What are the writings of Andersen, what are the works of Andersen

Updated on culture 2024-06-07
4 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tales, "The Mermaid Princess", "The Bachelor's Nightcap", "Dream Under the Big Locust Tree", "The Little Match Girl".

    Is that what you mean?

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Fairy tales "The Mermaid Princess", "The Bachelor's Nightcap", "Dream Under the Big Locust Tree", "The Little Match Girl" and poems and plays.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Hans Christian Andersen's works include "The Emperor's New Clothes Tell Me to Be Tan".

    Fleas and Professors", "Thumbelina".

    The Ugly Duckling, The Mermaid of Egnat, Precious Than Jewels, The Spanish Guest, The Improvisational Poet, Ott, Lucky Belle

    Comet", "The Thief of Wiessenburg", "Afsol", "The Little Match Girl".

    Daughter of the Sea" and so on.

    Hans Christian Andersen, whose full name is Hans Christine Andersen, is a 19th-century Danish fairy tale writer known as the "sun of the world's children's literature". Hans Christian Andersen's literary career began in 1822 when he wrote plays. After entering university, his work matured.

    The Danish fairy tale writer Hans Christian Andersen never married. He spent his whole life in fairy tales, he was reluctant to contact outsiders, he was very inferior, thinking that he was not only ugly, but also poor.

    Hans Christian Andersen himself believes that the reason why he has repeatedly failed to fall in love is because of his ugly appearance and because he is poor. He said many times in his diary and letters, "Because I am ugly and will be far from poverty, no one will want to marry me" and "If I am beautiful, or rich, and have a small decent office, then I will get married and start a family".

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    Hans Christian Andersen's major works include The Impromptu Poet, The Tale of the Dune, The Nightingale, The Steadfast Tin Soldier, The Lame Child, The Daughter of the Sea, The Snow Queen, Thumbelina, The Elderberry Tree Mother, The Little Match Girl, The Ugly Duckling, The Emperor's New Clothes, etc.

    Features of Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tales.

    The characteristics of Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tales can be analyzed in three stages, namely early fairy tales that combine realism and romanticism. The middle-term fairy tales that lash out at the ugly and praise the good, in addition to this self, there are also late-stage fairy tales that face reality more.

    Most of the early fairy tales were full of beautiful fantasies and optimistic spirits, reflecting the characteristics of combining realism and romanticism. Representative works include "Lighter", "Little Ida's Flowers", "Thumbelina", "Daughter of the Sea", "Wild Swan", "Ugly Duckling" and "The Emperor's New Clothes".

    In the middle fairy tale, the fantasy component is weakened, and the reality component is relatively enhanced. In the whipping of ugliness and praise of goodness, it shows the persistent pursuit of a better life, and also reveals the melancholy of lack of confidence. Representative works include "The Little Match Girl", "The Snow Queen", "Shadow", "A Drop of Water", "Mother's Story" and "The Puppet Showman".

    Late fairy tales are more realistic than those of the middle period, focusing on depicting the tragic fate of the people at the bottom, exposing the coldness, darkness and injustice of social life. The tone of the work is somber. Representative works include "A Dream Under the Willows", "She's a Waste", "The Bachelor's Nightcap" and "Lucky Belle".

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