美国文学

彭荻、吴东京、苏鑫、陈文玉

目录

  • 1 Colonial period
    • 1.1 1.1 The soil of American Dream: Puritanism
    • 1.2 1.2Anne Bradstreet: Verse upon the Burning of Our House
    • 1.3 consolidation
  • 2 Revolutionary period
    • 2.1 Benjamin Franklin ;autobiography
  • 3 American Romanticism
    • 3.1 What is Romanticsim
    • 3.2 Washington Irving
    • 3.3 consolidation
  • 4 Summit of Romanticism – American Transcendentalism
    • 4.1 Four sources, appearance, feature, influence
    • 4.2 Ralph Waldo Emerson :Self-Reliance
    • 4.3 Henry David Thoreau: Walden
    • 4.4 consolidation
  • 5 Late Romanticism
    • 5.1 Nathaniel Hawthorne
    • 5.2 Herman Melville
    • 5.3 consolidation
  • 6 Romantic Poet
    • 6.1 Walter Whitman
    • 6.2 Emily Dickinson
    • 6.3 Comparison: Whitman vs. Dickinson
    • 6.4 consolidation
  • 7 American Gothic Literature
    • 7.1 Edgar Allen Poe
    • 7.2 Raven, The Masque of the Red Death
  • 8 The Age of Realism
    • 8.1 Background, characteristics
    • 8.2 Three Giants in Realistic Period
    • 8.3 Local colorism
    • 8.4 consolidation
  • 9 American Naturalism
    • 9.1 Background,features, significance
    • 9.2 Poems of naturalism
  • 10 The Modern Period
    • 10.1 The 1920s and imagist movement
    • 10.2 Robert Frost
  • 11 Novels in the 1920s
    • 11.1 I.F. Scott Fitzgerald
    • 11.2 II.Ernest Hemingway
  • 12 Southern Literature
    • 12.1 William Faulkner
    • 12.2 Barn Burning
  • 13 American Drama
    • 13.1 Eugene O'Neil
    • 13.2 Absurd Drama
  • 14 The Post-War Period: 50s & 60s
    • 14.1 Allen Ginsburg: Howl
    • 14.2 Sylvia Plath: Daddy (confessionist)
  • 15 Post-War American literature
    • 15.1 Salinger
    • 15.2 Joseph Heller
  • 16 Multi-ethic American Literature I
    • 16.1 Hughes:
    • 16.2 Toni Morrison
    • 16.3 Suzan-Lori Parks
  • 17 Multi-ethic American Literature II
    • 17.1 Maxine Hong Kingston:Women Warrior
    • 17.2 David Henry Hwang:  M.  Butterfly
Comparison: Whitman vs. Dickinson

I. Comparison: Whitman vs. Dickinson

1. Similarities:

(1) Thematically, they both extolled, in their different ways, an emergent America, its expansion, its individualism and its Americanness, their poetry being part of “American Renaissance”.

(2) Technically, they both added to the literary independence of the new nation by breaking free of the convention of the iambic pentameter and exhibiting a freedom in form unknown before: they were pioneers in American poetry.

2. differences:

(1) Whitman seems to keep his eye on society at large; Dickinson explores the inner life of the individual.

(2) Whereas Whitman is “national” in his outlook, Dickinson is “regional”.

(3) Dickinson has the “catalogue technique” (direct, simple style) which Whitman doesn’t have.