• 回答数

    4

  • 浏览数

    160

大飞猪猪
首页 > 期刊论文 > 小妇人有关论文查重

4个回答 默认排序
  • 默认排序
  • 按时间排序

粉红猪大大

已采纳

Alcott prefaces Little Women with an excerpt from John Bunyan’s seventeenth-century work The Pilgrim’s Progress, an allegorical novel about leading a Christian life. Alcott’s story begins with the four March girls—Meg, Jo, Beth, and Amy—sitting in their living room, lamenting their poverty. The girls decide that they will each buy themselves a present in order to brighten their Christmas. Soon, however, they change their minds and decide that instead of buying presents for themselves, they will buy presents for their mother, Marmee. Marmee comes home with a letter from Mr. March, the girls’ father, who is serving as a Union chaplain in the Civil War. The letter inspires the girls to bear their burdens more cheerfully and not to complain about their Christmas morning, the girls wake up to find books, probably copies of The Pilgrim’s Progress, under their pillows. Later that day, Marmee encourages them to give away their breakfast to a poor family, the Hummels. Their elderly neighbor, Mr. Laurence, whom the girls have never met, rewards their charitable activities by sending over a feast. Soon, Meg and Jo are invited to attend a New Year’s Party at the home of Meg’s wealthy friend, Sally Gardiner. At the party, Jo retreats to an alcove, and there meets Laurie, the boy who lives with Mr. Laurence. While dancing, Meg sprains her ankle. Laurie escorts the sisters home. The Marches regret having to return to their daily routine after the holiday visits Laurie when he is sick, and meets his grandfather, Mr. Laurence. She inadvertently insults a painting of Mr. Laurence in front of the man himself. Luckily, Laurie’s grandfather admires Jo’s spunk, and they become friends. Soon, Mr. Laurence meets all the sisters, and Beth becomes his special favorite. Mr. Laurence gives her his deceased granddaughter’s girls have various adventures. Amy is caught trading limes at school, and the teacher hits her as punishment. As a result, Mrs. March withdraws her daughter from school. Jo refuses to let Amy go with her to the theater. In retaliation, Amy burns Jo’s manuscript, and Jo, in her anger, nearly lets Amy drown while ice-s-kating. Pretty Meg attends her friend Annie Moffat’s party and, after allowing the other girls to dress her up in high style, learns that appearances are not everything. While at the party, she hears that people think she intends to marry Laurie for his year, the Marches form the Pickwick Club, in which they write a family newspaper. In the spring, Jo smuggles Laurie into one of the club meetings, and he becomes a member, presenting his new circle with a postbox. At the beginning of June, the Marches decide to neglect their housework. At the end of a lazy week, Marmee takes a day off too. The girls spoil a dinner, but everyone ends up laughing over it. One day, Laurie has English friends over, and the Marches go on a picnic with them. Later, Jo gets a story published for the first dark day, the family receives a telegram saying that Mr. March is sick in the hospital in Washington, . Marmee goes to tend to him, and Jo sells her hair to help finance the trip. Chaos ensues in Marmee’s wake, for the girls neglect their chores again. Only Beth goes to visit the Hummels, and after one of her visits, she contracts scarlet fever from the Hummel baby. Beth teeters on the brink of death until Marmee returns. Meanwhile, Amy spends time at Aunt March’s house in order to escape the disease. Beth recovers, though not completely, and Mr. Brooke, Laurie’s tutor, falls in love with Meg, much to Jo’s dismay. Mr. Brooke and Meg are engaged by the end of Part One. Three years pass before Part Two begins. Mr. March is home from the war, and Laurie is nearly done with school. Soon, Meg marries and moves into a new home with Mr. Brooke. One day, Amy decides to have a lunch for her art school classmates, but poor weather ruins the festivities. Jo gets a novel published, but she must cut it down in order to please her publishers. Meanwhile, Meg struggles with the duties of keeping house, and she soon gives birth to twins, Demi and Daisy. Amy gets to go to Paris instead of Jo, who counted on the trip, because their Aunt Carroll prefers Amy’s ladylike behavior in a begins to think that Beth loves Laurie. In order to escape Laurie’s affections for her, Jo moves to New York so as to give Beth a chance to win his affections. There Jo meets Professor Bhaer, a poor German language instructor. Professor Bhaer discourages Jo from writing sensationalist stories, and she takes his advice and finds a simpler writing style. When Jo returns home, Laurie proposes to her, but she turns him down. Beth soon and Laurie reunite in France, and they fall in love. They marry and return home. Jo begins to hope that Professor Bhaer will come for her. He does, and they marry a year later. Amy and Laurie have a daughter named Beth, who is sickly. Jo inherits Plumfield, Aunt March’s house, and decides to turn it into a boarding school for boys. The novel ends with the family happily gathered together, each sister thankful for her blessings and for each other.

310 评论

偶素小cici

《小妇人》讲述的是马奇一家的故事。家里有四姐妹:追求高贵但会照顾人的大姐梅格,充满躁动却关心家人的二姐乔,优雅自私却颇得人爱的艾美以及忘我无私却需要家里人的贝思。她们的母亲是慈祥的马奇太太,父亲马奇先生随军当兵。这样的一家人和她们的邻居男孩劳里、劳里的爷爷劳伦斯先生、马奇婶婶,以及周围的朋友所发生的如家庭日记般简单的故事,却流露着耐人寻味的亲情、友情、爱情。书中展示的是一幅幅温馨甜美的家庭生活图景,歌颂了永恒的爱情,打动了无数读者的心。 作者路易莎的父亲因为沉迷于对理想的追求,以至生活重担落入母亲和她手中,生活十分辛苦,马奇一家正是她家生活投影,但现实中路易莎一家的经济状况远不如马奇一家。我想,书中男孩劳里经常帮助马奇一家,也正是路易莎希望现实中也有一位男性可以挑起她家的生活重担,饱含着这一美好愿望,她把自己变成了书中和男孩劳里成为好朋友的乔。 整本书可以说是马奇家四姐妹和男孩劳里的成长历程。在这个过程中,他们都更懂得了身边的亲情、友情、爱情,更理智地对待它们。乔是一个假小子,喜欢创作、写诗,她喜欢劳里,但这是纯真的友情,她想让梅格嫁给劳里,后来又想让艾美、贝思嫁给他,乔认为他们很般配,最后劳里向她吐露爱意时,她才发现,挡在中间的是自己,应该尽快把自己处理掉。于是她选择了逃避,而待她成长起来了,懂得并渴望爱情时,却永远失去了劳里;贝思最宁静,默默为大家做事,为了帮助别人,染上了猩红热,乃至付出生命,她的一生都在为别人着想,深受家人爱戴,面对她的死,所有人都伤心欲绝。我想,即使是一个最自私的人,也会为之痛惜;梅格为家负担,外出作家教,虽然她喜欢追求高贵虚荣,但最后,她放弃了马奇婶婶的遗产,嫁给了清贫的布鲁克先生,过着苦中带甜的幸福生活。艾美想作淑女,追求艺术,但一直喜欢和假小子乔吵吵闹闹。后来,她去了世界各国学习,扶弱助贫,变得成熟稳重了,最后,和劳里建立了爱情。 这便是善良仁爱的马奇一家,她们一起为家庭负担,坚强独立,选择属于自己的生活道路。可以说她们渐渐成熟了,她们的心灵始终是美好的——不管是当初为伙伴写诗的心,为小姐妹的死而流泪的心,而是现在收获的心。 书中有许多感人肺腑的话语: 贝思患病危在旦夕时,马奇姐妹在祈祷: “如果上帝赐给贝思一条生路,我一定不再抱怨。”梅格虔诚低语。 “如果上帝赐给贝思一条生路,我一定爱他敬他,终生做他的奴仆。”乔说。 艾美伤心地哭了,假如失去温柔可爱的姐姐,即使有一千个一万个绿松石戒指,也不能给她带来安慰啊! 乔交到巴尔教授这个朋友后说:“嗯,冬天过去了,我一本书都没写,也没有发财,但是我交到了一个很值得相处的朋友,我要努力一辈子享有他的友谊。” 乔拒绝了劳里,劳里说:“哦,乔,难道你不能?……” 乔说:“特迪,亲爱的,我真希望能……” 我将这些对话都圈划了下来,总是想回味一下,之所以觉得这本书值得推荐,是因为《小妇人》这本书充满了人性美,是每个人心灵至深处的东西。看着书中人的成长,我们也可以试着正确地处理身边的亲情、友情、爱情,感受一下同龄人的喜怒哀乐,感受一下人性美,书中的事也都发生在我们周围。关于爱,其实很复杂,有朋友之爱,亲人之爱,长幼之敬爱。这本书将告诉我们如何怀着一颗收获的心体会,感受并对待它们,并且试着像马奇一家一样,为了这些爱,变得更坚强独立。家庭生活可能很枯燥,但谁能发现它温馨的底蕴,谁就具备了慧眼。我想《小妇人》的作者路易莎?梅?奥尔科特具备了,此篇读后感的写作者王闻洲也拥有了。家——是人性最美的一面体现的场所,那里是无私的爱的所在。每个人的追求从这里开始——如四姐妹,每个人的目标最终也要在家中落脚。希望读到此书的人都能在生活的一刻中驻足,体味它的美。

253 评论

王小丽0125

应该符合你的要求.第一段是总体介绍和写作背景,第二段是内容概括以及作品影响.不需要再去参考资料中找. Little Women is a novel published in 1868 and written by American author Louisa May Alcott. The story concerns the lives and loves of four sisters growing up during the American Civil War. It was based on Alcott's own experiences as a child in Concord, Massachusetts with her three sisters, Anna, May, and Elizabeth. Little Women is the story of The Marches, a family used to hard toil and suffering. Although Father March is away with the Union armies, the sisters Meg, Jo, Amy and Beth keep in high spirits with their mother, affectionately named Marmee. Their friendly gift of a Christmas holiday breakfast to a neighbouring family is an act of generosity rewarded with wealthy Mr. Laurence's gift of a surprise Christmas feast. However, despite their efforts to be good, the girls show faults: the pretty Meg becomes discontented with the children she teaches; boyish Jo loses her temper regularly; while the golden-haired schoolgirl Amy is inclined towards affectation. However, Beth, who keeps the house is always kind and gentle. After certain happy times winning over the Laurences, dark times arrive as Marmee finds out about her husband's illness. Worse is to come as Beth contracts scarlet fever in her Samaritan efforts for a sick neighbour and becomes more or less an invalid. The novel tells of their progress into young womanhood with the additional strains of romance, Beth's terminal illness, the pressures of marriage and the outside world. This is the story of their growing maturity and wisdom and the search for the contentedness of family life. It was written in 1867 and is a fictionalised biography of Alcott and her sisters. It has become a much loved classic tale and, while some of its issues seem outdated, many of the trials of the sisters are all too relevant today as evidenced by its continued following.

93 评论

可不娇气

Introductionprint Print document PDF list Cite link LinkLittle WomenLouisa May AlcottThe following entry presents criticism on Alcott's novel Little Women. See also Louisa May Alcott Nineteenth-Century Literary is now known as Little Women includes both the original work by that title and its sequel, Good Wives. Written by Louisa May Alcott in 1868 and 1869 respectively, together these works have been long established as primary within the canon of juvenile literature and are considered by many to be the first children's books in America to break with the didactic tradition. Alcott introduced realism and entertainment to American children's literature, thereby achieving commercial success unknown to her moralizing contemporaries. Little Women is still read worldwide May Alcott was born in Germantown, Pennsylvania in 1832, and raised in Concord, Massachusetts, and Boston. She was the second of four daughters of Abigail May Alcott and Amos Bronson Alcott, a Transcendentalist, educational reformer, and well-known writer. Louisa, though more commercially successful than her father, faced many obstacles to the literary career she envisioned for herself. As a woman writer, she was expected to write sentimental and moralizing tales, and in order to earn a living as a writer, she was expected to cater to the sensational cravings of her audience. Although she did both successfully until her death in 1888, many critics argue that with Little Women, Alcott countered sensationalism with realism and subverted the moralizing purpose she often appeared to and Major CharactersIn Part I, while Mr. March is away as a volunteer chaplain in the Civil War, the March girls, Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy, embark on "pilgrimages" toward selfimprovement, with the inspiration of John Bunyan's religious allegory, The Pilgrim's Progress (1678). Their journeys, though, are largely determined by their own consciences and will rather than by dogma. Meg learns to overcome her vanity, Jo to overcome excessiveness and temper, Amy, greed and selfishness. Beth is already saintly and seems not to need change, but ironically, it is an act of charity—a visit to a sick infant—which results in the scarlet fever that weakens her health and precipitates her into this haven are neighbors Theodore Laurence (Laurie) and his grandfather, who are far from stock patriarchal figures; they are, rather, admirers who crave and aspire to the domestic peace enjoyed by the Marches. Laurie and Jo develop a close friendship that intrigued Alcott's readers, but she avoided the conventional romantic plot by refusing to have them marry. Jo, an unconventional girl who thinks of herself as the "man of the house" while her father is away, is more interested in developing her art and financially supporting her family than II of Little Women, originally published separately as Good Wives, focuses on the girls' transitions into adulthood. Meg marries John Brooke, Laurie's tutor—a financially difficult but happy match. Amy loses some of her passion for art and marries Laurie after he has been refused by Jo and has recovered from the blow. Beth dies before she can reach adulthood, but her loss inspires Jo to take up her domestic role. Jo eventually marries Professor Bhaer, a middle-aged academic with whom she shares philosophical interests. They open a boys' school, where she, no longer a tomboy, becomes a mother-figure for the ThemesAlcott's earlier work, often published under the pseudonym A. M. Barnard, is generally characterized by sensational characters and plots, violence, melodrama, and romance—all consistent with the expectations of her readers. When asked to write a "girl's book," Alcott was yet again forced to write according to others' interests, but in this case she opted for more realism than sensationalism by choosing the only girl-hood she knew for her subject—her own. Based on her life, and that of her sisters, Anna, Elizabeth, and May, Little Women follows the adolescence of the girls into adulthood, captures their private, domestic experience concretely, delineates their matriarchal haven of comfort and frugality, dramatizes their creative play, and explores their struggles to become artists, good sisters, and eventually happy wives. Although the culture of her time demanded that Alcott produce moralizing tales, she displayed a certain amount of resistance to that mandate in Little Women, preaching moderation rather than excessive religious molding. The girls are guided less by rigid moral strictures than by their strong sense of family, sometimes conveyed by words of wisdom from mother Marmee, but more often by a need to get along as a sisterly community. In part II this theme of sisterly love expands to include marriage and the formation of new families, with new roles for the three surviving sisters as good wives. Self-improvement, social responsibility, domestic cooperation, and matriarchal power, as well as the importance of play and artistic development, all serve as prominent themes in Little ReceptionThe influence of Little Women has been vast, but historically limited to a female readership. Early critics received the novel with sentimental praise and an appreciation of Alcott's ability to meet the minds of her child readers, a view shared by Angela Brazil in her 1922 review. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Alcott was appreciated, like many American women writers, as merely a local colorist with a talent for portraying the domestic sphere concretely. In academia, her novel was studied only by the scholars of children's literature until the 1960s and 1970s, when it came under closer scrutiny by feminist critics, some of whom were frustrated with its outdated sentimentality, others of whom dismissed it because it seems to uphold the traditional separation of men's and women's spheres (public vs. private). In the 1980s, the new emphasis on expanding the canon to include marginalized writers and works associated with popular culture brought more attention to Little Women. It has achieved importance within Women's Studies and the American literary canon in general for its detailed descriptions of nineteenth-century family life and of female struggles for social identity. As Carolyn Heilbrun suggests, Little Women has been particularly influential on female readers in the twentieth century who, craving models of female autonomy, found one, at least briefly, in Alcott's character Jo. Recent critics have continued in this positive vein, calling further attention to the subversive elements in Little Women, recasting Jo as an early feminist who, like her creator, made the most of the limited possibilities open to women in her time.希望对楼主有帮助, 不满意请留言

271 评论

相关问答

  • 小妇人主题分析论文

    女主在亲情,友情跟爱情之间中做出抉择,经历了种种的事情,以后最终找到自己的幸福,认识到了虚伪的跟真实的爱的区别

    Camillemcc 6人参与回答 2023-12-09
  • 小妇人论文参考文献

    能看看你当时写的开题报告吗 做个参考

    糖水黄桃888 3人参与回答 2023-12-06
  • 小妇人英语本科毕业论文

    温馨的圣诞烛光 —浅议《小妇人》 在十九世纪上半叶崛起的美国妇女作家中,出现了一位出生于费城的作家,她的名字叫莎.梅.阿尔考特( I,o}rls

    Jamietee1997 4人参与回答 2023-12-07
  • 英语专业小妇人毕业论文

    好多写这个作品的人物性格分析的

    奔跑的窝妞妞 3人参与回答 2023-12-11
  • 小妇人论文的研究意义

    怎么写开题报告呢?首先要把在准备工作当中搜集的资料整理出来,包括课题名称、课题内容、课题的理论依据、参加人员、组织安排和分工、大概需要的时间、经费的估算等等。第

    小木每木每 3人参与回答 2023-12-12