自考问答 自考本科自考百科
自考问答 > 自考百科 > 英美文学自考真题答案百度云

英美文学自考真题答案百度云

发布时间:

英美文学自考真题答案百度云

发布时间:

自考英美文学真题答案百度云

不知道 帮顶哈 希望有人知道~

以前保存的有,不过最近被删除了。找资料可以去一些学习论坛找找看,基本都有。比较好的考研论坛,我推荐两个:考研论坛,另外一个大家论坛。上面资料都挺多。百度文库资料也很全,不过大部分要vip

《2020考研资料收集》百度网盘资源免费下载

链接:

2020考研资料收集|有机化学 第五版 华北师范大学等 李景宁 课后习题答案全解解析.pdf|红宝书考研英语词汇.pdf|高等数学 同济第7版 下册 习题全解指南 课后习题答案解析.pdf|高等数学 同济第7版 下册 习题全解指南 课后习题答案解析(1).zip|高等数学 同济第7版 上册 习题全解指南 课后习题答案解析_2.zip|高等数学 第7版 下册 同济大学.zip|高等数学 第7版 下册 同济大学.pdf|高等数学 第7版 上册 同济大学.zip|高等数学 第7版 上册 同济大学.pdf|中科院有机化学真题1986-2009(内含答案).part2.rar|中科院有机化学真题1986-2009(内含答案).part1.rar|中科院有机化学2011.pdf|中科院物理化学历年真题2011-2012.rar|中科院物理化学历年真题1995-2010.pdf

你好,百度文库有下载的。你自己去找找

英美文学自考真题答案百度云

The major writers of the Modern Period Ⅰ。Ezra Pound (1885-1972) 一。 一般识记 Ezra Pound's contribution to American literature: Pound was one of the most important poets and critics of his time and he was regarded as the father of modern American poetry. He is a leading spokesman of the "Imagist Movement", which though short-lived, had a tremendous influence on modern poetry. 二。 识记 His major works: Pound composed poems, wrote criticisms and did translations. (1) His poetic works: In 1915 Pound began writing his great work, The Cantos, which spanned from 1917 to 1959 and were collected in The Cantos of Ezra Pound (1986)。 He joined a famous literary salon run by an American woman writer Gertrude Stein, and became involved in the experimentations on poetry. His other poetic works include twelve volumes of verse Collected Early Poems of Ezra Pound (1982), and Personae (1909), and some longer pieces such as Hugh Selwyn Mauberley (1920)。 (2) His critical essays: Make It New (l934), Literary Essays (l954), The ABC of Reading (1934) and Polite Essays (l937), etc. These essays best reflect Pound's appraisals of literary traditions and of modern writing. (3) His translations: The Translations of Ezra Pound (1953), Confucius (1969), and Shih-Ching (1954) These translations have not only cast light on Pound's affinity to the Chinese and his strenuous effort in the study of Oriental literature, but also offered us a clue to the understanding of his poetry and literary theory. From the analysis of the Chinese ideogram Pound learned to anchor his poetic language in concrete, perceptual reality, and to organize images into larger patterns through juxtoposition. 三。 领会 1. Ezra Pound's poetic subjects or themes: (1) His earlier poetry is saturated with the familiar poetic subjects that characterize the 19th century Romanticism: songs in praise of a lady, songs concerning the poet's craft, love and friendship, death, the transience of beauty and the permanence of art, and some other subjects that Pound could call his own: the pain of exile, metamorphosis, the delightful psychic experience, the ecstatic moment, etc. (2) Later he is more concerned about the problems of the modern culture: the contemporary cultural decay and the possible sources of cultural renewal as well. In The Cantos, Pound traces the rise and fall of eastern and western empires, the moral and social chaos of the modern world, especially the corruption of America after the heroic time of Jefferson. From the perception of these things, stems the poet's search for order, which involves a search for the principles on which the poet's craft is based. 2. His artistic achievment: (1) He is the leader of the Imagist Movement: Led by the American poet Ezra Pound, Imagist Movement is a poetic movement that flourished in the U.S. and England between 1909-1917. It advances modernism in arts which concentrated on reforming the medium of poetry as opposed to Romanticism, especially Tennyson's wordiness and high-flown language in poetry. Pound endorsed three main principles as guidelines for Imagism, including direct treatment of poetic subjects, elimination of merely ornamental or superfluous words, and rhythmical composition in the sequence of the musical phrase rather than in the sequence of a metronome. The primary Imagist objective is to avoid rhetoric and moralizing, to stick closely to the object or experience being described, and to move from explicit generalization. The leading poets are Ezra Pound, Wallace Stevens, D.H.Lawrence, etc. Pound's famous one-image poem "In a Station of the Metro" would serve as a typical example of the Imagist ideas. (2) His use of myth and personae: Pound argued that the poet cannot relate a delightful psychic experience by speaking out directly in the first person: he must "screen himself" and speak indirectly through as impersonal and objective story, which is usually a myth or a piece of the earlier literature, or a "mask," that is a persona. In this way, Pound could sustain a dialogue between past and present succesfully. (persona: It is an invented person; a character in drama or fiction. Persona, a Latin word meaning "mask ," is used in Jungian psychology to refer to one's "public personality"-the facade or mask presented to the world but not representative of inner feelings and emotions. In literary criticism, persona is sometimes used to refer to a person figuring in, for example, a poem, someone who may or may not represent the author himself. ) (3) His language: His lines are usually oblique yet marvelously compressed. His poetry is dense with personal, literary, and historical allusions, but at the expense of syntax and summary statements. 四。应用:Selected Readings: 1. In a Station of the Metro (1) Theme: This poem is an observation of the poet of the human faces seen in a Paris subway station or a description of a moment of sudden emotion at seeing beautiful faces in a Metro in Paris. He sees the faces, turned variously toward light and darkness, like flower petals which are half absorbed by, half resisting, the wet, dark texture of a bough. (2) The one image in this poem: This poem is probably the most famous of all imagist poems. In two lines it combines a sharp visual image or two juxtoposed images (意象叠加) "Petals on a wet, black bough" with an implied meaning. The faces in the dim light of the Metro suggest both the impersonality and haste of city life and the greater transience of human life itself. The word "apparition" is a well-chosen one which has a two-fold meaning: Firstly, it means a visible appearance of something real. Secondly, it builds an image of a ghostly sight, a delusive and unexpected appearance. (3) Pound uses the fewest possible words to convey an accurate image, which is the principle of the Imagist poetry. This poem looks to be a modern adoption of the haiku form of Japanese poetry which adapts the 3-line, 17 syllable and where the title is an intergral part of the whole. The poem succeeds largely because of its internal rhymes: station/apparition; Metro/petals/wet; crowd/bough. Its form was determined by the experience that inspired it, involving organically rather than being chosen arbitrarily. 2. The River-Merchant's Wife: A Letter (1) Theme: It is an adaptation from the Chinese Li Po (701-762) named Rihaku in Japanese, which, by means of vivid images and shifting tones, describes the silky shy tenderness of the young wife writing to her absent husband the river-merchant. The history of her feelings for her husband develops as the following: her bashfulness when she was a young girl, her spiritual affinity with him during the phase of their marriage, the material nature of her love at the time of his departure as well as her longing for his return when she grows old. (2) use of images and allusion: In this poem Pound uses images such as "hair" "grown moss" "falling leaves" to suggest the passing years and growing age. Besides, Pound employs an allusion to "a story of a woman waiting for her husband on a hill." In Pound's version, the line emphasizes the otherworldly nature of her love during her marriage. 3. A Pact This poem is about Pound's evaluation on Whitman. Pound started to find some agreement between "Whitmanesque" free verse, which he had attacked for its carelessness in composition, and the "verse libre" of the Imagists who showed more concern for formal values. In the poem Pound affirmed Whitman's contribution in the experiment on the form and content of American poetry and expressed his eagerness to communicate with Whitman…… Ⅱ。 Robert Lee Frost (l874-l963) 一。 一般识记 His life and writing: Frost is an important poet in the 20th century .He won the Pulitzer Prize four times and read poetry at the inauguration of President John F. Kennedy in 1961. He spent his early childhood in the Far West and later the family moved to New Hampshire. He went to Harvard but left in the middle because of his tuberculosis. When he was 28, he began to venture on writing. 二。 识记 His major works: His first book A Boy's Will (1913), whose lyrics trace a boy's development from self-centered idealism to maturity, is marked by an intense but restrained emotion and the characteristic flavor of New Eng1and life. His second book, a volume of poems North of Boston (1914), is described by the author as "a book of people," which shows a brilliant insight into New England character and the background that formed it. Many of his major poems are collected in this volume, such as "Mending the Wall," in which Frost saw man as learning from nature the zones of his own 1imitations, and "Home Buria1," which probes the darker corners of individual lives in a situation where man cannot accept the facts of his condition. Mountain Interval (19l6) contains such characteristic poems as "The Road Not Taken," "Birches". New Hampshire (1923) that won Frost the first of four Pulitzer Prizes includes "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening", which stems from the ambiguity of the speaker's choice between safety and the unknown. The collection West-Running Brook (1928) poses disturbing uncertainties about man's prowess and importance. Collected Poems (l930) and A Further Range (1935) gathered Frost's second and third Pulitzer Prizes. Both translate modern upheaval into poetic materia1 the poet could skillfully control. Frost's fourth Pulitzer Prize was awarded for A Witness Tree (l942) which includes "The Gift Outright," the poem he later recited at President Kennedy's inauguration. Frost took up a religious question most notably in "After Apple-Picking:" can a man's best efforts ever satisfy God? A Masque of Reason (l945) and A Masque of Mercy (1947) are comic-serious dramatic narratives, in both of which biblical characters in modern settings discuss ethics and man's re1ations to God. 三。 领会 1. His thematic concerns: (1) Generally Frost is considered a regional poet whose subject matters mainly focus on the landscape and people in New England. These thematic concerns include the terror and tragedy in nature, as well as its beauty, and the 1oneliness and poverty of the isolated human being. But first and foremost Frost is concerned with his love of life and his belief in a serenity that only came from working usefully, which he practiced himself throughout his life. (2) Frost wrote many poems that investigate the basic themes of man's life: the individual's relationships to himself, to his fellow-man, to world, and to his God. Profound meanings are hidden underneath the plain language and simple form. His poetry, by using nature as a storehouse of analogy and symbol, often probes mysteries of darkness and irrationality in the bleak and chaotic landscapes of an indifferent universe when men stand alone, unaided and perplexed. 2. His nature poems: Robert Frost is mainly known for his poems concerning New England life. He learned from the tradition, especially the familiar conventions of nature poetry and of classical pastoral poetry, and made the colloquial New England speech into a poetic expression. A poem so conceived thus becomes a symbo1 or metaphor, a careful, loving exploration of reality, in Frost's version, "a momentary stay against confusion." Many of his poems are fragrant with natural quality. Images and metaphors in his poems are drawn from the rural world, the simple country 1ife and the pastoral 1andscape. However, profound ideas are delivered under the disguise of the p1ain language and the simple form, for what Frost did is to take symbols from the limited human world and the pastoral landscape to refer to the great world beyond the rustic scene. These thematic concerns include the terror and tragedy in nature, as well as its beauty, and the 1oneliness and poverty of the isolated human being. But first and foremost Frost is concerned with his love of life and his belief in a serenity that only came from working usefully, which he practiced himself throughout his life. 3. Frost's style in language: By using simple spoken language and conversational rhythms, Frost achieved an effortless grace in his style. He combined traditiona1 verse forms —— the sonnet, rhyming coup1ets, blank verse with a clear American local speech rhythm, the speech of New England farmers with its idiosyncratic diction and syntax. In verse form he was assorted; he wrote in both the metrical forms and the free verse, and sometimes he wrote in a form that borrows freely from the merits of both, in a form that might be called semi-free or semi-conventional. 四。 应用 Selected Readings: l. After Apple-Picking This poem is so vivid a memory of experience on the farm in which the end of labor leaves the speaker with a sense of completion and fulfilment yet finds him blocked from success by winter's approach and physical weariness. On the one hand, Frost expressed his love of life and his belief in a serenity that only came from working usefully. On the other hand, the poet was concerned with individual's relationships to himself, to his fellow-man, to world, and to his God. He took up a religious question: can a man's best efforts ever satisfy God? Besides this is a typical lyric poem describing the pastoral landscape in New England. Symbols and images from the pastoral landscape to refer to the great world beyond the rustic scene. The language of this poem is characterized by simple spoken language and conversational rhythms, the combination of traditiona1 verse forms —— the sonnet, rhyming coup1ets, blank verse with the speech of New England farmers with its idiosyncratic diction and syntax. Frost wrote in both the metrical forms and the free verse, in a form that might be called semi-free or semi-conventional. 2. The Road Not Taken (1) The theme: This poem seems to be about the poet, walking in the woods in autumn, hesitating for a long time and wondering which road he should take since they are both pretty. In reality, this is a meditative poem symbolically written. It concerns the important decisions which one must take in the course of life, when one must give up one desirable thing in order to possess another. Then, whatever the outcome, one must accept the consequences of one's choice for it is not possible to go back and have another chance to choose differently. In the poem, he followed the one which was not frequently travelled by. Symbolically, he chose to follow an unusual, solitary life; perhaps he was speaking of his choice to become a poet rather than some common profession. But he always remembered the road which he might have taken, and which would have given him a different kind of life. (2) Language: This poem is written in classic five-line stanzas, with the rhyme scheme a-b-a-a-b and conversational rhythm. The poet uses "the road " to symbolize life's journey. 3. Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening (1) The theme: This is a deceptively simple poem in which the speaker literally stops his horse in the winter twilight to observe the beauty of the forest scene, and then is moved to continue his journey. Philosophically and symbolically, it stems from the ambiguity of the speaker's choice between safety and the unknown. (2) This poem suggests deep thought about death and about life. The strange attraction of death to man is symbolized by the dark woods silently filled up with the coldness of snow. Frost frequently uses the technique of symbolism in his poetry. Some critics think that the "village" stands for the human world, "woods" for nature, "horse" for the animal world, and "promises" for obligations. The poem represents a moment of relaxation from the burdensome journey of life, an almost aesthetic enjoyment and appreciation of natural beauty which is wholesome and restorative against the chaotic existence of modern man. (3) The last stanza shows a kind of sad, sentimental but also strong and responsible feeling. The attraction of the beauty of the nature makes the speaker stop in the journey. He finally turns away from it, with a certain weariness and yet with quiet determination, to face the needs of life. This stresses the central conflict of the poem between man's enjoyment of nature's beauty and his responsibility in society. This shows a man's despairing courage to seek out the meaning of life. In the last stanza, the three adjectives "lovely" "dark" "deep" reinforce one another. Not only do they represent beauty and terror of nature symbolized by the dark woods, but they also reveal the speaker's love for nature and human isolation from it. Besides, the word "sleep" here means "die" symbolically.

下篇:美国文学 第一章美国浪漫主义时期 一、美国浪漫主义时期概述 Ⅰ。本章学习目的和要求 通过本章学习,了解19世纪初期至中叶美国文学产生的历史、文化背景;认识该时期文学创作的基本待征、基本主张,及其对同时代和后期美国文学的影响;了解该时期主要作家的文学创作生涯、创作思想、艺术特色及其代表作品的主题思想、人物刻画、语言风格等;同时结合注释,读懂所选作品并了解其思想内容和艺术特色,培养理解和欣赏文学作品的能力。 Ⅱ。本章重点及难点: 1.浪漫主义时期美国文学的特点 2.主要作家的创作思想、艺术特色及其代表作品的主题结构、人物刻画、语言风格、思想意义。 3.分析讨论选读作品 Ⅲ。本章考核知识点和考核要求: 1.美国浪漫主义时期概述 (1)“识记”内容:美国浪漫主义文学产生的社会历史及文化背景 (2)“领会”内容: 美国浪漫主义在文学上的表现 a.欧洲浪漫主义文学的影响 b.美国本土文学的崛起及其待证 (3)“应用”内容:清教主义、超验主义、象征主义、自由诗等名词的解释 2.美国浪漫主义时期的主要作家 A.华盛顿。欧文 1.一般识记:欧文的生平及创作主涯 2.识记:《纽约外史》《见闻札记》 3.领会:欧文的创作领域、创作思想,及其作品的艺术风格 4.应用:选读《瑞普。凡。温可尔》的主题及其艺术特色 B.拉尔夫.华尔多.爱默生 1.一般识记:爱默生的生平及创作生涯 2.识记:爱默生的超验主义思想 3.领会: (1)爱默生的散文:《论自然》《论自助》《论美国学者》等 (2)爱默生与梭罗:梭罗的超验主义思想和他的《沃尔登》 4. 应用:《论自然》节选:爱默生的基本哲 学思想及自然观 C.纳撒尼尔。霍桑 1.一般识记:霍桑的生平及创作主涯 2.识记:霍桑的长短篇小说 3.领会: (1)《红字》的主题、心理描写、象征手法和、小说结构 (2)霍桑的清教主义思想及加尔文教条中的“原罪”对霍桑的影响(人性本恶的观点) (3)霍桑对浪漫主义小说的贡献 4.应用:选读《小伙子布朗》的主题结构、象征手法及语言特色 D.华尔特。惠特曼 1.一般识记:惠特曼的生平及其创作生涯 2.识记:惠特曼的民主思想 3.领会: (1)惠特曼的《草叶集》的主创意图、思想感情及诗体形式、语言风格 (2)惠特曼的个人主义 4.应用:选读《草叶集》诗选:“一个孩子的成长”、“涉水的骑兵”、“自己之歌”的主题结构、诗歌的艺术特色、语言风格 E.赫尔曼。麦尔维尔 1.一般识记:麦尔维尔的生平及创作生涯 2.识记:麦尔维尔的早期作品:《玛地》《雷得本》《白外衣》,后期作品《皮埃尔》《骗子的化装表演》《比利伯德》等 3.领会:《白鲸》的 (1)主题:表层及深层意义 (2)小说结构:浪漫主义和现实主义的统一 (3)象征手法和寓言的运用 (4)语言特色 4.应用:选读《白鲸》最后一章的节选:主题思想、人物刻画、象征手法、语言特色 Chapter l The Romantic Period (一)“识记”内容: 1.The origin of Romantic American literature The Romantic Period, one of the most important periods in thehistory of American literature, stretches from the end of the 18th century to the outbreak of the Civil War. It started with the publication of Washington Irving’s The Sketch Book and ended with Whitman’s Leaves of Grass. 2.The American Renaissance or New England Renaissance is a period of the great flowering of American literature, from the i830s roughly until the end of the American Civil War. It came of age as an expression of a national spirit. One of the most important influences in the period was that of the Transcendentalists, including Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau. The Transcendentalists contributed to the founding of a new national culture based on native elements. Apart from the Transcendentalists, there emerged during this period great imaginative writers ——Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville, and Walt Whitman——whose novels and poetry left a permanent imprint on American literature. 3.Its social historical and cultural background The development of the American society nurtured "the literature of a great nation." America was flourishing into a politically, economically and culturally independent country. Historically, it was the time of westward expansion in America economically, the whole nation was experiencing an industrial transformation. Politically, democracy and equa1ity became the ideal of the new nation, and the two-party system came into being. Worthy of mention is the literary and cultural life of the country. With the founding of the American Independent Government, the nation felt an urge to have its own literary expression, to make known its new experience that other nations did not have: the early Puritan settlement, the confrontation with the Indians, the frontiersmen''''''''s life, and the wild west. Besides, the nation’s literary milieu was ready for the Romantic movement as we11. Thus, with a strong sense of optimism, a spectacular outburst of romantic feeling was brought about in the first ha1f of the 19th century. 4.Major writers of this period There emerged a great host of men of letters during this period, among whom the better-known are poets such as Philip Freneau, William Cullen Bryant, Henry Wordsworth Long Fellow, James Russel Lowell, John Greenleaf Whitter, Edgar Ellen Poe, and, especially, Walt Whitman, whose Leaves Of Grass established him as the most popular American poet of the 19th century. The fiction of the American Romantic period is an original and diverse body of work. It ranges from the comic fables of Washington Irving to the The Gothic tales of Edgar Allen Poe, from the frontier adventures of James Fenimore Cooper to the narrative quests of Herman Melville, from the psycho1ogical romances of Nathaniel Hawthorne to the social realism of Rebecca Harding Davis. (二)领会内容 1.The impact of European Romanticism on American Romanticism Foreign literary masters, especially the English counterparts exerted a stimulating impact on the writers of the new world. Born of one common cultural heritage, the American writers shared some common features with the English Romanticists. They revolted against the literary forms and ideas of the period of classicism by developing some relatively new forms of fiction or poetry. (1) They put emphasis upon the imaginative and emotional qualities of literature, which included a liking for the picturesque, the exotic, the sensuous, the sensational, and the supernatural. (2) The Americans also placed an increasing emphasis on the free expression of emotions and disp1ayed an increasing attention to the psychic states of their characters. Heroes and heroines exhibited extremes of sensitivity and excitement. (3) The strong tendency to exalt the individual and the common man was almost a national religion in America. Writers like Freneau, Bryant, and Cooper showed a great interest in external nature in their respective works. (4) The literary use of the more colorfu1 aspects of the past was also to be found in Irving’s effort to exploit the legends of the Hudson River region, and in Cooper’s long series of historical tales. (5) In short, American Romanticism is, in a certain way, derivative. 2.The unique characteristics of American Romanticism Although greatly influenced by their English counterparts, the American romantic writers revealed unique characteristics of their own in their works and they grew on the native lands. For examp1e,(1) the American national experience of "pioneering into the west" proved to be a rich source of material for American writers to draw upon. They celebrated America''''''''s landscape with its virgin forests, meadows, groves, endless prairies, streams, and vast oceans. The wilderness came to function almost as a dramatic character that symbolized moral 1aw. (2)The desire for an escape from society and a return to nature became a permanent convention of American literature. Such a desire is particularly evident in Cooper’s Leather Stocking Tales, in Thoreau''''''''s Walden and, later, in Mark Twain’s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. (3) With the growth of American national consciousness, American character types speaking local dialects appeared in poetry and fiction with increasing frequency. (4) Then the American Puritanism as a cultural heritage exerted great influences over American moral values and American Romanticism. One of the manifestations is the fact that American romantic writers tended more to moralize than their English and European counterparts. (5) Besides, a preoccupation with the Calvinistic view of origina1 sin and the mystery of evil marked the works of Hawthorne, Melville and a host of lesser writers. (三)应用内容 1. The American Puritanism and its great influence over American moral values, as is shown in American romantic writings. (1) American Puritanism Puritanism is the practices and beliefs of the Puritans. (The Puritans were originally members of a division of the Protestant Church, who came into existence in the reigns Queen Elizabeth and King James Ⅰ。The first settlers who became the founding fathers of the American nation were quite a few of them Puritans. They came to America out of various reasons, but it should be remembered that they were a group of serious, religious people, advocating highly religious and moral principles. As the word itself hints, Puritans wanted to purify their religious beliefs and practices. They felt that the Church of England was too close to the Church of Rome in doctrine form of worship, and organization of authority.) The American Puritans, like their brothers back in England, were idealists, believing that the church should be restored to complete "purity". They accepted the doctrine of predestination, original sin and total depravity, and limited atonement through a special infusion of grace from God. But in the grim struggle for survival that followed immediately after their arrival in America, they became more and more practical, as indeed they had to be. Puritans were noted for a spirit of moral and religious earnestness that determinated their whole way of life. Puritans'''''''' lives were extremely disciplined and hard. They drove out of their settlements all those opinions that seemed dangerous to them, and history has criticized their actions. Yet in the persecution of what they considered error, the Puritans were no worse than many other movements in history. As a culture heritage, Puritanism did have a profound influence on the early American mind and American values. American Puritanism also had a conspicuously noticeable and an enduring influence on American literature. It had become, to some extent, so much a state of mind, so much a part of the national cultural atmosphere, rather than a set of tenets. (2) One of the manifestations is the fact that American romantic writers tended more to moralize than their English and European counterparts. Besides, a preoccupation with the Calvinistic view of origina1 sin and the mystery of evil marked the works of Hawthorne, Melville and a host of lesser writers. 2. New England Transcendentalism New England Transcendentalism is the mot clearly defined Romantic literary movement in this period. It was started in the area around Concord, Mass. by a group of intellectual and the literary men of the United States such as Emerson, Henry David Thoreau who were members of an informal club, i. e. the Transcendental Club in New England in the l830s. The transcendentalists reacted against the cold, rigid rationalism of Unitarianism in Boston. They adhered to an idealistic system of thought based on a belief in the essential unity of all creation , the innate goodness of man, and the supremacy of insight over logic and experience for the revelation of the deepest truths. The writings of the transcendentalists prepared the ground of their contemporaries such as Walt Whitman, Herman Melville, and Nathaniel Hawthorne. The main issues involved in the debate were generally philosophical, concerning nature, man and the universe. Basically, Transcendentalism has been defined philosophical1y as "the recognition in man of the capacity of knowing truth intuitively, or of attaining knowledge transcending the reach of the senses." Emerson once proclaimed in a speech, "Nothing is at last sacred but the integrity of your own mind." Other concepts that accompanied Transcendentalism inc1ude the idea that nature is ennobling and the idea that the individual is divine and, therefore, self-re1iant. 3. American Romanticists differed in their understanding of human nature. To the transcendentalists such as Emerson and Thoreau, man is divine in nature and therefore forever perfectible; but to Hawthorne and Melville, everybody is potentially a sinner, and great moral courage is therefore indispensab1e for the improvement of human nature, as is shown in Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter.

不知道 帮顶哈 希望有人知道~

美学自考真题答案百度云

1 2008 4 全国2008年4月自考美学试题 WORD 2 2007 4 美学2007年4月自学考试答案 WORD 3 2007 4 2007年4月自学考试自考全国美学历年试卷试题真题 WORD 4 2006 7 全国2006年7月高等教育自学考试美学试题历年试卷 WORD 5 2006 4 全国2006年4月高等教育自学考试美学试题历年试卷 WORD 6 2006 4 2006年4月全国自考自学考试美学试题试卷真题答案 WORD 7 2006 4 全国2006年4月自学考试自考美学试卷试题真题答案及评分 WORD 8 2005 7 全国2005年7月高等教育自学考试美学试题历年试卷 WORD 9 2005 4 全国2005年4月高等教育自学考试美学试题历年试卷 WORD 10 2004 7 全国2004年7月高等教育自学考试美学试题历年试卷 WORD 11 2004 4 全国2004年4月高等教育自学考试美学试题历年试卷 WORD 12 2003 7 浙江省2003年7月高等教育自学考试美学试题历年试卷 WORD 13 2003 4 2003年4月美学答案 WORD 14 2003 4 全国2003年4月高等教育自学考试美学试题历年试卷 WORD 15 2002 7 浙江省2002年7月高等教育自学考试美学试题历年试卷 WORD 16 2002 4 全国2002年4月高等教育自学考试美学试题历年试卷 用消息发给你了!

你得注意一点,0037美学这门课程教材改版了,2008年起,使用的都是07版的教材《美学》,而之前的教材是叫做《美学原理》,所以你找之前的那些试题估计用处不大。

全国2008年4月高等教育自学考试美学试题课程代码:00037一、单项选择题(本大题共20小题,每小题1分,共20分)在每小题列出的四个备选项中只有一个是符合题目要求的,请将其代码填写在题后的括号内。错选、多选或未选均无分。1.在西方美学史上,“迷狂说”的创始人是( )A.毕达哥拉斯 B.德谟克利特C.柏拉图 D.亚里士多德2.苏轼的诗句“欲把西湖比西子,淡妆浓抹总相宜”运用的是( )A.接近联想 B.类似联想C.对比联想 D.关系联想3.倡导“心理距离说”的美学家是( )A.康德 B.席勒C.布洛 D.叔本华4.游戏说和集体无意识说界定艺术的角度是( )A.艺术的功能 B.艺术的本质C.艺术的起源 D.艺术的存在5.把艺术品的结构划分为语音层、语义层、图式层、客体层四个层次的美学家是( )A.英伽登 B.布隆博格C.汉斯立克 D.克罗齐6.王国维所划分的意境的两种类型是( )A.物态之境和宇宙之境 B.有物之境和无物之境C.仁达之境和至善之境 D.有我之境和无我之境7.商业广告所表现的艺术功能是( )A.教化功能 B.核心功能C.外围功能 D.启迪功能8.艺术品之所以是艺术品的关键是( )A.艺术形式 B.艺术意象C.艺术的思想内容 D.创作主体9.艺术天才的形成主要由于( )A.超群的理性思维与敏锐的感性能力 B.自然生理机制和超群的思维能力C.先天生理心理结构与后天机遇 D.先天的生理心理结构与后天的实践10.千百年来人们不否认艺术的存在,从根本上讲艺术本体论就是( )A.艺术存在论 B.艺术形式论C.艺术行动论 D.艺术功能论11.西方创立“美学”学科的美学家是( )A.柏拉图 B.狄德罗C.鲍姆加登 D.黑格尔12.康德在《判断力批判》中提出崇高对象的特征是( )A.形式 B.无形式C.质地 D.体积13.亚里士多德对古希腊的悲剧艺术进行系统理论总结的著作是( )A.《诗学》 B.《理想国》C.《诗艺》 D.《论崇高》14.王国维在《人间词话》中指出“明月照积雪”、“大江流日夜”、“长河落日圆”等境界,可谓“千古壮观”。这种审美形态是( )A.崇高 B.悲剧C.伟大 D.荒诞15.在西方早期,狭义的美主要指的是( )A.崇高 B.滑稽C.优美 D.喜剧16.美育作为一门独立学科正式确立标志的著作是( )A.《论审美教育》 B.《谈美书简》C.《美育与人生》 D.《审美教育书简》17.把美育目标的实现称为“消融渣滓”的是( )A.孔子 B.孟子C.朱熹 D.柳宗元18.强调小说具有熏、浸、刺、提“四种美育”功能的是( )A.王夫之 B.叶燮C.梁启超 D.鲁迅19.西方美学史上,提出“寓教于乐”原则的是( )A.柏拉图 B.亚里士多德C.贺拉斯 D.席勒20.美学的哲学基础应是马克思主义的( )A.实践存在论 B.实践论C.存在论 D.辩证法二、多项选择题(本大题共5小题,每小题2分,共10分)在每小题列出的五个备选项中至少有两个是符合题目要求的,请将其代码填写在题后的括号内。错选、多选、少选或未选均无分。21.下列美学家中,属于经验主义一派的有( )A.荷加兹 B.哈奇生C.休谟 D.康德E.谢林22.“有意味的形式说”的主要缺陷包括( )A.脱离主体的现实情感 B.脱离人类的具体实践C.脱离社会的历史发展 D.脱离人类文化心理结构的历史演进E.摆脱了形式主义和神秘主义23.以下属于西方画论话语的有( )A.线条的质感与韵律 B.形式的象征性和组合关系C.色彩的情感性和色彩间的组合关系 D.色调与主题的统一E.画得确切与真实24.美学的研究对象应当包括( )A.美 B.审美现象C.审美活动 D.审美关系E.艺术25.喜剧的次级形态有( )A.滑稽 B.讽刺C.幽默 D.荒诞E.可笑三、名词解释题(本大题共4小题,26、27小题每题3分,28、29小题每题4分,共14分)26.审美直观27.审美理想28.崇高29.美育代宗教说四、简答题(本大题共5小题,每小题6分,共30分)30.简述审美关系的特征。31.简述审美经验的动态过程。32.简述意象的物态化和物化。33.悲剧的基本特征。34.美育的基本特点。五、论述题(本大题共2小题,35小题14分,36小题12分,共26分)35.为什么说审美活动是人最具本质性的存在方式?36.举例说明艺术中技巧的审美价值。

<美学>换教材了.以前的考试题只能做为参考.

美学自考2020真题答案百度云

网上百度文库里查找一下希望回答能够帮助你你也可以追问

链接:

2020年自考备考已经开始,自考历年真题对考生来说是十分宝贵的资料,考前每道真题至少要做1-2遍才会事半功倍。网给大家整理了 2019年10月自考《美学》真题及答案解析 ,一起来试试吧!

解析

A.细雨鱼儿出,微风燕子斜

B.寒波海澹起,白鸟悠悠下

C.行到水穷处,坐看云起时

D.落日照大旗,马鸣风萧萧

【答案解析】

崇高艺术在内容上都反映了自然和社会中雄伟壮阔的事物,王国维在《人间词话》中指出:“明月照积雪”“大江流日夜”“中天悬明月”“长河落日圆”“此种境界,可为千古壮观”。这里他从外在形式上分析了崇高的内涵,也就是表现为语言的奔放、色影的强烈、画面的雄阔、线条的粗犷等特点。故而选D。参见教材P119。

【 点击咨询>>  】

自考一方面是需要结合历年考题,多做题练习,另一方面也可以买一些视频课程,跟着老师有重点的复习,可以来这边看看,听听试听课

美学自考真题及答案百度云

自考题库及答案可以登录查找。作为专门的在线教育平台,的备考指导栏目就专门收录有自考的历年真题和模拟练习题,还有备考的知识点指导。点击底部咨询官网。 自考答卷时注意事项: 一、正确填写信息 在拿到试卷后不要急着先看试题,而是正确填写好自己的姓名、准考证号以及座位号,不写或者错写座位号的,考试成绩作0分处理,所以大家一定要注意。另外还要检查试卷是否齐全,检查一下卷面印刷是否清楚。如果发现有漏页,错页或印刷字迹模糊的情况,一定要及时向监考老师提出,以便及时得到调换。 二、仔细审题 大家在解答每一道题之前一定要仔细审题,弄清题意,否则很容易就会答错或者答偏。在审题时也要注意不能操之过急,特别是形式上类似以前曾经做过的题目,要特别注意,不要想当然的认为是一样的题目就按原来的思路下笔解答,结果导致文不对题,该拿的分没有拿到。文字过长的题目一定要稳下心来仔细阅读。 三、认真答题 大家在答题时可以根据答题的时间分配,按照试卷编排的程序一题一题地往下答;也可以采用先易后难的方法,遇到难题或一时答不出来的题目先跳过去,最后再回头答难题。但是无论选择哪种答题方式,在做完全部试题以后都要进行检查,在检查时最好重新审题,以免出现误答和漏答的情况。 四、答题要有逻辑有条理 建议大家在答题时可以分点分段来写,做到完整准确,条理清楚,要点突出,书写规范。有计算题的要把计算过程清楚地反映在答题过程中,一步一步解答,这样有利于成绩的评定。另外在答题时也要注意字迹一定要清楚,做到卷面整洁。 五、不留空白 最后建议大家最好避免提前离开考场,在答完试卷之后进行反复核查,对于没有把握的答题以宏观角度去阐述,自圆其说。尽量做完所有题目,不要留空白题。自考/成考有疑问、不知道如何总结自考/成考考点内容、不清楚自考/成考报名当地政策,点击底部咨询官网,免费领取复习资料:

  •   索引序列
  •   自考英美文学真题答案百度云
  •   英美文学自考真题答案百度云
  •   美学自考真题答案百度云
  •   美学自考2020真题答案百度云
  •   美学自考真题及答案百度云
  •   返回顶部

自考地区