综合英语教程(第三版)5电子教案unit7section1课件.ppt-(课件无音视频)
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1、ReportCultureAdvanced English5Unit 71Elements of poetry 231234Poem by Walt WhitmanLecture about WhitmanWork on the table below in small groups,filling in the first two columns,and then read the lecture.After reading,return to this table to finish the last column.Things I already known about Whitman:
2、Things Im not quite clear about him:Things I learned after readingabout him:A professor of American literature is giving a lecture to his students.A Poetic Tramp:A Lecture about Walt Whitman 1My last lecture covered poets and their poems before the middle of the nineteenth century.Today,we are going
3、 to study modern American poets and poems.We will start with Walt Whitman.I will first talk briefly about his major contributions to modern American poetry,giving you a short account of his life story.After that,we will read one of his most important poems.When Walt Whitman began publishing his poem
4、s in the mid 1800s,he forever changed peoples sense of what a poet could be,and what a poem could look and sound like.12For Whitman,poetry was no schoolroom or parlor exercise 2.It wasnt an“indoor”activity at all.Instead,poetry had to breathe the open air.It had to start in the earth,just as a tree
5、sets its roots deep in the soil,and then take flight,just as the tree shoots its branches into the sky.Sure,this is actually what I am going to talk about today.Whitman liked to think of the poet as a kind of tramp:someone who traveled far and wide,meeting new people along the way,constantly seeking
6、 out new experiences and new encounters.He also liked to think of himself as the poet of the common man and woman.He admired people who worked hard,especially people who worked with their hands,and he often even made them the subject of his poems.More than anything else,though,he loved the diversity
7、 of life:so many different people,so 34many different kinds of plants and animals,cities and farms,dreams and visions.As a kind of poetic tramp,Whitman set out to encounter all this variety of life and to make it all hang together 3 in his poems.Nobody had ever before tried to put so much into a poe
8、m.Take a quick look at any of his poems just look at it,without even reading it.Whitmans lines almost seem to run right off the page.Before Whitman,the true mark of a poem was its regular pattern of meter and rhyme:the poet sought to shape his emotions and ideas into an organized form.Whitmans long
9、lines are not usually structured in this way.In fact,they often seem to flow across the page in what looks like an uncontrollable flood of words.This happens because he is always trying to get so much of the detail of his world into his poems.5Read his poems aloud.Try to catch the sound of Whitmans
10、voice in them.Whitman is said to have recited poetry aloud as he walked along the seashore,and you can sometimes almost hear the rhythm of the surf in his poems.You can also sometimes hear the voice of a prophet,as when he cries out,“Unscrew the locks from the doors!Unscrew the doors themselves from
11、 the jambs!”4 Whitman loved the sound of the human voice,in speech and in song,and always imagined himself“singing”aloud in his poems.Walt Whitman was born at West Hills,Long Island,in New York non May 31,1819.His father,Walter Whitman 5,was a carpenter and a house builder,and a staunch supporter of
12、 the ideals of the American Revolution.Walt attributed his creativity to the influence of his mother,Louisa Van Velsor Whitman.Walt eventually had seven brothers and sisters,of which he was the second oldest.67When Walt was not quite four years old,the Whitmans moved to Brooklyn,New York,where Walts
13、 father continued to build and sell houses.It was a difficult time economically,and Whitmans father suffered many losses selling the houses he built.Walt managed to attend public schools for six years,until the age of eleven,but was forced to go to work as an office boy to earn money for the family
14、after that.This was all the formal education he ever received.At the age of eleven,Whitman went to work at a law office where he learned writing from work and a local lending library.This was the beginning of Walts lifelong love of literature.Among his earliest favorites were the Arabian Nights,the
15、historical novels and poems of Sir Walter Scott 6,and the adventure novels of89of another ground breaking American writer,James Fenimore Cooper 7.After working in several law offices,he worked as assistant in a physicians office.And finally,Walt went to work for a newspaper.He began as an apprentice
16、 compositor 8,setting type for various local newspapers.Eventually,beginning in his mid teens,he also began writing short pieces that appeared in the papers.Like many well-known authors,Whitman began his literary career as a journalist,reporting on a wide variety of topics.He was often asked to revi
17、ew books,operas,and plays during these years,a task that allowed him to indulge in his favorite pastimes:reading and attending the theater,especially opera.Several years later,Whitman became a schoolteacher on Long Island.From his late teens into his twenties,Whitman alternated1112working as a teach
18、er and as a compositor/journalist,depending on the kind of work he could find.Whitman was not his average mid nineteenth century schoolteacher.For one thing,he refused to hit his students,which made many local residents suspicious of his“lax”methods as a teacher!By 1841,Whitman was back again in New
19、 York City,writing stories for the papers.It was at this time that he was assigned to cover the New York City lectures of a visiting New England speaker already famous throughout the country,Ralph Waldo Emerson9.Emerson would have a tremendous impact on Whitmans sense of what he could do as a writer
20、.Emerson encouraged his audience to follow their inner promptings in all things.In one of the talks Whitman heard,Emerson called for a new kind of poet,one who would set free the imagination and,by doing so,transform the world.13Around 1841,Whitman did a brief stint 10 at a New Orleans paper,a perio
21、d most notable for Whitmans journey to and from New Orleans.He traveled by train to Cumberland,then by horse-drawn stage11 to Wheeling,West Virginia,where he caught the steamboat that sailed the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers to New Orleans;he returned a little over two months later by steamboat up the
22、 Mississippi and across the Great Lakes,where,after taking the train to Niagara and Albany,he caught another steamboat that took him down the Hudson River to Manhattan.Whitmans fascination with American places was energized by these trips.Whitman began to work on his first collection of poems,Leaves
23、 of Grass when he was 36 years old,in 1855.Whitman even assisted in typesetting the volume.Early responses to Whitmans first book were often very critical.1415The Boston Intelligencer printed a scathing12 review,stating that Whitman“must be some escaped lunatic,raving in pitiable delirium.”This was
24、not an uncommon attitude at the time.Whitman was writing an entirely new kind of poetry.Who had ever seen poems about runaway slaves or about the miracles of everyday life,or a poem that began so boldly as“I celebrate myself?”Many readers disapproved of Whitmans subject matter and his style,neither
25、of which seemed to them“refined”or“lofty”enough.But Whitman also had his supporters.One of them was none other than Ralph Waldo Emerson,who had done so much to inspire Whitman in the first place.Emerson wrote Whitman a letter calling the book“the most extraordinary piece of wit and wisdom that Ameri
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