-
Hugo's full name is Victor Hugo, who is a representative writer of positive romantic literature in France in the early 19th century, a representative figure of humanism, and an outstanding bourgeois democratic writer in the history of French literature. In his life, he wrote many poems and screenplays, various essays, literary criticism and political articles, and has a wide influence in France and the world. He also wrote many representative works, such as "Les Miserables", "Ninety-Three Years", "Notre Dame de Paris", "The Adventures of the Normandy", "The Demon King of Iceland", etc., and these works portray many classic images, what are the classic images?
Next, I will give you a specific talk.
1.Quasimoldo, this is a character in "Notre Dame de Paris", he has a geometric face, a square nose, and a mouth that protrudes outward, God has given him all the ugliness, but he does not bring malice to the world, he repays the world with kindness, he is a deformed child abandoned by his parents in front of Notre Dame Cathedral, known as an ugly and deaf weirdo, but he has a kind heart, it can be said that he is the representative of truth, goodness and beauty. In particular, he was in love with Esmeralda, but he did not dare to express his fear, so he could only hide in the shadows and silently care for her, until she was sent to the gallows, and he stepped forward and rescued Esmeralda.
2.Esmeralda. The same Esmeralda is also a character in Notre Dame de Paris.
She has a beautiful and charming appearance, but her heart is very pure and kind, and she is a classic artistic image that perfectly combines external beauty and inner beauty. He represents freedom, light and beauty, and although she has experienced many hardships, she still has tenderness for the world. Fruit in the art of the law of the characteristics:
Describe exaggerated, mundane plots. His lord has either done something extremely heroic or extremely brutal and despicable. Their personality traits are exaggerated.
The plot is also unique, with shields coming one after the other, making full use of coincidences, chances, etc., with twists and turns but victorious. Guo's creation is his practice of aesthetic insights, and he likes to be significant, so the environmental depiction of his works is inseparable from this principle.
3.Set in England in the late 17th and early 18th centuries, "The Smiling Man" tells the tragic story of Gwynplaine, a descendant of an English aristocracy, after his face was destroyed, showing the very different lifestyles of the two social classes after the English Revolution at that time. The greed and corruption of the English bourgeoisie and the simplicity and kindness of the poor people are in sharp contrast, and Hugo's contrasting writing technique of beauty and ugliness is once again vividly expressed in this article, although Gwynplaine's appearance is ruined, but he has a kind heart.
These characters are all representative to a certain extent, and thus have become classic images in historical literature.
-
Two of Hugo's best-known works are Notre Dame Cathedral and Les Miserables; The hero of Notre Dame Cathedral is an ugly but very kind bell ringer, who saved the heroine several times, but because of social injustice, he left the world early; Les Misérables revolves around the experience of the protagonist Jean Valjean, and vividly describes the society at that time.
-
His representative works include "Notre Dame de Paris", "Ninety-Three Years", "Les Misérables", "Smiling Man" and "Maritime Laborers". The classic images created are, Esmeralda, Quasimodo, Claude Frollo, Esmeralda, and Gasdo.
-
Notre Dame Cathedral, Les Misérables, Ninety-Three Years, The Demon King of Iceland, Bug Járga, these are his representative works. Created a very ugly bell ringer. It also created the image of a saint.
-
Hugo was romantic.
Victor Hugo, a French writer, a representative writer of positive romantic literature in the early 19th century, a representative figure of humanism, and an outstanding bourgeois democratic writer in the history of French literature, is known as the "Shakespeare of France". During his lifetime, he wrote many poems, screenplays, various essays, literary criticisms and political chapters, and had a wide influence in France and the world.
Hugo's creative career has undergone three periods of transformation, in the early days, he was influenced by Romanticism, and he liked to carry out very grand narratives; Later, he slowly transitioned to realism, and his works are very critical, and finally he will take humanism as the leading factor, to reflect the sorrow and joy of the little people.
Features of Hugo's creations
One of the characteristics of Hugo's artistic approach is the depiction of exaggerated, extraordinary characters and extraordinary plots. His protagonist has either committed an extremely heroic act, or he has committed an extremely brutal and despicable act. Their personality traits are exaggerated.
The plot is also extraordinary. The contradictions come one after another, and they make full use of coincidences, chance encounters and other techniques, which are tortuous and fascinating. Hugo's creation is a practice of his aesthetic insights about contrast.
He likes significant contrasts. The environmental depiction of the work is inseparable from this principle of Lu Hui.
-
Victor Hugo (1802-1885), a French writer, a representative writer of positive romantic literature in the early 19th century, a representative of humanism, and an outstanding bourgeois democratic writer in the history of French fine literature, is known as the "Shakespeare of France". In his life, he wrote many poems, screenplays, various essays, literary reviews and political chapters, and has a wide influence in France and the world.
Hugo's creative history spans more than 60 years, and his works include 26 volumes of poetry, 20 volumes**, 12 volumes of plays, and 21 volumes of philosophical works, totaling 79 volumes. His representative works include "Notre Dame de Paris" and "Les Misérables", and the short story "The Death of the Normandy".
-
Romanticism is a literary genre.
First of all, Hugo's long preface to his play Cromwell, known as the Romantic Literary Manifesto. In the preface, Hugo opposes the classical view of art and puts forward the literary proposition of Romanticism: insisting on the representation of plots not formulaically but concretely.
In particular, he preached the principle of contrasting the funny and the ugly with the sublime. This preface has become an essay denouncing classicism, an important manifesto of the Romantic movement, and a classic of romantic literary theory, and occupies an important position in the history of French literary criticism.
Secondly, Hugo wrote famous ** such as "Notre Dame de Paris", "Ninety-Three Years", "Les Miserables" and "Maritime Laborers" in his lifetime, which occupy an important position in the history of French literature.
Many things are always understood after experience, just like feelings. After the pain, you will know how to protect yourself; After being stupid, we will know how to persist and give up in a timely manner, and we will slowly understand ourselves in the process of gaining and losing. In fact, life does not need such meaningless attachments, and nothing really cannot be parted. >>>More
Romanticism is self-centered, and its response to reality is relatively real, but expressionism is generally more exaggerated, and sometimes there will be deformed aesthetics or reactions, which are related to the social environment at the time, and they will show their loneliness, depression, fear, despair and so on in their works.
During the Romantic period, French opera was divided into grand opera, lyrical opera, and light song and dismantling opera. >>>More
After the French Revolution, under the influence of Romanticism in the early 19th century, the French opera art flourished further, and many new representatives emerged, such as Berlioz, Spontini, Meyerbel, Gounod and Bizet. When it comes to French opera of this period, you will definitely think of Spontini (1774 1851), who is called the originator of French grand opera, but in fact he is an Italian composer and former director of the Neapolitan court. During his time in Paris, he admired large-scale, historically or politically significant operas, and wrote his most successful opera, The Virgin, which premiered at the Paris Opera in 1807. >>>More
The Roots of Romanticism
The first chapter is a typical logical structure of "proposition-antithesis-co-topic", which Berlin intends to establish a new paradigm for the study of Romanticism—the study of the history of literary thought. At the beginning of the book, Berlin asks the question: the definition of Romanticism is a trap. >>>More