正在加载图片...
2.0 Points of View: 5 2.1 Ideas of Novel Writing:what a writer should do is to record what life felt like to living things,to communicate the impression made by one individual upon others,and to reveal human personality partly through its own self-consciousness and partly through the picture projected by it uponother minds. 2.2 Feminist Ideas:a strong advocator of feminist movement.Her ideal is the blending of masculine intellect and logic with feminine intuitionand imagination. 2.3 Two Kinds of Truth:reason intuition.Reason in the masculine sphere:truth-in the feminine. 3.0 Characteristics of Her Novels: 5 3.1 The Aesthetic Aspects of Life:Virginia Woolf's characters are presented essentially as solitaries.Their inner life is what really matters.Even in company,they seem to be alone,absorbed in private unspoken trains of thought.Their relations to others are only valuable to them inso far as they feed and enrich their solitary experience.If her first impulse is to express life's loveliness,her second is to express its transience;life drifts past her like a cloud,shifting. changing,dissolving,even as she gazes 3.2 New Devices: The Narrow Framework of Time-the employment of devices 5 2.0 Points of View: 2.1 Ideas of Novel Writing: what a writer should do is to record what life felt like to living things, to communicate the impression made by one individual upon others, and to reveal human personality partly through its own self-consciousness and partly through the picture projected by it upon other minds. 2.2 Feminist Ideas: a strong advocator of feminist movement. Her ideal is the blending of masculine intellect and logic with feminine intuition and imagination. 2.3 Two Kinds of Truth: reason & intuition. Reason → in the masculine sphere; truth → in the feminine. 3.0 Characteristics of Her Novels: 3.1 The Aesthetic Aspects of Life: Virginia Woolf’s characters are presented essentially as solitaries. Their inner life is what really matters. Even in company, they seem to be alone, absorbed in private unspoken trains of thought. Their relations to others are only valuable to them in so far as they feed and enrich their solitary experience. If her first impulse is to express life’s loveliness, her second is to express its transience; life drifts past her like a cloud, shifting, changing, dissolving, even as she gazes. 3.2 New Devices: The Narrow Framework of Time → the employment of devices 5’ 5’ 5’ 5’ 5’
<<向上翻页向下翻页>>
©2008-现在 cucdc.com 高等教育资讯网 版权所有