文学术语汇编
2014-05-16 20:18阅读:
Literature of the
absurd: (荒诞派文学) The term is
applied to a number of works in drama and prose fiction which have
in common the sense that the human condition is essentially absurd,
and that this condition can be adequately represented only in works
of literature that are themselves absurd. The current movement
emerged in France after the Second World War, as a rebellion
against essential beliefs and values of traditional culture and
traditional literature. They hold the belief that a human being is
an isolated existent who is cast into an alien universe and the
human life in its fruitless search for purpose and meaning is both
anguish and absurd.
Theater of the absurd:
(荒诞派戏剧) belongs to literature
of the absurd. Two representatives of this school are Eugene
Ionesco, French author of The Bald Soprano (1949) (此作
品中文译名<</font>秃头歌女>), and Samuel Beckett, Irish author of
Waiting for Godot (1954) (此作品是荒诞派戏剧代表作<</font>等待戈多>). They project the irrationalism,
helplessness and absurdity of life in dramatic forms that reject
realistic settings, logical reasoning, or a coherently evolving
plot.
Black comedy or black humor:
(黑色幽默) it mostly employed to
describe baleful, naïve, or inept characters in a fantastic or
nightmarish modern world playing out their roles in what Ionesco
called a “tragic farce”, in which the events are often
simultaneously comic, horrifying, and absurd. Joseph Heller’s
Catch-22 (美国著名作家约瑟夫海勒<</font>二十二条军规>) can be taken as an example of the
employment of this technique.
4.Aesthetic Movement(唯美主义): it 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 some French artists.
They declared that art should serve no religious, moral or social
purpose. The two most important representatives of aestheticists in
English literature are Walt Pater and Oscar Wilde.
5. Allegory(寓言): a tale in verse or prose
in which characters, actions, or settings represent abstract ideas
or moral qualities, such as John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s
Progress. An allegory is a story with two meanings, a literal
meaning and a symbolic meaning.
6. Fable(寓言): is a short narrative, in
prose or verse, that exemplifies an abstract moral thesis or
principle of human behavior. Most common is the beast fable, in
which animals talk and act like the human types they represent. The
fables in Western cultures derive mainly from the stories
attributed to Aesop, a Greek slave of the sixth century B.
C.
7. Parable(寓言): is a very short narrative
about human beings presented so as to stress analogy with a general
lesson that the narrator is trying to bring home to his audience.
For example, the Bible contains lots of parables employed by Jesus
Christ to make his flock understand his preach.
(注意以上三个词在汉语中都翻译成语言,但是内涵并不相同,不要搞混)
8. Alliteration(头韵): the
repetition of the initial consonant sounds. In Old English
alliterative meter, alliteration is the principal organizing device
of the verse line, such as in Beowulf.
9. Consonance is the repetition of a
sequence of two or more consonants but with a change in the
intervening vowel, such as “live and love”.
10. Assonance is the repetition of identical or
similar vowel, especially in stressed syllables, in a sequence of
nearby words, such as “child of silence”.
11. Allusion (典故)is a reference without
explicit identification, to a literary or historical person, place,
or event, or to another literary work or passage. Most literary
allusions are intended to be recognized by the generally educated
readers of the author’s time, but some are aimed at a special
group.
12. Ambiguity(复义性): Since William Empson(燕卜荪)
published Seven Types of Ambiguity(《复义七型》), the term has
been widely used in criticism to identify a deliberate poetic
device: the use of a single word or expression to signify two or
more distinct references, or to express two or more diverse
attitudes or feeling.
13.
Antihero(反英雄):the chief character in a modern novel or
play whose character is totally different from the traditional
heroes. Instead of manifesting largeness, dignity, power, or
heroism, the antihero is petty, passive, ineffectual or dishonest.
For example, the heroine of Defoe’s Moll Flanders is a thief and a
prostitute.
14. Antithesis(对照):(a figure of speech)
An antithesis is often expressed in a balanced sentence, that is, a
sentence in which identical or similar syntactic structure is used
to express contrasting ideas. For example, “Marriage has many
pains, but celibacy(独身生活)has no pleasures.” by Samuel Johnson
obviously employs antithesis.
15. Archaism(拟古):the literary use of
words and expressions that have become obsolete in the common
speech of an era. For example, the translators of the King James
Version of Bible gave weight and dignity to their prose by
employing archaism.
16. Atmosphere(氛围): the prevailing mood
or feeling of a literary work. Atmosphere is often developed, at
least in part, through descriptions of setting. Such descriptions
help to create an emotional climate to establish the reader’s
expectations and attitudes.
17. Ballad(民谣):it is a song, transmitted
orally, which tells a story. It originated and was communicated
orally among illiterate or only partly literate people. It exists
in many variant forms. The most common stanza form, called
ballad stanza is a quatrain in alternate four- and
three-stress lines; usually only the second and fourth lines rhyme.
Although many traditional ballads probably originated in the late
Middle Age, they were not collected and printed until the
eighteenth century.
18. Climax:as a rhetorical device it
means an ascending sequence of importance. As a literary term, it
can also refer to the point of greatest intensity, interest, or
suspense in a story’s turning point. The action leading to the
climax and the simultaneous increase of tension in the plot are
known as the rising action. All action after the climax is referred
to as the falling action, or resolution. The term crisis is
sometimes used interchangeably with climax.
19. Anticlimax(突降):it denotes a writer’s
deliberate drop from the serious and elevated to the trivial and
lowly, in order to achieve a comic or satiric effect. It is a
rhetorical device in English.
20. Beat Generation(垮掉一代):it refers to a
loose-knit group of poets and novelists, writing in the second half
of the 1950s and early 1960s, who shared a set of social attitudes
– antiestablishment, antipolitical, anti-intellectual, opposed to
the prevailing cultural, literary, and moral values, and in favor
of unfettered self-realization and self-expression. Representatives
of the group include Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac and William
Burroughs. And most famous literary creations produced by this
group should be Allen Ginsberg’s long poem Howl and Jack
Kerouac’s On the Road.
21. Biography(传记):a detailed account of a
person’s life written by another person, such as Samuel Johnson’s
Lives of the English Poets and James Boswell’s Life of
Samuel Johnson.
22. Autobiography(自传):a person’s account of his
or her own life, such as Benjamin Franklin’s
autobiography.
24. A parody(模仿)imitates the serious manner and
characteristic features of a particular literary work, or the
distinctive style of a particular author, or the typical stylistic
and other features of a serious literary genre, and deflates the
original by applying the imitation to a lowly or comically
inappropriate subject.
25. Celtic Revival also known
as the Irish Literary Renaissance
(爱尔兰文艺复兴)identifies the remarkably
creative period in Irish literature from about 1880 to the death of
William Butler Yeats in 1939. The aim of Yeats and other early
leaders of the movement was to create a distinctively national
literature by going back to Irish history, legend, and folklore, as
well as to native literary models. The major writers of this
movement include William Butler Yeats, Lady Gregory, John
Millington Synge and Sean O’Casey and so on.
26.
Characters(人物)are the
persons represented in a dramatic or narrative work, who are
interpreted by the reader as being endowed with particular moral,
intellectual, and emotional qualities by inferences from the
dialogues, actions and motivations. E. M. Forster divides
characters into two types: flat character, which is presented
without much individualizing detail; and round character, which is
complex in temperament and motivation and is represented with
subtle particularity.
27. Chivalric Romance (or medieval romance)
(骑士传奇或中世纪传奇)is a type of narrative
that developed in twelfth-century France, spread to the literatures
of other countries. Its standard plot is that of a quest undertaken
by a single knight in order to gain a lady’s favor; frequently its
central interest is courtly love, together with tournaments fought
and dragons and monsters slain. It stresses the chivalric ideals of
courage, loyalty, honor, mercifulness to an opponent, and elaborate
manners.
28.
Comedy:(喜剧)in
general, a literary work that ends happily with a healthy, amicable
armistice between the protagonist and society.
29. Farce
(闹剧)is a type of comedy
designed to provoke the audience to simple and hearty laughter. To
do so it commonly employs highly exaggerated types of characters
and puts them into improbable and ludicrous
situations.
30. Confessional
poetry(自白派诗歌) designates a
type of narrative and lyric verse, given impetus by Robert Lowell’s
Life Studies, which deals with the facts and intimate mental and
physical experiences of the poet’s own life. Confessional poetry
was written in rebellion against the demand for impersonality by T.
S. Elliot and the New Criticism. The representative writers of
confessional school include Robert Lowell, Anne Sexton and Sylvia
Plath and so on.
31. Critical
Realism:(批判现实主义)The
critical realism of the 19th century flourished in the fouties and
in the beginning of fifties. The realists first and foremost set
themselves the task of criticizing capitalist society from a
democratic viewpoint and delineated the crying contradictions of
bourgeois reality. But they did not find a way to eradicate social
evils. Representative writers of this trend include Charles Dickens
and William Makepeace Thackeray and so on.
32. Drama:
(戏剧)The form of composition designed
for performance in the theater, in which actors take the roles of
the characters, perform the indicated action, and utter the written
dialogue. (The common alternative name for a dramatic composition
is a play.)
33. Dramatic
Monologue:(戏剧独白)a
monologue is a lengthy speech by a single person. Dramatic
monologue does not designate a component in a play, but a type of
lyric poem that was perfected by Robert Browning. By using dramatic
monologue, a single person, who is patently not the poet, utters
the speech that makes up the whole of the poem, in a specific
situation at a critical moment. For example, Robert Browning’s
famous poem “My Last Duchess” was written in dramatic
monologue.
34.
Elegy(哀歌或挽歌):a poem
of mourning, usually over the death of an individual. An elegy is a
type of lyric poem, usually formal in language and structure, and
solemn or even melancholy in tone.
35.
Enlightenment(启蒙运动):The name applied to an intellectual movement
which developed in Western Europe during the seventeenth century
and reached its height in the eighteenth. The common element was a
trust in human reason as adequate to solve the crucial problems and
to establish the essential norms in life, together with the belief
that the application of reason was rapidly dissipating the
remaining feudal traditions. It influenced lots of famous English
writers especially those neoclassic writers, such as Alexander
Pope.
36.
Epic(史诗):it is a
long verse narrative on a serious subject, told in a formal and
elevated style, and centered on a heroic or quasi-divine figure on
whose actions depends the fate of a tribe, a nation, or the human
race.
37.
Epiphany:(顿悟)In the
early draft of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, James Joyce
employed this term to signify a sudden sense of radiance and
revelation that one may feel while perceiving a commonplace object.
“Epiphany” now has become the standard term for the description,
frequent in modern poetry and prose fiction, of the sudden flare
into revelation of an ordinary object or scene.
38. Epithet: as a term in
criticism, epithet denotes an adjective or adjectival phrase used
to define a distinctive quality of a person or thing. This method
was widely employed in ancient epics. For example, in Homer’s epic,
the epithet like “the wine-dark sea” can be found
everywhere.
39.
Essay:(散文)any short
composition in prose that undertakes to discuss a matter, express a
point of view, persuade us to accept a thesis on any subject, or
simply entertain. The essay can be divided as the formal essay and
the informal essay (familiar essay).
40.
Euphemism(委婉语): An inoffensive expression used in place
of a blunt one that is felt to be disagreeable or embarrassing,
such as “pass away” instead of “die”
41.
Expressionism(表现主义):a German movement in literature and the other
arts which was at its height between 1910 and 1925 – that is, in
the period just before, during, and after WWⅠ. The expressionist artist or writer undertakes
to express a personal vision – usually a troubled or tensely emotional
vision – of human life and
human society. This is done by exaggerating and distorting. We
recognize its effects, direct or indirect, on the writing and
staging of such plays as Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman as well as on the theater
of the absurd.
42. Free
verse(自由体诗):Like
traditional verse, it is printed in short lines instead of with the
continuity of prose, but it differs from such verse by the fact
that its rhythmic pattern is not organized into a regular metrical
form – that is, into feet, or
recurrent units of weak and strong stressed syllables. Most free
verse also has irregular line lengths, and either lacks rhyme or
else uses it only occasionally. Walt Whitman is a representative
who employed this poem form successfully.
43. Gothic novel:(哥特式小说)It is a type of prose
fiction. The writers of this type of fictions mostly set their
stories in the medieval period and in a Catholic country,
especially Italy or Spain. The locale was often a gloomy castle.
The typical story focused on the sufferings imposed on an innocent
heroine by a cruel villain. This type of fictions made bountiful
use of ghosts, mysterious disappearances, and other supernatural
occurrences. The principle aim of such novels was to evoke chilling
terror and the best of this type opened up to the fiction the realm
of the irrational and of the perverse impulses and nightmarish
terrors that lie beneath the orderly surface of the civilized mind.
Some famous novelists liked to employ some Gothic elements in their
novels, such as Emily Bronte’s Wuthering
Heights.
44. Graveyard poets(墓园派诗歌): A term applied to
eighteenth-century poets who wrote meditative poems, usually set in
a graveyard, on the theme of human mortality, in moods which range
from pensiveness to profound gloom. The vogue resulted in one of
the most widely known English poems, Thomas Gray’s “Elegy Written
in a Country Churchyard”.
45. Harlem Renaissance(哈莱姆文艺复兴):a period of
remarkable creativity in literature, music, dance, painting, and
sculpture by African-Americans, from the end of the First World War
in 1917 through the 1920s. As a result of the mass migrations to
the urban North in order to escape the legal segregation of the
American South, and also in order to take advantage of the jobs
opened to African Americans at the beginning of the War, the
population of the region of Manhattan known as Harlem became almost
exclusively Black, and the vital center of African American culture
in America. Distinguished writers who were part of the movement
included Langston Hughes and Jean Toomer. The Great Depression of
1929 and the early 1930s brought the period of buoyant Harlem
culture – which had been fostered by prosperity in the publishing
industry and the art world – effectively to an end.
46. Heroic Couplet(英雄双韵体)refers to lines of
iambic pentameter which rhyme in pairs: aa, bb, cc, and so on. The
adjective “heroic” was applied in the later seventeenth century
because of the frequent use of such couplets in heroic poems and
dramas. This verse form was introduced into English poetry by
Geoffrey Chaucer. From the age of John Dryden through that of
Samuel Johnson, the heroic couplet was the predominant English
measure for all the poetic kinds; some poets, including Alexander
Pope, used it almost to the exclusion of other meters.
47. Hyperbole(夸张):this figure of speech called
hyperbole is bold overstatement, or the extravagant exaggeration of
fact or of possibility. It may be used either for serious or ironic
or comic effect.
48. Understatement(轻描淡写):this figure of speech
deliberately represents something as very much less in magnitude or
importance than it really is, or is ordinarily considered to be.
The effect is usually ironic.
49. Imagism(意象派):it was a poetic vogue that
flourished in England, and even more vigorously in America, between
the years 1912 and 1917. It was planned and exemplified by a group
of English and American writers in London, partly under the
influence of the poetic theory of T. E. Hulme, as a revolt against
the sentimental and mannerish poetry at the turn of the century.
The typical Imagist poetry is written in free verse and undertakes
to be as precisely and tersely as possible. Meanwhile, the Imagist
poetry likes to express the writers’ momentary impression of a
visual object or scene and often the impression is rendered by
means of metaphor without indicating a relation. Most famous
Imagist poem, “In a Station of the Metro”, was written by Ezra
Pound. Imagism was too restrictive to endure long as a concerted
movement, but it influenced almost all modern poets of Britain and
America.
50. Irony(反讽):This term derives from a
character in a Greek comedy. In most of the modern critical uses of
the term “irony”, there remains the root sense of dissembling or
hiding what is actually the case; not, however, in order to
deceive, but to achieve rhetorical or artistic
effects.
51. Local Colorism(地方色彩)was a literary trend
belonging to Realism. It refers to the detailed representation in
prose fiction of the setting, dialect, customs, dress and ways of
thinking and feeling which are distinctive of a particular region.
After the Civil War a number of American writers exploited the
literary possibilities of local color in various parts of America.
The most famous representative of local colorism should be Mark
Twain who took his hometown near the Mississippi as the typical
setting of nearly all his novels.
52. Lyric(抒情诗):in the most common use of the
term, a lyric is any fairly short poems consisting of the utterance
by a single speaker, who expresses a state of mind or a process of
perception, thought and feeling.
53. Metaphysical Poets(玄学派诗人):The name is now
applied to a group of seventeenth-century poets who, whether or not
directly influenced by John Donne, employ similar poetic procedures
and imagery, both in secular poetry and in religious poetry.
Metaphysical poetry is characterized by irregular meter, colloquial
language and original images.
54. Modernism(现代主义):The term modernism is
widely used to identify new and distinctive features in the
subjects, forms, concepts, and styles of literature and the other
arts in the early decades of the 20th century, but
especially after WWI. The specific features signified by
“modernism” vary with the user, but many critics agree that it
involves a deliberate and radical break with some of the
traditional bases not only of Western art, but of Western culture
in general.
55.Postmodernism(后现代主义):The term postmodernism
is often applied to the literature and art after WWII.
Postmodernism involves not only a continuation, sometimes carried
to an extreme, of the countertraditional experiments of modernism,
but also diverse attempts to break away from modernist forms which
had, inevitably, become in their turn conventional, as well as to
overthrow the elitism of modernist “high art” by recourse to the
models of “mass art”.
56. Theme(主题):The term is usually applied to a
general concept or doctrine, whether implicit or asserted, which an
imaginative work is designed to incorporate and make persuasive to
the reader.
57. Multiple Point of View (多重视角):It is one of
the literary techniques William Faulkner used, which shows within
the same story how the characters reacted differently to the same
person or the same situation. The use of this technique gave the
story a circular form wherein one event was the center, with
various points of view radiating from it. The multiple points of
view technique makes the reader recognize the difficulty of
arriving at a true judgment.
58. Ode(颂诗):An ode is a complex and
often lengthy lyric poem, written in a dignified formal style on
some lofty or serious subject.
59. Magic realism(魔幻现实主义)is a new literary
genre appeared in the 20th century. The writers, who
employed magic realistic techniques, interweave, in an ever-lasting
pattern, a sharply etched realism in representing ordinary events
and descriptive details together with fantastic and dreamlike
elements, as well as with materials derived from myth and fairy
tales. In American literature, some of Toni Morrison’s novels
employed magic realistic elements.
60. Transcendentalism(超验主义):appeared in 1830s
in US;emphasis on spirit or oversoul and stressing importance of
the individual;regarding nature as symbols of the spirit or God and
emphasis on brotherhood of man;representatives: Ralph Waldo Emerson
and Henry David Thoreau
61. Lost Generation(迷惘的一代):Many prominent
American writers of the decade following the end of WWI,
disillusioned by their war experience and alienated by what they
perceived as the crassness of American culture are often tagged as
Lost Generation. Their representatives are F. Scott Fitzgerald and
Ernest Hemingway.
62. Naturalism(自然主义):Naturalism was a new and
harsher realism. Naturalists dismissed the validity of comforting
moral truths. They attempted to achieve extreme objectivity and
frankness, presenting characters of low social and economic classes
who were determined by their environment and heredity. In
presenting the extremes of life, the naturalists sometimes
displayed an affinity to the sensationalism of early romanticism,
but unlike their romantic predecessors, the naturalists emphasized
that the world was amoral, that men and women had no free will,
that lives were controlled by heredity and environment, that the
destiny of humanity was misery in life and oblivion in death. In
American literature, Theodore Dreiser is a representative of
naturalism.
63. American
Puritanism(清教主义):Puritanism is the practices and beliefs
of the Puritans. The Puritans were originally members of a division
of the Protestant Church. They were a group of serious, religious
people, advocating highly religious and moral principles. As the
word itself hints, Puritans wanted to purity their religious
beliefs and practices. They accepted the doctrine of
predestination, original sin and total depravity, and limited
atonement through a special infusion of grace form God. As a
culture heritage, Puritanism did have a profound influence on the
early American mind. American Puritanism also had an enduring
influence on American literature.
64. Flashback(闪回):interpolating narratives or
scenes which represent events that happened before the time at
which the work opened; for example, it is used in Arthur Miller’s
Death of a Salesman.
65. Plot(情节):The plot in a dramatic or narrative work
is constituted by its events and actions, as these are rendered and
ordered toward achieving particular artistic and emotional
effects.