、ins N.Y.,Instructor,New York University,(1937-45),Assistant professor(1945-49),Associate professor(1949-57),Cultural affairs officer(1957-64),Professor,Colorado University(1964-),Visiting professor,University of Brazil,(1954-56),Visiting professor,University of Coimbra,(1961-64),Publications:,Backgr

3、ounds of American Literary Thought,(1952),Backgrounds of European Literature,(1954),I.Background Knowledge,B.Some terms:,-The Sad Young Men,-The Lost Generation,-The Beat Generation,-The Angry Young Men,The Sad Young Men,and,The Lost Generation,refer to the same group of people.The former was create

4、d by F.Scott Fitzgerald;the latter,by Gertrude Stein.They were applied to the,disillusioned intellectuals and aesthetes,of the years following the First World War,who rebelled against former ideals and values,but could replace them only by despair or cynical hedonism.,After WWII appeared,The Beat Ge

5、neration,in US.It wasapplied to certain,American artists and writeres,who were popular during the 1950s.During the 1960s“beat”ideas and attitudes were absorbed by other cultural movements,and those who practiced the“beat”life style were called“hippies”.,At this time there appeared in England a group

6、 called,The Angry Young Men,.,This term was applied to a group of,English writers,of the 1950s whose heroes shared certain rebellious and critical attitudes towards society.,I.Background Knowledge,C.Other literary figures:,-Gertrude Stein,-E.Hemingway,1.Gertrude Stein,(1874-1946),American author and

7、 patron of the arts.,A celebrated personality,she encouraged,aided,and influencedthrough her patronage as well as through her writingmany literary and artistic figures.,The fifth and youngest child of the Daniel and Amelia Stein family,Gertrude was born on February 3,1874 into upper middle class sur

8、roundings in Allegheny,Pennsylvania.In 1902 she went abroad and from 1903 until her death lived chiefly in Paris.,When she was 3 years old the family moved to Vienna and then on to Paris before returning to America in late 1878.,So I was five years old when we came back to America having known Austr

9、ian German and French French,and now American English,a nice world if there is enough of it,and more or less there always is.,Her father moved the family to Oakland,California soon after their return.Her brother Leo,2 years her senior,and Gertrude found like interests and became close allies through

10、 much of their early lives.Gertrude was 8 when she made her first attempt at writing.,Reading became an obsession for her beginning with Shakespeare and books on natural history.Gertrudes love affair with words would later reveal itself in her own works.In school she was fascinated with the structur

11、ing of sentences.,I suppose other things may be more exciting to others.I like the feeling the everlasting feeling of sentences as they diagram themselves.,In 1891 her father died suddenly,and the oldest brother Michael assumed the position of earning a living for the family.The Steins moved to San

12、Francisco where Gertrude became intrigued by the theater and opera.a passion she would continue after she moved to Baltimore in 1892 to live with a wealthy aunt.,.how strange it was for me coming from a rather desperate inner life I had been living for the last few years to a cheerful life of all au

13、nts and uncles.,Gertrude entered Radcliffe College in 1893.As a student she developed a special philosophical relationship with her teacher,William James.James told her,I hope you will pardon me if you recognize some features of my ideal student as your own.,On a particularly nice spring day during

14、final exams in James course she wrote at the top of her paper.,Dear Professor James,I am sorry but really I do not feel a bit like an examination paper in philosophy today.,The next day she received a postcard from James saying,I understand perfectly how you feel I often feel like that myself.and th

15、en gave her the highest mark in his course.,With philosophy and psychology courses behind her,Gertrude decided on a career in medicine and enrolled at Johns Hopkins University.She later studied medicine in Europe and eventually dismissed the whole idea.Wanderlust had captured her attention as she tr

16、aveled through Italy,Germany,and England.living for awhile with brother Leo in London.,She returned to America to live with friends in New York.It was here that she wrote her first novel Q.E.D.It would,for some reason,be lost for 30 years and not be published until 4 years after her death under the

17、title of Things As They Are.,Leo Stein moved to Paris and took up residence at 27 Rue de Fleurus.Gertrude joined him in 1904,and would not touch foot upon American soil again for 30 years.soon becoming a legend in her own time.,Steins best known works are:,Three Lives(1909),The Making of Americans(1

18、925),Autobiography of Alive B.Toklas(1933).,2.,Ernest,Hemingway,Ernest Hemingway,(1899-1961),American novelist and,short story writer,one of the great,American writers of the 20,th,century.,His fiction focuses on people living essential,dangerous lives soldiers,fishermen,athletes,bullfighters who me

19、et the pain and difficulty of their existence with stoic courage.His celebrated literary style,influenced by Ezra Pound and Gertrude Stein,is direct,terse and often monotonous,yet particularly suited to his elemental subject matter.,During World War I he served as an ambulance driver in France and i

20、n the Italian infantry and was wounded just before his 19,th,birthday.Later,while working in Paris as correspondent for the,Totonto Star,he became involved with the expatriate circle surroundinig Gertrude Stein.,With the publication of,The Sun Also Rises,(1926),he was recognized as the spokesman of

21、the“lost generation”.,During the Spainish Civil War,Hemingway served as a correspondent on the loyalist side;from this experience came his great novel,For Whom the Bell Tolls,(1940).,Hemingway fought in World War II and then settled in Cuba in 1945.His novelette,The Old Man and the Sea,(1952)celebra

22、tes the indomitable courage of an aged Cuban fisherman.,In 1954,Hemingway was awarded the Nobel Prize in literature.,Owing to ill health and diminishing mental faculties,in July 1961,he commmitted suicide by shooting himself.,II.Words and Expressions,1.romanticize,(L2,P1),vt.,使浪漫化,使传奇化,romantically

23、adv.,浪漫地,romanticism n.,浪漫精神,浪漫主义,romanticist n.,浪漫主义者,romanza n.,浪漫曲,叙事短诗,抒情短诗,Words and expressions,2.speakeasy,(L7,P1),-a place where alcoholic drinks are sold illegally during Prohibition.,3.Puritan morality,(L7,P1),-extreme or excessive strictness in matters of morals.,Strict Puritans even rega

24、rded drinking,gambling and participation in theatrical performances as punishable offences.,4.flask-toting,(L10,P1),-adj.always carrying a small flask filled with whisky or other strong liquor.,Words and expressions,5.sheik,(L10,P1),-a masterful man to whom women are supposed to be irresistably attr

25、acted,6.flapper,(L11,P1),-(colloq.)a young woman considered bold and unconventional in actions and dress.,7.drugstore cowboy,(L11,P1),-a western movie extra who loafs in front of drugstores between pictures,Words and expressions,8.Victorian,(L1,P3),-showing the middle-class respectability,prudery,bi

26、gotry,etc.generally attributed to Victorian England over which,Queen Victoria ruled,(1837-1901),9.Bohemian,(L5,P4),-a person,especially an artist,poet,etc.who lives in an unconventional,nonconforming way,Words and expressions,10.Prohibition,(L12,P4),-the forbidding by law of the manufacture,transpor

27、tation,and sale of alcoholic liquors for beverage purposes(the period of 1920-1933),the prohibition by Federal law.,11.jingoism,(L7,P5),n.,主战论,武力外交政策,沙文主义,侵略主义,jingoist n.,沙文主义者,侵略主义者,jingo n.,沙文主义者,Words and expressions,12.soap opera,(L15,P5),-a daytime radio or television serial drama of a highly

28、melodramatic,sentimental nature.It has been so called since many original sponsors were soap companies.,13.Greenwich Village,(L1,P7),-section of New York City,on the lower west side of Manhattan;noted as a center for artists,writers,etc.,14.Babbittry,(L9,P7),-(after George Babbitt,title character of

29、 a satirical novel by Sinclair Lewis)a smugly conventional person interested chiefly in business and social success and indifferent to cultural values.,n.,市侩作风、庸俗之人,Philistine n.(,中东古国,),腓力斯人,仇敌,俗气的人,;adj.,俗气的,无教养的,Words and expressions,15.fast,(L7,P8),-adj.living in a reckless,wild,dissipated way,1

30、6.boobery,(L12,P9),-same as Babbittry,smug,self-satisfied,conformist in cultural matters,n.,愚人之统称,愚笨,;booby:n.,呆子,傻瓜,17.keep up with the Joneses,(L22,P9),-strive to get all the material things ones neighbors or associates have.,III.Introduction to the Passage,1.Type of literature,a piece of expositi

31、ve writing,2.,Main idea,explaining a period in American history;it focuses on attitudes,revolt of the young people,disappointed and disillusioned writers and artists,back from World War I(1914-1918),once lived abroad as expatriates,later returned voluntarily.They were called,Lost Generation,because

32、they were critical and rebellious.However,they never lost because they were creative and productive.,3.The theme,“,The intellectuals of the twenties,the sad young men,cursed their luck but didnt die;escaped but voluntarily returned;flayed the Babbitts but loved their country,and in so doing gave the

33、 nation the liveliest,freshest,most stimulating writing in literary experience.”,4.Clear and simple structural organization,-P.1:introducing the subject,-P.2-9:supporting and developing the thesis,-P.10-11:bringing the discussion to an end,IV.Text Analysis,1.Identifying and understanding Americanism

34、s in this essay,-speakeasy,-sheik,-flask-toting,-drugstore cowboy,-flapper,-Babbittry,-soap opera,-fast,-boobery,2.Effective Writing Skills,1).Effective use of topic sentences,2).Developing a new but related aspect of the thought stated in the thesis in each paragraph or paragraph unit.,3,.,Rhetoric

35、al Devices,1).metaphor,2).personification,3).metonymy,4).transferred epithet,4.Special Difficulties,1).Prefixes“-un”and“-in”(-im,-il,-ir)bearing a negative meaning,2).Paraphrasing some sentences,3).Identifying figures of speech,V.Detailed Study of the Text,Part I,Paragraph 1,Sentence 1:,sensationall

36、y romanticized:,(This so-called problem)was treated in a passionate,idealized manner to shock thrill and rouse the interest of people.,paraphrase:,After World War I,during the 1920s,every aspect of life in U.S.was commented upon,but people comment upon the Rebellion of the Younger Generation more th

37、an all the other aspects.People treated it very romantically and sensationally.,Sentence 2:,1).The slightest mentionby the young:,middle aged,:,Middleaged people lived through the Twenties so they can recall what life was like then.,the young,:,The young people have only heard about all this and wer

38、e very curious about the lives of young people of another generation.,nostalgic,curious,:,Both are transferred epithets.They really modify“the middle-aged”and“the young”respectively.,paraphrase:,At the very mention of this post-war period,middle-aged people begin to think about it longingly and youn

39、g people become curious and start asking all kinds of questions.,2).memories of country road,:,These are the recollections of the nostalgic middle-aged.,deliciously illicit thrill,:,A visit to a speakeasy,a very enjoyable and exciting action,was prohibited because these places sold alcoholic drinks

40、illegally.,Puritan morality,:,excessive strictness in matters of morals.Strict Puritans even regarded drinking,gambling and participation in theatrical performances as punishable offences.,fashionable experimentations in amour,:,trying out new ways of lovemaking as everyone was doing at that time,pa

41、rked sedan,:,in a sedan car parked on lonely country roads,3).questions aboutdrugstore cowboy,:,Some of the questions asked by curious young people.,naughty,:,mildly indecent,jazzy,:,(a party)playing jazz music,sheik,:,a masterful man to whom women are supposed to be irresistably attracted,moral and

42、 stylistic vagaries,:,odd and eccentric dress and conduct,flapper,:,in the 1920s,a young woman considered bold and unconventional in action and dress,drugstore cowboy,:,a western movie extra who loafs in front of drugstores between pictures,Sentence 5:,The answers to suchjazzmad youth.,1).,The answe

43、rs to such“yes”and“no”,:,paraphrase:,People cannot give a simple“yes”or“no”answer to such questions.They should be answered with both,“,yes”and“no”,because of necessity.,2).,“yes”Problem,:,paraphrase:,During the process when children grow up to become adults,there always exists a Younger Generation

44、Problem.In this sense the answer must be“yes”.,3).,“no”jazzmad youth,:,see in perspective,:,to view or judge things or events in a way that show their true relations to one another.,degeneration,:,moral corruption,depravity,jazzmad,:,blindly and foolishly fond of jazz music,paraphrase:,When looking

45、back now to those days and view things in their true relations to one another,we see that the social behavior of the young people was not very wild,irresponsible,and immoral.Their behaviour was far from being as sensational as the degeneration of jazzmad youth.Therefore,in this sense,the answer must

46、 be“no”.,Paragraph 2,Sentence 1:,paraphrase:,In fact,the revolt of the young people was a necessary and expected consequence of the conditions that existed in this period of history.,Sentence 2:,paraphrase:,We must remember that the revolt of the young did not take place only in the U.S.,but affecte

47、d all the countries in the Western world.Their revolt was the result of World War Ithe biggest and most serious war in a hundred years.,Sentence 3:,1).,It was reluctantlyor tradition,:,subconscious,:,occurring without conscious perception,or with only slight perception,on the part of the individual,

48、tradition,:,stories,beliefs,customs,etc.,handed down orally from generation to generation,paraphrase:,Some people in the U.S.fully understood,though unwillingly,that the U.S.should no longer remain isolated politically or in matters of social customs and practices.If these people did not state their

49、 views openly,at least,they understood it subconsciously.,2).,We had reachedbordering oceans,:,reach international stature,:,to develop and grow into a nation respected and esteemed by all other nations in the world,provincial,:,narrow in outlook/views,limited like that of rural provinces.Here the w

50、ord means narrow like that of a single countrythe U.S.,paraphrase:,metaphor,comparing“provincial morality”to“artificial walls”.We have become a world power so we can no longer in our action just follow the principles of right and wrong as accepted in our own country,nor can we remain isolated geogra

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