书签 分享 收藏 举报 版权申诉 / 35
上传文档赚钱

类型英语专业英语短篇小说教案及课后答案.docx

  • 上传人(卖家):最好的沉淀
  • 文档编号:5794163
  • 上传时间:2023-05-09
  • 格式:DOCX
  • 页数:35
  • 大小:121.55KB
  • 【下载声明】
    1. 本站全部试题类文档,若标题没写含答案,则无答案;标题注明含答案的文档,主观题也可能无答案。请谨慎下单,一旦售出,不予退换。
    2. 本站全部PPT文档均不含视频和音频,PPT中出现的音频或视频标识(或文字)仅表示流程,实际无音频或视频文件。请谨慎下单,一旦售出,不予退换。
    3. 本页资料《英语专业英语短篇小说教案及课后答案.docx》由用户(最好的沉淀)主动上传,其收益全归该用户。163文库仅提供信息存储空间,仅对该用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上传内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。 若此文所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知163文库(点击联系客服),我们立即给予删除!
    4. 请根据预览情况,自愿下载本文。本站不保证下载资源的准确性、安全性和完整性, 同时也不承担用户因使用这些下载资源对自己和他人造成任何形式的伤害或损失。
    5. 本站所有资源如无特殊说明,都需要本地电脑安装OFFICE2007及以上版本和PDF阅读器,压缩文件请下载最新的WinRAR软件解压。
    配套讲稿:

    如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。

    特殊限制:

    部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。

    关 键  词:
    英语专业 英语 短篇小说 教案 课后 答案
    资源描述:

    1、Keys to Unit One Langston Hughes: Early AutumnTeaching objectives: 1.To learn the elements of fiction/short story2. Text for Reading3. Interpretation and DiscussionDifficulties: 1. To find the meaning under the surface of the words2. To write a short story after readingTime: 4 periodsTeaching proced

    2、ures:1. the Introduction of the textbook as well as the teaching aims2. the elements of fiction/short storyFiction: the word fiction is a rather general term that can be define d as narrative told in prose. Therefore, fiction refers to different ty pes of writing such as folktale, myth, legend, etc.

    3、, but it is most o ften associated with the novel and the short story.Short story: the short story is necessarily limited in length and scop e.Key words of short story: a single incident; a single character or a few characters; compact; creative and imaginative3. Exercises and analysis:1) Opinions o

    4、f Understanding:(1) What was probably untrue of Mary?.A. She missed the days of the past.B. She still loved Bill.C. She worked to keep a family of three children.D. She was satisfied with her life and job in New York.(2) Which of the following adjectives can probably best describe Bills attitude?A.

    5、Emotional.B. Indifferent.C. Puzzled.D. Hopeful.(3) Mary didnt say anything when she got on the bus. Why?A. She had nothing more to say.B. She was disappointed in Bill.C. She was too emotional.D. She knew the situation was hopeless.(4) The last sentence of the story “she had forgotten to tell him tha

    6、t her youngest boy was named Bill, too” shows that .A. Mary knew she would meet Bill again some day.B. “Bill” is a very common name.C. Mary had been thinking about Bill and still loved him.D. Mary was proud of her youngest son.(5) The title of the short story “Early Autumn” may suggest to the reader

    7、 that .A. the bitterness of an emotional long winter was aheadB. it was still the bright time of ones life, like early AutumnC. both Mary and Bill were now middle-aged peopleD. the love between them was not as “hot” as summer days2) Questions for Discussion (Suggested answers for reference):(1) Can

    8、you pick out words and sentences to show that Mary and Bill were now different in their attitudes toward each other?1) Mary: she saw him for the first time in years. (line 5) Bill: At first he did not recognize her (line 8)2) Mary: Unconsciously, she lifted her face as though wanting a kiss (line 11

    9、) Bill: but he held out his hand. (line 12)3) Mary: “I live in New York now,” she said.(eagerly telling him her address) (line 14)Bill:“Oh” smiling politely, then a little frown came quickly between his eyes. (having no interested in her living place now.) (lines 15-16)4) Mary:“Married yet?(”concern

    10、ing keenly about his marital status) (line 21)Bill:“SureT.wo kids.”(beingsatisfiewdith hispresentsituatioannd showing pridein mentioning his family.) (line 22)5) Bill“: And your husband?” he asked(nhoetr.noticing her subtle emotional change.) (line27)Mary: “We have three children. I work in the burs

    11、ars office(avoCiodliunmgbia”mentioning her husband in her reply). (line 28)6) Bill:“Youre looking very ” (he wanted to say old) “ (wneoltl,b”einhge said. sensitive to her condition.) (line 29)Mary: She understood. (being very sensitive to her own condition.) (line 30)7) Mary: “We liveon CentralPark

    12、West,”she said.“Come and see us sometime.” (offering a direct invitation.) (line 33)Bill:“Sure,” he replied. “You and your husband must have dinner with my family some night.Any night.Lucilleand Idlove to have you.”(givinga politeindirecrtejection(.l)ines34-35)8) Mary:“Theres my bus,” sh(elisnaeid4.

    13、2)Bill:He held out his hand, “-bGyo.o”d(ready to part with Mary.) (line 43) Mary: “When ” she wanted to s(anyot ready to part with Bill) (line 44)(2) Severaltimesthe authordescribesthe scene on Washington Square:the dusk, the chillyweather, the falling leaves, the passing people. Does he only want t

    14、o tell us where and when the story takes place? What other effects do such descriptions achieve?(The description of the setting gives the reader a feeling of sadness and depression. It was getting dark and getting cold with leaves falling. The bright daytime was over and the unpleasan darkness was a

    15、head, and the warm and comfortable summer and early autumn days were being replaced by the cold and long winter. The setting echoes and reisnffoerecleisngMsaroyf regretand yearning and implies the emotional crisis that she might have to face.)3) Explanation and Interpretation:(Explain the implied me

    16、aning of the following sentences, and point out their significance in the context of the story.)1) Impulsively, she had married a man she thought she loved.(Noticethe two key words: “impulsivel”yand “thought”. This has directrelatiotno herreactions at Washington Square, New York, years later. She ma

    17、de an impulsive decision and the man she“thought”she loved was not the man she wanted to be a life partner with.)2) Unconsciously, she lifted her face as though wanting a kiss, but he held out his hand. (Her unconsciousreactionrevealsthattheirsweet lovein thepasthad been keptaliveinMary s memory for

    18、alltheseyears,but Billhad undergonea totalchange,treatinhger as an ordinary acquaintance of the past.)3) “And your husband?” he asked her.“We have three children. I work in the bursars office at Columbia.”(This is the first time Bill initiated the conversation, but he had failed to notice the signs

    19、in Marys emotional reaction and asked a question he should have not asked. Mary avoided the question by talking about something else. Why did she avoid mentioning her husband? There is message in the avoidance.)4) The lights on the avenue blurred, twinkled, blurred.(The vision came from Marys eyes.

    20、Obviously, her eyes were now filled with tears.)5) The bus started. People came between them outside, people crossing the street, people theydidnt know. Space and people.(A lot of people had walked into their lives, Mary and Bills family members and their respective circle of friends and colleagues.

    21、 It was no longer their world of two young lovers when they were in Ohio.)4) Suggested Homework:Suppose you were Bill Walker and you had a habit of writing down what happened to you in your diary. After the chance meeting with Mary at Washington Square, you went home and wrote a brief paragraph abou

    22、t the meeting. The paragraph may begin like this:Oct. 11, 2009I had never expected to see Mary, but I met her at Washington Square. She looked rather old to me I didnt even recognize her immediatelyFor reference only:Oct. 11, 2009(I had never expected to see Mary, but I met her at Washington Square.

    23、 She looked rather old to me I didnt even recognize her immediately. It was quite a surprise that she could pick me out among the hustling and bustling crowd in the street. After all, it has been quite a few years since we parted - Eight, nine, or ten years? Time flies and we both changed a lot, no

    24、longer the heady, impulsive kind of youngsters that we once were. For some reason, she seemed rather emotional about this chance meeting, and was keen in knowing about what had happened to me in these years and in telling and inviting me to her place. Somehow, she avoided mentioning her husband, the

    25、 man she quickly married after we ran into a little problem in our relationship. Ten years is a long time, enough to reshape a persons life. I wish her and her family all the happiness, sincerely.)Keys to Unit Two(1) I. B. Singer: The Washwoman(2) Frank Sargeson: A Piece of Yellow Soap1) Questions f

    26、or Discussion:(Suggested answers for reference)(1) Does the piece of washing soap have the “power” as the narrator tells us? What is the “power”that forces him to take off?(The piece of yellow washing soap is, of course, an ordinary one. The narrator is a “nave narrator” who believed that it had som

    27、e sort of mysterious “power,” while the readers are expected to know better. This power comes from the narrator s deep sympathy for the tragic fate of the washing woman. Seeing the situation, he simply could not continue to demand the payment which he knew the woman was unable to produce.)(2) In thi

    28、s Unit, we have two stories about two washwomen. There are a lot of similar descriptions and common characteristics in the two stories. Find and list them.(They were both reduce to desperation, depending solely on washing for living. Both were hard-working and uncomplaining, quietly but almost heroi

    29、cally bore their burden and struggled for a hard existence. The author describes their common feature the white and shrunken fingers as symbol of suffering in the lives of the working people. They both were both dead by the end of the stories.)(3) The two first-person narrators tell two stories of t

    30、wo washwomen who shared similar tragic fate. Discuss the differences in the narrators that result in the differences in the way the two short stories are told.(Singers narrator knows more and tells more about the washing woman, often making direct comments and revealing his own feelings about the li

    31、fe of the woman whose story he is telling. He frequently emphasizes that what he istelling is real, and hints that the story has significance. The narrators voice is very close to the authors. Please see more in “Reading Tips” on page 11. On the other hand, Sargeson s narrator is a na ve one, that i

    32、s, the narrator s understanding is purposely made shallow, and the reader need find by himself the real meaning in the situation. So the narrator stands at some distance from the author . Please see more in “Reading Tips” on page 15. Therefore, in Text I, we, as readers, are basically “given” or “re

    33、ceived” the story, while in Text II, we need to participate imaginatively in the story to “dig out” the true meaning the nave narrator has left unexplained.)2) Explanation and Interpretation:(Explain the implied meaning of the following sentences, and point out their significancein the context of th

    34、e story.) From “The Washwoman”:(1) She had been so sick that someone called a doctor, and the doctor had sent for a priest. (According to the custom, a priest should be present while one is dying. The implied messageis the doctor thought that he could do nothing to save her, and the best thing to do

    35、 was to prepare for her death.)(2) “With the help of God you will live to be a hundred and twenty,” said my mother, as ablessing.“God forbid!.”(“My Mother” extended a good wish for long life to her, but the washing woman thought that a long life was a terrible thing, because it only meant suffering

    36、longer.)(3) Her soul passed into those spheres where all holy souls meet, regardless of the roles they played on this earth, in whatever tongue, of whatever religion.(A good person, like the old washwoman, would go to heaven because she had a noble soul.She would rise above all the earthly considera

    37、tions of class, race, nation and religion. )From “A Piece of Yellow Soap”:(4) My eyes would get fixed on her fingers and the soap, and after a few minutes I would lose all power to look the woman in the face. I would mumble something to myself and take myself off .(The narrator could not bear to loo

    38、k at this washing-tub slave for too long. He would have to find some excuse and leave. He could not push her over the cliff while she was standing on the verge of total desperation.)(5) She had a way too of feeling inside her handbag as she passed me, and I always had the queer feeling that she carr

    39、ied there a piece of soap. It was her talisman powerful to work wonders (Possibly in the bag there were a few pennies that the woman had earned from her washing,and she was going to buy food or some necessities. Seeing the narrator, to whom she knew she owed money, she unconsciously or protectively

    40、put her hand in the bag. The narrator, being “nave,” misunderstood her reaction while they met in the street.)Suggested Homework:Translate the following paragraphs from“The Washwoman” into Chinese:The bag was big, bigger than usual. When the woman placed it on her shoulders, it covered her completel

    41、y. At first she stayed, as though she were about to fall under the load.But an inner stubbornness seemed to call out; no, you may not fall. A donkey may permit himself to fall under his burden, but not a human being, the best of creation.She disappeared, and mother sighed and prayed for her.More tha

    42、n two months passed. The frost had gone, and then a new frost had come, a new wave of cold. One evening, while mother was sitting near the oil lamp mending a shirt, the door opened and a small puff of steam, followed by a gigantic bag, entered the room. I ran toward the old woman and helped her unlo

    43、ad her bag. She was even thinner now, more bent. Her head shook from side to side as though she were saying no. She could not utter a clear word, but mumbled something with her sunken mouth and pale lips.For reference only:衣服包很大,比平时更大。妇人将那一大包衣服驼在肩上,包袱把她的身子完全盖住 了。一开始,她稳住脚,好像随时都会在大包袱的重压下倒下。但似乎有一种内在的毅力

    44、在呼唤,让她挺住,不能倒下。一头驴可以允许自己被重压压垮,但人为万物之灵,则不可趴下。她渐渐走远,母亲叹了口气,默默为她祈祷。两个多月过去了。冰雪消融后,冰雪又至,新一阵寒潮袭来。一天晚上,母亲正坐在 油灯旁补衣衫,门突然被推开,一团小小的雾气引领着一个巨大的包袱进了屋子。我跑上前去帮老太太卸下包袱。她愈加消瘦,背更驼了。她不停地晃着脑袋,像在说太过分了。她连话都说不清楚,从瘪陷的嘴中透过苍白的嘴唇嘟哝了几声。Keys to Unit ThreeRichard Selzer: The Discus Thrower1) Questions for discussion (Suggested an

    45、swers for reference)(1) What impression do you get of the patient from the description given in the story?(In spite of his serious illness, the man never moans or complains. He talks little and generally keeps the physical suffering to himself. He tries to maintain an image of a real man although he

    46、 is in the grip of Death. He behaves in the manner of Hemingways “tough guy” acting by the principal that “A man can be destroyed but can not be defeated.”)(2) In the short conversations, we hear the patients demand to know about exact time and his demand for shoes. Why is he still interested in tim

    47、e and what does he want shoes for since he cant walk anymore?(His interest in exact time and his demand for shoes seem to suggest that, deep in his heart, the man refuses to accept the fate. It might be the result of fierce psychological conflict within the patient, with reality and rationality on o

    48、ne side, and wish and will on the other side. Some abnormal behaviors indicate the mans unwillingness to reconcile with the fate in spite of his self-restrain.)(3) Read carefully the paragraph about plate-throwing. Why does the writer give such detailed description of it? What is your interpretation of this rather abnormal behavior?(From the detailed descriptions of his “discus” throwing, we seem to learn that the man is rather skillful at that,

    展开阅读全文
    提示  163文库所有资源均是用户自行上传分享,仅供网友学习交流,未经上传用户书面授权,请勿作他用。
    关于本文
    本文标题:英语专业英语短篇小说教案及课后答案.docx
    链接地址:https://www.163wenku.com/p-5794163.html

    Copyright@ 2017-2037 Www.163WenKu.Com  网站版权所有  |  资源地图   
    IPC备案号:蜀ICP备2021032737号  | 川公网安备 51099002000191号


    侵权投诉QQ:3464097650  资料上传QQ:3464097650
       


    【声明】本站为“文档C2C交易模式”,即用户上传的文档直接卖给(下载)用户,本站只是网络空间服务平台,本站所有原创文档下载所得归上传人所有,如您发现上传作品侵犯了您的版权,请立刻联系我们并提供证据,我们将在3个工作日内予以改正。

    163文库