高级英语课件TheSadYoungMen.ppt
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1、The Sad Young Men,Rod W.Horton and Herbert W.Edwards,Lesson 5,Teaching Plan,Teaching Objectives,To enable the students to gain some basic knowledge of the American literature and history about“the lost generation”.To enable the students to know the writing style of a literary commentary.,Teaching Fo
2、cus,Background information about Hemingway and FitzgeraldCommon features of the lost generation The literary theory of writing a literary commentary,Teaching Methods,Teacher-oriented teaching methodStudent-oriented teaching methodThe elicited method,Teaching Procedure,.Introductory Remarks.Backgroun
3、d Information.Learning Focus.Key words and Expressions.Explanation of the Text,.Division of the Text.The Writing Style.Rhetorical Devices.Exercises,Introductory Remarks,.Introductory Remarks,describing a special group of people,who were shocked and uprooted uproot for a time but never“lost”the Revol
4、t of the Younger Generation:the most interesting aspect in the Twenties in the 20th century,a logical outcome of conditions at that time:the aftermath of WWII and rising of AmericaIt started with WWI,which whipped up the energies of the youth and created an enlistment craze.,after having a good tast
5、e of the war,they returned home only to find that:they could adjust themselves no more to their hometownthey rebelled in the form of completely overthrowing the Victorian gentility,which in itself was obsolescent in a society highly industrialized.,young intellectuals flocked to live in Greenwich Vi
6、llage,a place well known for Bohemianism and eccentricitynon-intellectuals began to imitate their manners,which was also a way for the youth to escape their social responsibilities,many young intellectuals went to live in Europe as expatriates,due to their imitation and Americas materialismalmost al
7、l of them returned within a few years out of homesickness,tempered by their life of expatriation,they produced the liveliest,freshest and most stimulating works in Americas literary history,Detailed Study of the Text,.Background Information,The Sad Young Men and the Lost Generationthe former:the tit
8、le of F.Fitzgeralds novel All the Sad Young Men the latter:a remark made by Gertrude Stein who once said to Ernest Hemingway,“Oh,you are all of you a lost generation”.,They were both applied to disillusioned young intellectuals,who were cut off from the old values and yet unable to come to terms wit
9、h the new era after the WWI.So they rebelled against social conventions by a like of despair or cynical hedonism.,Beat Generationgroup of American writers of the 1950s whose writing expressed profound dissatisfaction with contemporary American society and endorsed an alternative set of valuesThe ter
10、m sometimes is used to refer to those who embraced the ideas of these writers.,Prohibition the forbidding by law of the manufacture,transportation,and sale of alcoholic liquors for beverage purposes;specifically in the U.S.,the period(19201933)of prohibition by Federal law,The term Beat Generation w
11、as first used by Kerouac in the late 1940s.despair over the beaten state of the individual in mass society and belief in the beatitude,or blessedness,of the natural world and in the restorative powers of the beat of jazz music and poetry,.Learning Focus,Common features of the lost generationThe reas
12、ons of the emergence and prosperity of the lost generationThe information and the works of the writers with the lost generation,.Key words and Expressions,nostalgic(adj.):looking for something far away or long ago or for former happy circumstanceillicit(adj.):not allowed by law,custom,rule,etc:unlaw
13、ful;prohibited,thrill(n.):tremor of excitementspeakeasy(n.):slang a place where alcoholic drinks are sold illegally,esp.such a place in the USduring Prohibition,denunciation(n.):the act of denouncingamour(n.):a love affair,esp.of an illicit or secret naturesedan(n.):an enclosed automobile with two o
14、r four doorsand two wide seatsfront and rear,naughty(adj.):improper,obscenejazzy(adj.):(a party)playing jazz musicflask-toting(adj.):always carrying a small flask filled with whisky or other strong liquor,sheik(n.):(Americanism)a masterful man to whom women are supposed to be irresistibly attractedv
15、agary(n.):an odd,eccentric,or unexpected action or bit of conduct,flapper(n.):colloq(in the 1920s)a young woman considered bold and unconventional in actions and dressperspective(n.):a specific point of view in understanding or judging things or events,esp.one that shows them in their true relations
16、 to one another,jazzmad(adj.):blindly and foolishly fond of jazz musicaftermath(n.):a result or consequence,esp.an unpleasant oneprovincial(adj.):narrow,limited like that of rural provinces,gentility(n.):he quality of being genteel;now,specifically,excessive or affected refinement and eleganceaggres
17、siveness(n.):bold and energetic pursuit of ones end,enterprise,bustle(v.):hurry busily or with much fuss and bothermedium(n.):environmentcatalytic(adj.):acting as the stimulus in bringing about or hastening a result,precipitate(v.):throw headlong;cause to happen before expected,needed;bring onobsole
18、scent(adj.):in the process of becoming obsolete,mores(n.):customs,esp.the fixed or traditional customs of a society,often acquiring the force of lawsophistication(n.):the state of being artificial,worldlywise,urbane,etc,faddishness(n.):the following of fadshectic(adj.):characterized by excitement,ru
19、sh,confusion,etcgaiety(n.):cheerfulness;the state of being gay,orgy(n.):any wild riotous licentious merry-making;debaucheryspree(n.):a lively,noisy frolicreveler(n.):a person who makes merry or is noisily festive,sober(v.):make or become serious,solemnprolong(v.):lengthen or extend in time or space,
20、stalemate(n.):any unresolved situation in which further action is impossible or useless;deadlockinsolence(n.):being boldly disrespectful in speech-or behavior;impudence,belligerent(adj.):at war;of waradventurousness(n.):being fond of adventure;willingness to take chancesstrenuous(adj.):vigorous,ardu
21、ous,zealous,etc,perversion(n.):a perverting or being perverted;corruptionjingoism(n.):chauvinism characterized by an aggressive。threatening,warlike foreign policy,fracas(n.):a noisy fight 0r loud quarrel;brawlinfantry(n.):foot soldiers collectively;esp.that branch of an army consisting of soldiers t
22、rained and equipped to fight chiefly on foot,harass(v.):trouble,worryor torment,as with cares,debts,repeated questions,etc.,sergeant(n.):noncommissioned officer of the fifth grade.ranking above a corporal and below a staff sergeant in the U.S.Army and Marine Corps;generally,any of the noncommissione
23、d officers in the U.S.armed forces with sergeant as part of the title of their rank,draft(n.):the choosing or taking of an individual or individuals from a group for some special purpose,esp.for compulsory military servicecarnival(n.):a reveling or time of revelry;festivity;merrymaking,contingent(n.
24、):a share,proportion,or quota,as of troopsships。laborers,delegates,etcbombast(n.):talk or writing that sounds grand or important but has little meaning;pompous language,recession(n.):a temporary falling off()f business activity during a period when such activity has been generally increasingwhip up:
25、rouse,excite,outmoded(adj.):no longer in fashion or accepted;obsoletesodden(adj.):dull or stupefied,as from overindulgence in liquor,dubious(adj.):rousing suspicion;feeling doubt;skepticalflout(n.):be scornful;show contempt;jeer;scoffconflagration(n.):a big,destructive fire,fast(adj.):living in a re
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