Title: American RealismNovelists
1American RealismNovelists
- Li Wenji, Zhu Defen, Zhou Yujun
2The literature of Realism(1865-1918)
- 1. Reasons civil war, social development. People
sought to describe the wide range of American
experience and to present the subtleties of human
personality, to portray characters who were less
simply all good or all bad. - 2. Realism originated in France. A literary
doctrine that called for reality and truth in
the depiction of ordinary life. - 3. American realism, different from European
realism, is more varied and individualistic.
3- 4. Development of American realism first appear
in the literature of local color, arbiter
William Dean Howells. He defined realism as
nothing more and nothing less than the truthful
treatment of material. - 5. Important writers Henry James, Mark Twain.
4Literary Characteristics
- 1. Feminist movement. Emily Dickinson, Harriet
Beecher Stowe, Sarah Orne Jewett, Kate Chopin,
Edith Wharton, Ellen Glasgow, Willa Cather. - 2. Decline of American Romanticism, Walt Whitman,
Leaves of Grass. - 3. Appearance of American realism
- 4. Appearance of American naturalism.
5Realism
- a mode of writing that gives the impression of
recording or reflecting faithfully an actual way
of life. The term refers, both to a literary
method based on detailed accuracy of description
and to a more general attitude that rejects
idealization, escapism, and other extravagant
qualities of romance in favor of recognizing
soberly the actual problems of life. Realism is
not a direct or simple reproduction of reality
but a system of conventions producing a lifelike
illusion of some real world outside the text, by
processes of selection, exclusion, description or
manners of addressing the reader.
6William Dean Howells(18371920)
7Major Works
- A Modern Instance (1882)
- The Rise of Silas Lapham (1885)
- Indian Summer (1886)
- A Hazard of New Fortunes (1890)
8Some Comments
- Howells believes that the smiling aspects of
American life were the most prevalent and the
most typical, and that American life was such
that novelists could confine themselves to what
would not offend the innocence of a young girl,
and should therefore do so. - He wrote too much, and sometimes for an
immediate publicmore than thirty novels or
novelettes, several volumes of short stories, and
thirty-one dramas.
9- Although Howells, James, and Twain all worked for
realism, there were obvious differences between
them. In thematic term, for instance, James wrote
mostly for the upper reaches of American society,
and Howells concerned himself chiefly with middle
class life, whereas Mark Twain dealt largely with
the lower strata of society.
10Samuel Clemens (18351910)
11Chronology
- 1835 born in Florida, Missouri
- 1839 family settles in Hannibal, Missouri
- 1847 father dies Twain leaves school, becomes
an apprentice to a printer, and works for brother
Orion's newspaper - 1852 several of his sketches were published,
including "The Dandy Frightening the Squatter. - 1953 moves to St. Louis, New York and
Philadelphia. - 1854 He visited Washington, DC in February.
- 1856 trains as steamboat pilot under Horace
Bixby and lives experiences recounted in Life on
the Mississippi
12- 1858 receives steamboat piloting license
- 1861 fights briefly for Confederates and then
travels by coach to Carson City and lives
experiences recounted in Roughing It - 1862 works for Virginia City Territorial
Enterprise - 1863 adopts the pseudonym Mark Twain
- 1865 "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras
County" gives him national recognition - 1869 travels to Europe and the Holy Land and
lives experiences recounted in The Innocents
Abroad
13- 1869 The Innocents Abroad
- 1870 marries Olivia and settles in Hartford,
Connecticut - 1872 Roughing It
- 1894 Paige typesetting machine, in which Twain
has invested almost 250,000, fails after going
bankrupt, he goes on a lecturing tour of the
world - 1894 Tom Sawyer Abroad
- 1894 The Tragedy of Pudd'nhead Wilson
- 1895 daughter Susy dies of meningitis
- 1895 suffers from bronchitis and rheumatism
14- 1896 Tom Sawyer, Detective
- 1896 Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc
- 1897 Following the Equator
- 1898 finishes paying off debts
- 1900 "The Man That Corrupted Hadleyburg"
- 1906 What is Man?
- 1907 Christian Science
- 1909 Is Shakespeare Dead?
- 1910 dies
15Major Works
- The Notorious Jumping Frog of Calaveras County
(1865) - The Innocents Abroad (1869)
- The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876)
- The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884)
- A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthurs Court
(1889) - The Tragedy of Puddnhead Wilson (1894)
- The Man That Corrupted Hadleyburg (1900)
- The Mysterious Stranger (1916)
16Interesting anecdotes
- Once, when he had the chance to invest in Bells
telephone, he declined. I was the burnt child,
he said, and I resisted all these temptations.
In spite of his doubts about the telephone,
Clemens was the first resident of Hartford to
have one installed in his home. He was also the
first American writer to use a telephone in a
story.
17- Just one year before his death, Clemens remarked
to Albert Bigelow Paine, his foremost biographer,
I came in with Harleys comet in 1835. It is
coming again next year, and I expect to go out
with it. It will be the greatest disappointment
of my life if I dont go with Halleys comet.
18The adventures of Huckleberry Finn
19Background
- The story is set in the USA, in the period of
about 1830/40. This was before the American Civil
War (1861-65) which was fought (mainly) over the
issue of slavery.
20Introduction and comments
- Huck, in flight from his murderous father, and
Nigger Jim, in flight from slavery, pilot their
raft thrillingly through treacherous waters,
surviving a crash with a steamboat, betrayal by
rogues, and the final threat from the
bourgeoisie. - Informing all this is the presence of the River,
described in palpable detail by Mark Twain, the
former steamboat pilot, who transforms it into a
richly metaphoric entity.
21Themes of Huck Finn
- Conflicts between nature and civilization,
between freedom and slavery - the natural potential for goodness of the human
being - equality between men
- mens initiation
- escapism
22Contributions
- Use of colloquial language
- No one knew better than Mark Twain the various
uses of dialogue and the importance of dialogue
to journalistic writing, yarns, and fiction. Good
dialogue serves three purposes (1) It can make a
character real to the reader by reproducing the
way he talks and by showing through what he says
the kind of person he is. (2) It can provide
background information that the reader needs to
know in order to understand a particular episode.
And (3) it can advance the action of the story. - Robert Penn Warren noted. 'It is a language
capable of poetry.'
23Preface
- IN this book a number of dialects are used, to
wit the Missouri negro dialect the extremest
form of the backwoods Southwestern dialect the
ordinary "Pike County" dialect and four modified
varieties of this last. The shadings have not
been done in a haphazard fashion, or by
guesswork but painstakingly, and with the
trustworthy guidance and support of personal
familiarity with these several forms of speech.
24Artistic Features
- First, he possessed utter clarity of style. He
evolved a style so clear and economical that
other contemporary styles seemed slightly
archaic, rusty, and redundant. - Second, he had a supreme command of vernacular
American English. Before him there had been only
American dialect after him there was an American
language. American dialect had been used very
well by some other writers, but in their hands it
was surrounded and conditioned by a literary
language that wittingly or unwittingly patronized
it. Mark Twain removed the surrounding frame.
25- Third, there was Mark Twains humor, which
resists explanation. In Twains time, humor,
though it was seen as greatly valuable, remained
clearly subordinate in the value system of the
19th century. The function of humor was to
entertain, but it was not expected to participate
in the high seriousness that Matthew Arnold and
his age asked of literature. But Twain liberated
humor, raising it to high arta liberation that
parallels his creation of vernacular American
English. Instead of subduing his humor to
seriousness, twain invaded the citadels of
seriousness and freed the humor held captive
there.
26Some more comments
- Ernest Hemingway once said all American
literature comes from one book Huckleberry Finn. - I believe he wrote that book(Huck Finn) in a
little hut on a hill on his farm, Anderson said,
imaginatively. It poured out of him. I fancy
that at night he came down from his hill stepping
like a kinga splendid playboy, playing with
rivers and men, ending on the Mississippi, on the
broad river that is the great artery flowing out
of the heart of the land.
27Local Color
- Style of writing marked by the presentation of
the features and peculiarities of a particular
locality and its inhabitants. The name is given
especially to a type of American literature that
in its most characteristic form made its
appearance just after the civil war.
28- Set during the California gold rush, Bret Hartes
The Luck of Roaring Camp(1868), with its use of
miners dialect and western background, is among
the early local-color stories. Many authors first
achieved success with vivid descriptions of their
own localities Mark Twain described Mississippi
River life, Sarah Orne Jewett wrote of New
England, Kate Chopin described the deep south.
29Tall Tale
- Narrative that depicts the extravagantly
exaggerated wild adventures of North American
folk heroes. The tall tale is essentially an oral
form of entertainment the audience appreciates
the imaginative invention rather than the literal
meaning of the tales. Associated with the lore of
the American frontier, tall tales often explain
the origins of lakes, mountains, and canyons
they are spun around legendary heroes.
30- One of the few examples of the tall tale not
native to the United States is found in the
German collection Baron Munchausens narratives
of His Marvellous Travels and Compaigns in Russia
(1785) by the German scholar and adventurer R. E.
Raspe.
31Exerpts from Tom Sawyer (chapter xxi, p51)
- VACATION was approaching. The schoolmaster,
always severe, grew severer and more exacting
than ever, for he wanted the school to make a
good showing on "Examination" day. His rod and
his ferule were seldom idle now--at least among
the smaller pupils. Only the biggest boys, and
young ladies of eighteen and twenty, escaped
lashing. Mr. Dobbins' lashings were very vigorous
ones, too for although he carried, under his
wig, a perfectly bald and shiny head, he had only
reached middle age, and there was no sign of
feebleness in his muscle.
32- As the great day approached, all the tyranny that
was in him came to the surface he seemed to take
a vindictive pleasure in punishing the least
shortcomings. The consequence was, that the
smaller boys spent their days in terror and
suffering and their nights in plotting revenge.
They threw away no opportunity to do the master a
mischief. But he kept ahead all the time. The
retribution that followed every vengeful success
was so sweeping and majestic that the boys always
retired from the field badly worsted. At last
they conspired together and hit upon a plan that
promised a dazzling victory.
33- They swore in the sign-painter's boy, told him
the scheme, and asked his help. He had his own
reasons for being delighted, for the master
boarded in his father's family and had given the
boy ample cause to hate him. The master's wife
would go on a visit to the country in a few days,
and there would be nothing to interfere with the
plan the master always prepared himself for
great occasions by getting pretty well fuddled,
and the sign-painter's boy said that when the
dominie had reached the proper condition on
Examination Evening he would "manage the thing"
while he napped in his chair then he would have
him awakened at the right time and hurried away
to school.
34- In the fulness of time the interesting occasion
arrived. At eight in the evening the schoolhouse
was brilliantly lighted, and adorned with wreaths
and festoons of foliage and flowers. The master
sat throned in his great chair upon a raised
platform, with his blackboard behind him. He was
looking tolerably mellow. Three rows of benches
on each side and six rows in front of him were
occupied by the dignitaries of the town and by
the parents of the pupils.
35- To his left, back of the rows of citizens, was a
spacious temporary platform upon which were
seated the scholars who were to take part in the
exercises of the evening rows of small boys,
washed and dressed to an intolerable state of
discomfort rows of gawky big boys
snowbanks(?????) of girls and young ladies clad
in lawn and muslin and conspicuously conscious of
their bare arms, their grandmothers' ancient
trinkets, their bits of pink and blue ribbon and
the flowers in their hair. All the rest of the
house was filled with non-participating scholars.
36- The exercises began. A very little boy stood up
and sheepishly recited, "You'd scarce expect one
of my age to speak in public on the stage,"
etc.--accompanying himself with the painfully
exact and spasmodic gestures which a machine
might have used--supposing the machine to be a
trifle out of order. But he got through safely,
though cruelly scared, and got a fine round of
applause when he made his manufactured bow and
retired.
37- Tom Sawyer stepped forward with conceited
confidence and soared into the unquenchable and
indestructible "Give me liberty or give me death"
speech, with fine fury and frantic gesticulation,
and broke down in the middle of it. A ghastly
stage-fright seized him, his legs quaked under
him and he was like to choke. True, he had the
manifest sympathy of the house but he had the
house's silence, too, which was even worse than
its sympathy. The master frowned, and this
completed the disaster. Tom struggled awhile and
then retired, utterly defeated. There was a weak
attempt at applause, but it died early
38- Now the master, mellow almost to the verge of
geniality, put his chair aside, turned his back
to the audience, and began to draw a map of
America on the blackboard, to exercise the
geography class upon. But he made a sad business
of it with his unsteady hand, and a smothered
titter rippled over the house. He knew what the
matter was, and set himself to right it. He
sponged out lines and remade them but he only
distorted them more than ever, and the tittering
was more pronounced.
39- He threw his entire attention upon his work, now,
as if determined not to be put down by the mirth.
He felt that all eyes were fastened upon him he
imagined he was succeeding, and yet the tittering
continued it even manifestly increased. And well
it might. There was a garret above, pierced with
a scuttle over his head and down through this
scuttle came a cat, suspended around the haunches
by a string she had a rag tied about her head
and jaws to keep her from mewing as she slowly
descended she curved upward and clawed at the
string, she swung downward and clawed at the
intangible air.
40- The tittering rose higher and higher--the cat was
within six inches of the absorbed teacher's
head--down, down, a little lower, and she grabbed
his wig with her desperate claws, clung to it,
and was snatched up into the garret in an instant
with her trophy still in her possession! And how
the light did blaze abroad from the master's bald
pate--for the sign-painter's boy had GILDED it! - That broke up the meeting. The boys were avenged.
Vacation had come.
41Henry James (18431916)
42Major Works
- The American (1877)
- Daisy Miller (1879)
- The Portrait of a Lady (1881)
- The Turn of the Screw (1898)
- The Wing of the Dove (1902)
- The Ambassadors (1903)
- The Golden Bowl (1904)
- The Art of Fiction (1884)
43International theme
- During his lifetime his fame rested largely upon
his handling of his major fictional theme, the
international theme the meeting of America and
Europe, American innocence in contact and
contrast with European decadence, and its moral
and psychological complications. For the American
it was a process of progression from inexperience
to experience, from innocence to knowledge and
maturity
44Style and Subject Matter
- Refined, subtle, intricate, later obscure,
costive, with long and complex sentences.
detailed psychological depiction capable of
reproducing every nuances of the fine moral
intelligence or expressing the subtlest meanings.
Single point of view, scenic progression. - He describes upper-class unmarried women involved
in various courtship rituals and marriage rites
with upper-class men at the private level, and
records the social splits that separate males
from females in the nations public life.
45Theory on Fiction, The Art of Fiction 1884
- Novelan art form of penetrating analysis of
individual, confronting society, chronicles of
the psychological perceptions that James himself
defined as the highest form of experience. The
only obligation to which in advance we may hold a
novel is that it be interesting. A novel, in its
broadest definition, is a personal, direct
impression of life that, to begin with,
constitutes its value, which is greater or less
according to the intensity of the impression. But
here will be no intensity at all, and therefore
no value, unless there is freedom to feel and
say. The reason for the existence of novel is
that it tries to show life. the artistic field
should include all life, all emotions, all
experiences, all interpretation. Reality is the
biggest merit of novel.
46On Novelist
- Novelists should have absolute freedom in
creating. They must be good at experiencing life.
They must predict the unknown future from the
known reality. They must acquire a certain
knowledge of the flexibility of novel. He points
out that contents must be in harmony with form
and compared their close relationship to that
thread and needle. - Novelist and world. He also advocates insight and
depiction of mens inner world and advised
writers to catch the complexity of psychological
activities, arguing its not enough to describe
the outside details. There is one point at which
the moral sense and the artistic sense lie very
near together
47The Portrait of a Lady
- Previewing questions
- 1. Why did Isabel choose Osmond?
- 2. Why did she decide to return to her unhappy
marriage at the end of the novel? - 3. Isabels characters.
- 4. How did James show the conflicts between
American and European cultures? - 5. Features in style.
- 6. Meaning of the title.
- 7. Themes of the novel.
48Individualism
- The novel is about how an American girl lose her
naivety gradually, influenced by sophisticated
European life. It is a rich and subtle study of
what it would mean for a woman to practice the
absolute self-determination, based on a
completely individual nonconformist personal
judgment, which Emerson had preached. This
exploration of transcendental individualism as a
guide to life may be compared with Melvilles
exploration of the same idea in his creation of
captain Ahab. There Melville examined the effect
such conduct might have when adopted by a
powerful and ruthless man. James,is much more
concerned with the effect such an attitude may
have on his heroine herself. Isabel Archers
impact on the world around her is comparatively
unimportant but the result in her own life is as
devastating as Ahabs, though not as violent, or
perhaps, as final.
49Evil
- Madame Merle, Gilbert Osmand are James
personification of aspects of evil. This
belatedness of Evil, this understanding of it as
a matter of texts and letters, ultimately became
James great contribution to the imagination of
evil. It leads James to the strategy of
reasserting its importance by questioning it,
challenging it actively, not asserting flatly its
existence but making it a competitor in a world
acknowledged to be skeptical of it.
50Freedom
- The work is based on Miltons epic Paradise
Lost. This is a novel of the fortunate fall.
Just like in Miltons poem, everything is pointed
toward a defining of freedom. The novel certainly
concerns the unexpectedly far-reaching
consequences of a characters inadequacies of
perception. But here we have a full development
of necessity and freedom, circumstances and free
will, in which each, bewilderingly, may take on
the appearance of the other. And here alone,
until James very last works will this freedom be
achieved, precisely because a character will
learn the deep comprehension of necessity.
51O. Henry(William Sydney Porter) (1862-1910)
52I. Biography
- O. Henry (1862 - 1910)
- Born September 11, 1862Greensboro, North
Carolina, United States Died June 5, 1910New
York City, New York, United States - Famous quotations by O Henry
- Turn up the lights - I don't want to go home in
the dark. - Write what you like there is no other rule.
- Life is sobs, sniffles, and smiles, with sniffles
predominating. - If man knew how women pass the time when they are
alone, they'd never marry.
53O.Henrys Childhood
- When William was three, his mother died of
pneumonia. Then he, his father and brothers moved
to live with his grandmother who raised the
children and undertook their education. William
was an avid reader, but at the age of fifteen he
left school and then worked in a drug store and
on a Texas ranch. For extra money William worked
as a pharmacist at his uncle's drugstore. In 1881
O. Henry got his pharmacist's license.
54In 1887 he married Athol Estes Roach. They had
one daughter. Became a bank teller.
- Just before her death, wife Athol Estes Roach
posed with William Sydney Porter and daughter
Margaret.
55In 1894 he bought a comic magazine and changed it
into a short story magazine called The Rolling
Stone. Began heavy drinking.
- Preserved copy of The Rolling Stone,exhibited in
restored O. Henry House on Dolorosa St.
56- In 1894, cash was found to have gone missing from
the First National Bank in Austin, where Porter
had worked as a bank teller. When he was called
back to Austin to stand trial, Porter fled to
Honduras. Little is known about Porter's stay in
Central America. It is said that he met one Al
Jennings and rambled in South America and Mexico
on the proceeds of Jennings' robbery. After
hearing news that his wife was dying, he returned
in 1897 to Austin.
57- Being locked up for embezzlement freed him to
write, launching William Sydney Porter on a
brilliant but boozy career as O. Henry - In 1897 O.Henry was convicted of embezzling
money, although there has been much debate over
his actual guilt. He entered a penitentiary in
1898 at Columbus, Ohio, where worked night shifts
at the jail pharmacy and started to send in short
stories to magazines.
58How he acquired the pseudonym?
- After doing three years of the five year
sentence, Porter emerged from the prison in 1901
and changed his name to O. Henry. According to
some sources, he acquired the pseudonym from a
warder called Orrin Henry. It also could be an
abbreviation of the name of a French pharmacist,
Eteinne-Ossian Henry, found in the U.S.
Dispensatory(??), a reference work Porter used
when he was in the prison pharmacy.
59His last years were shadowed by alcoholism, ill
health, and financial problems.
- He was a fast writer, like the Russian Anton
Checkhov (1860-1904), but drinking on average two
quarts of whiskey daily did not improve the
quality of his work. In 1907 O. Henry married
Sara Lindsay Coleman, also born in Greensboro.
The marriage was not happy, and they separated a
year later. O. Henry died of cirrhosis of the
liver(???) on June 5, 1910, in New York. He was
found dead in the Caledonia Hotel with many empty
liquor bottles stashed under his bed and he was
only 47 years old at the time.
60There are many things that O. Henry tried to keep
a secret while he was alive, such as his health
problems
- He had diabetes, cirrhosis of the liver and was a
heavy drinker. Also, while William Sydney Porter
was in jail he changed his pen name several times
before settling on O. Henry. That was probably so
that nobody would know that he had been in jail.
But his past history never stopped him from
writing some of the greatest short stories of all
times, remembered for their suspense and unusual
twists.
61- In 1918 the O. Henry Memorial Awards were
established to be given annually to the best
magazine stories, with the winners and leading
contenders to be published in an annual volume. - O. Henry Museum
- Museum Hours1200 noon - 500 p.m. Wednesday -
SundayClosed Monday and Tuesday409 East Fifth
StreetAustin, Texas 78701(512)472-1903
62II. Professional Life
- O. Henry is one of the most popular and widely
known American short story writers of the
twentieth century. He is best known for his
typically brief stories, conversational openings,
plots hinging on improbable coincidence, and
variations on the surprise ending.
63- Although by profession O. Henry was a pharmacist
and bank teller, he began writing even as he held
these jobs. Even when he was in jail, he
continued writing and submitting stories to
various magazines. His first work, Whistling
Dick's Christmas Stocking (1899), appeared in
McClure's Magazine. The stories of adventure in
the U.S. Southwest and in Central America gained
an immediately success among readers.
64- When out of jail, O. Henry moved to New York City
to start writing full- time for Ainslee's
Magazine in 1902. He began publishing stories in
many periodicals under variations of his own
name. He quickly gained fame under the name O.
Henry. He then signed a contract with The New
York Sunday World and wrote weekly short
stories. Writing for the World, which had a
large circulation, he increased his popularity.
Many other magazines were very interested in
publishing his works.
65He was said to live in hotels for inspiration.
- He lived in many hotels including the Chelsea
Hotel, the Marty and the Caledonia. He was said
to live in hotels for inspiration. Henry would
love to sit in restaurants and bars for hours and
just watch the people. The people gave him ideas
for stories, which were mainly about life in the
city. He would observe their situations and then
write various fictional stories about them. He
would also give out money to panhandlers and
prostitutes, explaining that they gave him ideas
for stories.
The Chelsea Hotel, one of the many hotels in
which O. Henry lived in New York City.
66- The year of 1904 was the busiest and most
productive year of O. Henry's writing life. He
assembled all of his short stories into a book
named Cabbages and Kings. Two years later he
collected another group of stories under the name
The Four Million, including his well-known
stories The Gift of the Magi and The Furnished
Room.
67O. Henry's stories are often divided into five
groups according to their setting
- the American South ("The Third Ingredient"), the
West ("The Moment of Victory"), Central America,
prison and New York City ("Gift of the Magi"). - The most well-known stories written by O. Henry
often took place in New York City. O. Henry
wrote a total of one-hundred and forty stories
about the early twentieth-century city life. His
complete works comprise two hundred and
seventy-seven stories.
68After O. Henry's death his work was criticized by
some.
- A book critic, Katharine Fulerton Gerould,
believed his stories to be, "Perniciouswhile
other critics noted how quickly O. Henry stories
seemed to date, and his trademark surprise
endings were called overly sentimental and
predictable" . Most people still believe his
stories to be interesting and enjoyable to read.
O. Henry deeply influenced much of the short
story writing for half of the twentieth century.
69III. O. Henry's Famous Works
- Cabbages and Kings (1904)?????
- The Four Million (1906) ???
- The Gift of the Magi ?????
- The Cop and the Anthem ??????
- A Service of Love ????
- Mammon and the Archer ?????
- An Unfinished Story ??????
- The Furnished Room ???????
- The Romance of a Busy Broker ?????????
70- The Trimmed Lamp (1907) ?????The Last Leaf
(1907) ??????? - The Gentle Grafter (1908) ?????Conscience in
Art ???? - The Ransom of the Red Chief ??????
- Sixes and Sevens (1911) ????
- Rolling Stones (1912) ??
71(No Transcript)
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counted it. One dollar and eighty- seven cents.
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74- ?? ????,?????????????????????,???????????????
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?????????,????????,??????????????????.???????
?????,??????????????????????????????? - From??????????????????? ??? ???????? 2001
?5 ??17 ??3 ?
75American Naturalism pessimistic realism
- 1. Naturalism came from France.
- 2. Reasons civil war, social upheavals,
Darwinism, hypothesized that over the millennia,
man had evolved from lower forms of life. Human
were special, not because God had created them in
His image, as the Bible taught, but because they
had successfully adapted to changing
environmental conditions and had passed on their
survival making characteristic genetically. Men
were dominated by the irresistible forces of
evolution. Men were conceived as more or less
complex combination of inherited attributes and
habits conditioned by social and economic forces,
by heredity and environment.
76- 3. Features of naturalist writing A. naturalist
writers turned literary creation into a
mechanical record of society, in a way of
attempting to achieve extreme objectivity and
frankness. They never made comments on the
characters and their behaviors. B. The characters
were often figures of low social and economic
classes, with animal desire, some physically
strong but weak-willed figures. There were also
some healthy and lofty persons, but their ending
were miserable. C. the viewpoint from which the
writers understood problems was amoral, or
non-moral. They stressed men had no free will,
their lives were controlled by heredity and
environment. D. their material was infinite.
77- 4. American Naturalist writers Stephen Crane,
Frank Norris, Jack London, Henry Adams, Theodore
Dreiser.
78Naturalism
- A more deliberate kind of realism in novels,
stories, and plays, usually involving a view of
human beings as passive victims of natural forces
and social environmentthe most significant work
of naturalism in English being Dreisers Sister
Carrie. (Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms)
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80Londons Childhood
- Born in 1876 on the Barbary Coast of San
Francisco - Raised by mother, Flora Wellman, and stepfather,
John London - Childhood marked by poverty unhappiness
81London at age 8 with dog Rollo
82London as a school boy
83- Became an avid reader at age 10 when an Oakland
librarian encouraged him to escape his life of
poverty through reading. - Bought his first sailboat at age 12loved to sail
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85YouthAdventure/Responsibility
- Dropped out of school at age 14 had series of
low-paying jobs - Seaman delivered paperssweatshop worked
in canneryfreight train hobo cleaned local
saloon
- Loved to listen to stories about the California
Gold Rush of 1849
86Forming Ideas/Attitudes
- Experiences that shaped Londons life and
attitudes - -oyster pirate -seal hunter in the
North Pacific -1894arrested jailed in
Niagara Falls for vagrancy -adopted
socialistic views
- Educated self by reading in public library
- Attended University of California at Berkeley
- Left school after 1 year to seek his fortune in
gold fields
87Adventure
- Traveled to Klondike Gold Rush in 1897
- Spent one winter at Split-Up Island, near the
Stewart River - Did not find gold had a wealth of experiences he
would later use to write stories and books - Returned home to support himself and his family
by publishing his writin
88Jack London outfitted to travel to the gold
fields of the Klondike Gold Rush Photo actually
taken in at Truckee, CA.
89Adult Life
- An avid sailorloved his boat, the Snark
90http//sunsite.berkeley.edu/London/jack.html
Aboard the Snark with friends
91Married twicetwo daughters
92- Bess MaddernLondons first wife
- Becky and Joan LondonLondons daughters
93Charmian London Jack Londons second wife
94London owned and loved a ranch in Sonoma Valley
95Next to my wife, the ranch is the dearest
thing in the world to me.
Jack London
96The Londons at home
97I believe the soil is our greatest asset.
Jack London
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99I hope to do two things with the ranchTo leave
the land better for my having beenTo enable 30
or 40 families to live happily on the ground that
was so impoverished when I bought it.
100- ..he was mighty good to us, and there never was
a man who came here who went away hungry. - Ranch workman
101Londonthe Author
- Began avidly writing in 1897
- He commonly spent 15 hours a day writing
- Daily quota of 1000 written words a day
- Became recognized as a talented successful
writer
102(No Transcript)
103Jack London wrote 50 books and 1,000 articles
between 1899 and 1916.
104The greatest story London ever told was the
story he lived. Alfred
Kazin Literary critic
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106By 1916, London was the highest-paid writer in
the country and the most widely read American
author in the world.
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108His literary works like The Road, written in
1907, inspired later writers like John Steinbeck
and Jack Kerouac.
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110The Londons several weeks prior to his death
111- Jack London died on November 22, 1916.
- A memorial for he and his second wife, Charmian
Kittredge, is located at Glen Ellen.
112One of the reasons Jack Londons popularity as
an author remainsso high in the world today is
because his life was as interesting as his
works.
113Jack London's "Credo"I would rather be ashes
than dust! I would rather that my spark should
burn out in a brilliant blaze than it should
be stifled by dry-rot.The function of man is to
live, not to exist. I shall not waste my days
trying to prolong them. I shall use my time.
114What others thought of Jack London
115No writer, unless it were Mark Twain, ever had a
more romantic life than Jack London. Ernest J.
Hopkins
116The story of his adventure-filled life still
intrigues readers of all ages and from all walks
of life. Russ Kingman
117London was described as a born teller of tales
who wrote as he livedin a hurry.
Howard Lachtman
118(No Transcript)
119Title The Call of the WildGenre Realistic
FictionSetting Late 1800s, Klondike
gold rush
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121 Call of the Wild--Comments
122In his story the Klondike became not only a
real country, but a territory of the mind where
his characters lived or died because of what they
had in them.
(Lachtman, 1984)
123He was paid three cents per word for the story,
which he had shortened by 5,000 words.
124London received a total of 2,750.00 for his
work.
125The book has never been out of print during the
last seventy-five years
http//www.parks.sonoma.net/JLPark.html
126The Call of the Wild is the greatest dog story
ever written and is at the same time a study of
one of the most curious and profound motives that
play hide-and-seek in the human soul.
Carl Sandburg
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128From the time The Call of the Wild caught the
imagination of the world in 1903, until his death
by a stroke and heart attack in 1916,
129his 51 books, hundreds of short stories, essays
and other writings had more newspaper coverage
than any other writer.
130I have everything to make me glad I am alive. I
am filled with dreams and mysteries.
Jack London
131Overall, he wrote 19 novels, 150 short stories, 3
plays, and many nonfictions. He even tried to
write poems.Selected works
- Novels
- The Call of the Wild(1903)
- The Sea Wolf (1904)
- White Fang(1906)
- The Iron Heel(1908)
- Martin Eden(1909)
- The Star Rover(1915)
- Nonfiction
- The People of The Abyss(1903)
- War of the Classes(1905)
- The Road(1907)
- John Barleyborn(1913)
132- The Sea Wolf
- Humphrey Van Weyden Ghost the ship
Wolf Larsen - ???????????, ??????????????????????,
?????????????????, ???????????,
??????????????????? ???19?????????????????????,
?????????????, ???????????????????????????????????
???????????????????? - (Irving Stone)
- I believe that life is a mess. It is like yeast,
a ferment, a thing that moves and may move for a
minute, an hourbut that in the end will cease to
move. The big eat the little that they may
continue to move, the strong eat the weak that
they may retain their strength. ( The Sea Wolf )
133- Martin Eden ( Londons most autobiography novel)
- Ruth Morse
- Perhaps Nietzsche had been right. Perhaps there
was no truth in anything, not truth is truth no
such thing as truth. - ( Martin Eden)
- Being unaware of the needs of others, of the
whole human collective, Martin Eden lived only
for himself, fought only for himself, and if you
please, died for himself. - (Jack London)
134- ????, ????
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- ?????, ???
- ?????????
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135Theodore Dreiser (18711945)
- Sister Carrie (1900)
- An American Tragedy (1925)
136Stephen Crane (18711900)
- Maggie A Girl of the Street (1893)
- The Red Badge of Courage (1895)
- The Open Boat
- The Blue Hotel
137Theodore Dreiser (18711945)
- Sister Carrie (1900)
- An American Tragedy (1925)
138Stephen Crane (18711900)
- Maggie A Girl of the Street (1893)
- The Red Badge of Courage (1895)
- The Open Boat
- The Blue Hotel
139Sarah Orne Jewett (18491909)
- The Country of the Pointed Firs (1896)
140Kate Chopin (18511904)
141Ambrose Bierce (18421914)
- Tales of Soldiers and Civilians (1891)
- The Devils Dictionary
- In June 1913, he had written to a friend Ive
seen the lastmy lastof California and of you.
Pretty soon I am going awayO very far away. I
have in mind a little valley in the heart of the
Andes, just wide enough for one
142(No Transcript)
143Henry Adams (18381918)
- The Education of Henry Adams (1907)
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