英语小说与散文(外教社原版文学入门丛书)
分类: 图书,英语与其他外语,英语读物,综合,
品牌: 阿米戈尼
基本信息·出版社:上海外语教育出版社
·页码:172 页
·出版日期:2009年
·ISBN:9787544611862
·条形码:9787544611862
·包装版本:1版
·装帧:平装
·开本:32
·正文语种:英语
·丛书名:外教社原版文学入门丛书
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内容简介《英语小说与散文》通过分析、解读不同时期的英美文学作品,比较全面、系统地介绍了不同流派的英美小说与散文的起源、发展和演变;《英语小说与散文》同时也涉及相关的文学批评理论。全书言简意赅,脉络清晰,适合英美文学研究者、爱好者及英语专业学生阅读。“外教社原版文学入门丛书”以介绍文学理论和小说类型及相应的社会文化背景为主,勾勒出英美文学发展的概貌。本丛书文字简练、语言生动,对我国的外国文学及理论研究者、在校学生以及广大文学爱好者都有很高的参考价值。《英语小说与散文》为《英语小说与散文》分卷。
目录
Acknowledgements
Preface: the scope of the book and how to read it
1 Introduction: straightforward discourse and novel transactions
1.1 Literature and non/literature?
1.2 Prose
1.3 Narrative
1.4 Narrative in context: the novel, mimesis and poetics
1.5 The novel and prose narrative in literary/critical argument: formalism and old and new historicisms
1.6 Studying the novel and prose narrative: historicism, culture and rhetoric
1.7 The novel and prose narrative: from 'literature' to 'intettextuality'
1.8 The novel and prose narrative as 'forms of discourse'
1.9 The novel and 'culture' revisited: 'cukure' as learning,'self, culture', 'culture' as a field of conflict
2 The elements of narrative analysis and the origins of the novel: reading Jane Austen's Emma and Samuel Richardson's Pamela
2.1 The novel and formalist criticism
2.2 Reading the form of narrative fiction: Jane Austen's Emma
2.3 Implied reader, real reader: narrator, implied author
2.4 Events: story and discourse
2.5 Character and point of view in Emma
2.6 Limitations of the formal approach: social spaces and voices in narrative, from free indirect speech to social contexts
2.7 What happens in Richardson's Pamela'.
2.8 First,person narration and the epistolary form:the dramatised narrator, rhetoric and the narratee
2.9 The narratee and writing as an 'event' in Pamela
2.10 Pamela, print culture and debates about genre: the familiar letter, criticism and 'the novel'
2.11 The debate about the origins of the novel
2.12 The rise of the novel: Ian Watt and the tradition of formal realism
2.13 Contested fields of cultural discourse and the rise of the novel: Lennard J. Davis and Michael McKeon
2.14 Gender and the rise of the novel: the domestic woman and the production of subjectivities
2.15 Re,reading Emma: letters, standards and intertextual allusion
3 Bildung and belonging: studying nineteenth.century narrative and 'self/culture'
3.1 The bildungsroman
3.2 Biography and autobiography in the nineteenth century
3.3 The viewpoint of youth: bildung in nineteenth,century history
3.4 Reading Jane Eyre: the critical reception; romance and 'self, culture'
3.5 Romantic autobiography and character classification in Jane Eyre
3.6 Space, time and subjectivity in Jane Eyre
3.7 Where does Jane Eyre belong.
3.8 Reading Samuel Bamford's Early Days: the common narrative strategies of autobiography and novel
3.9 'Reality is always romantic, though the romantic is not always real': the truth of autobiography
3.10 Reading Elizabeth Gaskell's The Life of Charlotte Bronte: the rhetoric of biography
3.11 Biography, gender and the public position of the woman writer: negotiating 'realism' and 'romance'
3.12 Reading George Eliot's The Mill on the Floss: culture as 'incarnate history'
3.13 'Writing the history of unfashionable families': the workings of Eliot's 'realism'
3.14 Testing 'self, culture': 'eddication' and the role of the reader in Eliot's realism
4 Innovative stories and distinctive readers
4.1 The art of prose narrative
4.2 Charles Dickens's Bleak House: reading the estranging poetry of prose
4.3 'Reading' in context: journalism and fiction
4.4 Nuggets for the masses: newspaper stories
4.5 Reading the 'sacred nugget': distinctive narrative art in James's The Spoils of Poynton and its 'Preface'
4.6 James's narration and the discriminating reader
4.7 Contesting 'The Future of the Novel': Henry James's 'delicate organism' and H. G. Wells's 'right to roam'
4.8 Reading H. G. Wells's Ann Veronica
4.9 The short story
4.10 Thomas Hardy's 'The Withered Arm': the epical tale
4.11 Katherine Mansfield's 'The Garden Party': the lyrical story
4.12 The experimental novel: reading for voice and consciousness in Virginia Woolf's Mrs Dalloway
4.13 Thenovelistic scope of Mrs Dalloway
4.14 Woolf's narrative experimentation in context
5 History, intertextuality and the carnivalised novel: postmodern conditions and postcolonial hybridities
5.1 Playful narratives
5.2 The novel as history, and the postmodern novel as metafiction
5.3 Midnight's Children as postmodern 'historiographic metafiction': sniffy incredulity towards metanarratives
5.4 The novel as national fiction: postcolonial concerns
5.5 The discourse of Midnight's Children in 'long' cross,cultural history: Laurence Sterne's Tristram Shandy as eighteenth,century metafiction
5.6 Bakhtin's 'carnivalised' narrative: a 'second line of development' for the novel
5.7 Camivalised narrative, postcolonialism and the debate about 'hybridity': Midnight's Children revisked
5.8 Conclusion: long live postcolonial realism, the bildungsroman and leakage
Select bibliography and suggested further reading Index
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文摘Narrative is generally classified as a mimetic medium.‘Mimesis’is a termused to describe hterary modes which aim to‘imitate’human thoughts。speech,action and the world in which they take place:drama and narrativewould be more readily recognised as mimetic than would lyric poetry.Giventhe mimetic impulses of narrativ.and Johnson's recognition of the way inwhich narrative presents US with‘History’。it is understandable that studentsexpect to study novels and short stories in ways which accentuate theirrelation to the worldly situations which they dramatise.For instance.It would appear that such novelsreflect their historical contexts almost transparently.However,approaches to the novel and its contexts which assume that anarrative imitates or simply reflects the times in which it was made encounterobvious difficulties when confronted by certain narrative strategies.Thesechallenging,self,conscious narrative strategies are explored in Chapter 5through Laurence Sterne’s Tristram Shah#(an eighteenth-century novel),John Fowles’s The French Lieutenant's Woman,Paul Auster’s City of Glass,and Salman Rushdie’s Midnight's Children(twentieth,century novels).Thesenarratives playfully expose the limits of mimesis.Although I shall argue thateven playful,sceptical narrative strategies lead the reader back to worldlyinsights into societies and histories——in the case of Midnight's Children tocolonial domination and its resistance——it will be important to demonstratehow these contexts have to be traced through narrative as a complex medium.This remains the case even when narratives appear to be transparentlymlmetle.