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The author of Robinson Crusoe was Daniel Defoe.
Daniel Defoe (6 May 1660 – 24 April 1731) was an English writer of the 17th and 18th centuries.
In 1719, he published the long story "Robinson Crusoe", which tells the story of Robinson Crusoe drifting alone to an uninhabited desert island, starting a life of isolation for 28 years, and surviving with tenacity and unremitting efforts, and finally returning to his hometown.
Robinson Crusoe appreciation
Robinson Crusoe is a classic text that adapts to the new trend of Western historical and cultural development, and further sees the great role of human ability from the creative labor of human beings, so as to promote human intelligence and labor creative ability, and deny the absurd theory that God is omnipotent and God creates everything.
Through Robinson's 28 years of arduous experience on the desert island, the work symbolically shows the basic trajectory of human development, thus putting forward the theme of the era that labor creates history.
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The author of Robinson Crusoe was Daniel Defoe.
Daniel Defoe, English writer of the 17th and 18th centuries. At the age of 11, he began attending a school run by a priest in Dorkin, Surrey. In 1681, he completed his first treatise, Meditation.
In 1683, he began to engage in commercial activities, including liquor, tobacco, civet incense and knitwear**. After going bankrupt in business, he began to create a series of works, the main works are "Robinson Crusoe", "Theory of Planning", "Unity", "Family Guidance", "Memoirs of a Knight", "Colonel Jack" and so on.
The creative influence of Daniel Defoe
Daniel Defoe is known as the "Father of Europe", "Father of England" and "Father of British Newspapers", etc., and his "Robinson Crusoe", "Captain Singleton", "Colonel Jack", "Moore Flanders", etc., compared with previous literary works, have made new breakthroughs in both art form and artistic quality.
In a sense, Daniel Defoe introduced a new type of ** text to the world, which does not have Pope's classical style or Swift's spicy satire, but it is also self-contained, and the truth is seen in the simplicity and details.
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Robinson Crusoe was written by Defoe.
Daniel Defoe (1660-1731), an English first-class family, the founder of realism in the British Enlightenment period, is known as the "father of Europe". He traveled extensively, and in his early years he was engaged in underwear, tobacco and liquor, wool fabrics, and brick making, and once went to various continents to do business.
Defoe began writing at the age of 59. In 1719, the first ** "Robinson Crusoe" was published, which was very popular. After "Robinson Crusoe", he wrote some excellent works, among which "Moore Flanders" and "Colonel Jack", which are listed as classics of English literature.
Defoe's creative features
Daniel Defoe's ** is often narrated in the first person. The author uses a first-person narrative form, mimicking the techniques of diary and confessional memoirs.
Daniel Defoe's work shows the reader the truth, and although his ** is fictional, "fiction" also has a specific meaning, and does not refer to those fabrications of events that transcend reality, that is, fabrications that transcend human experience.
Daniel Defoe's work embodies a true quest for the Burmese festival because of the journalist-like style he developed over the years, and the influence of his Puritanist tradition of honesty made him extremely disgusted with all fiction and imagination.
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Robinson was born in 1632 into a respectable family in York. His father was German. His mother's surname was Robinson, and she was a prominent local family, so she named him Robinson Croitsner.
The British always pronounce "Kreuzner". "Krosso", therefore, everyone calls him "Krosso".
His father gave him a good education from an early age. His father wanted him to be a lawyer when he grew up, but he was determined to travel far and wide, and his father would bring him misfortune when he went on a new voyage, and he often harshly admonished him.
After a year, he finally took a chance to run away from home and realize his dream of sailing. From then on, he began a legendary rafting career. On September 1, 1651, Robinson came to the city of Hull by chance.
There he met a friend. That friend urged Robinson to go to sea with him. No sooner had the boat sailed out of the mouth of the Hambir than it encountered a terrible wind and waves.
In this desperation, Robinson regretted not listening to his parents' advice. So he didn't go home. And he contemplated going to sea, and he met a good captain, and begged him to take him out to sea, and the captain agreed, but he went out to sea.
The good times did not last long, and Robinson was taken prisoner by pirates, and let him fish every day. At one point, Robinson saw the right moment. In the end, he escaped, and took a little boy with him.
Later, Robinson was sent to Brazil by a good captain and introduced him to the planters. Robinson made a fortune and was ready to sail again, but he encountered another storm, fell into the sea, swam to a desert island with all his might, and lived on the desert island.
Robinson survived with his wits in his mind, but what happened to him?
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It mainly tells the story of the protagonist Robinson, who suffered a disaster due to going to sea, was attacked by pirates, then went to a plantation, and finally drifted to an uninhabited island, and insisted on living on the island for 28 years, and finally returned to the society he lived in.
This ** was created by Defoe inspired by a true story of the time. In September 1704, a Scottish sailor named Alexander Selkirk was abandoned in the Atlantic Ocean after a quarrel with the captain of the ship, and was rescued by Captain Woods Rogers after living on a desert island for 4 years and 4 months. Based on the legend of Selkirk, Defoe poured his many years of maritime experience and experience into the characters, and made full use of his rich imagination for literary processing, so that "Robinson" not only became the heart of the petty bourgeoisie at that time.
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The author of Robinson Crusoe was Daniel Defoe.
Daniel Defoe (1660-1731), English writer. The founder of the rich realism of the British Enlightenment, he is known as the "father" of Britain and Europe. The work is highly readable.
Protestant William III. In his masterpiece "Robinson Crusoe", the optimistic and brave Robinson overcame difficulties through hard work, wisdom and courage, showing the social atmosphere of pursuing adventure and advocating personal struggle at that time.
Robinson Crusoe (original English name: Robinson Crusoe, also translated as Robinson Crusoe, or Robinson Crusoe, Robinson Crusoe. Literally translated as Robinson Crusoe) is the first book written by Daniel Defoe when he was 59 years old**, first published on April 25, 1719.
This book is believed to be the first to be written in English in the form of a diary, and enjoys the title of the first full-length realistic novel in Britain.
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It's Daniel of England. Defoe.
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Fool: Defoe, that's so simple.
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"Robinson Crusoe" is not the author's real experience, but an adaptation of a story he heard.
Robinson Crusoe was inspired by a true story of the time. In September 1704, a Scottish sailor named Alexander Selkirk was abandoned in the Atlantic Ocean of South America after a quarrel with his captain at sea, and lived for four years and four months on the island of Ann Fernand, 400 miles from Chile, before being rescued by Captain Woods Rogers four years later. Based on the legendary story of Selkirk, the famous British writer Defoe poured his many years of maritime experience and experience into the characters, and made full use of his rich imagination for literary processing, making "Robinson" a hero in the minds of the petty bourgeoisie at that time.
It is the first idealized image of the emerging bourgeoisie in Western literature. He showed a strong bourgeois enterprising spirit and enlightenment consciousness.
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It's not just a disguised description of the society at that time imagined by the author himself.
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Of course not, the author made it up, but it's pretty good.
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