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理智与情感论文提纲

发布时间: 2021-03-18 17:19:15

㈠ 以理智与情感为话题的800字作文

这个故事中的人物像现实生活中的人们一样,有弱点,正是这些弱点导致了他们的不幸。他们高傲而自私,他们常陷于感情纠葛之中,以至不能决定自己的命运。凯瑟琳与希斯克利夫曾经是多么幸福的一对。“青梅竹马”、“两小无猜”,用种种描写这种纯真情感的词去形容他俩都不为过。可是我们要知道,世间有一种可以污染一切纯洁事物的东西叫“虚荣”,凯瑟琳怀着心中的高傲,嫁给了富有的艾加?林顿,嫁给了她对其并无爱意的艾加?林顿。说得更加坦白一些,美丽的凯瑟琳事实上嫁给的是金钱和地位。可怜的希斯克利夫,在他心中留下的是创伤、是仇恨。他想报复凯瑟琳可同时却依然深深爱着她。

人,也许就是如此矛盾的动物吧!凯瑟琳放不下的是虚荣,希斯克利夫放不下的是仇恨。而他们都放不下的是对方。爱并憎恨着,这也许是我们无法了解的,而令我最不能理解的是他们不惜一切地牺牲、伤害身边的所有人来报复对方。他们是这样的义无反顾,如同书名《呼啸山庄》那样呼啸着向前、咄咄逼人。排山倒海的仇恨让我有些窒息。电视剧中常说,一个人若没有轰轰烈烈的爱过,那他的这一生是可悲的。可我认为两个人如果爱到凯瑟琳和希斯克利夫这种地步,那他的人生更是凄凄惨惨、可悲可叹。我想人应该学着放手,学着忘记,学着淡然。忘记人生路上的所有伤痛,淡然生活中的一切不快。用一生的时间去憎恨、去保持虚荣,可最终还是回归到最初的平静与安谧。在面临暗潮汹涌时,学着去放手,是一件很美妙的事情。

相信凯瑟琳与希斯克利夫的一生错过了许多美好的事情,错过了许多平静中的美丽。这本书的大部分都充斥着仇恨与虚荣的阴影,让人精神都紧绷着,可在结尾部分作者却用了出乎意料的温和且纯洁透明的笔触。字里行间中弥漫着一种冷冷清清的凄美。你会发现平静得难能可贵:您回到画眉山庄的路上会经过教堂墓地,您可以看见靠近荒原的三个墓碑,中间凯瑟琳的已经旧了,被周围生长的杂草掩住了一半。一边是艾加?林顿的,另一边是希斯克利夫的新墓碑。如果您在那儿呆一会儿,看着在温暖夏日的空气里纷飞的昆虫,听着在草丛中喘息的柔风,您就会知道在静谧的泥土下,长眠的人在多么平静地安息。

炽热的爱会烧毁一个人的理智,平静而深沉的爱却让人回味永生.

㈡ 求论文:《傲慢与偏见》和《理智与情感》两书中女主角的性格分析对比,及其带给她们各自不同的人生。

玛丽安是一个敢于反抗伪善的社会习俗,敢于追求现实的幸福和真正的爱情,希望富裕但又不盲目版膜拜财权富的新型女性形象,开始关注于经济的思考,最终成为了一个世俗的、现实的女性,而不是以往只关注道德的待字闺秀,突破了以往文学史上那些仅仅依靠美貌加美德而获得美满婚姻的女性塑造的老套。

伊丽莎白聪敏机智,有胆识,有远见,有很强的自尊心,并善于思考问题。就当时一个待字闺中的小姐来讲,这是难能可贵的。正是由于这种品质,才使她在爱情问题上有独立的主见,并导致她与达西组成美满的家庭。

这个网上很多论文可以参考,但要钱的,有的学校有买版权,从学校网址进入下载不用钱,你自己看着办

http://epub.cnki.net/grid2008/index/ZKCALD.htm

㈢ 有没有理智与情感的论文

女人嫁鸡随鸡嫁狗承狗,没有社会地位!就像是附带的样!

㈣ 求一篇写理智与情感的英语论文

Jane Austen has often been considered a woman who led a narrow, inhibited life and who rarely traveled. These assertions are far from the truth. Jane Austen traveled more than most women of her time and was quite involved in the lives of her brothers, so much that it often interfered with her writing. Like most writers, Jane drew on her experiences and her dreams for the future and incorporated them into her writing. Her characters reflect the people around her; the main characters reflect parts of herself. In Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, and Mansfield Park, Elinor Dashwood, Elizabeth Bennet, and Fanny Price all reflect aspects of Jane Austen and dreams she had that were never fulfilled.

Sense and Sensibility's Elinor Dashwood mirrors Jane Austen's strait-laced sense of propriety and her concern and care about family members. Jane was "practical and sensible, and she did what she thought best" (Tomalin 186). For example, after her father died, Jane managed to gather herself together and send her father's pocket compass and pair of scissors to her brother Frank as a memento of their father. Elinor in Sense and Sensibility is the sister who holds down the family and discusses the practicality of situations. She too distributes cherished mementos of her father when he dies. Elinor is the sister who is concerned with the welfare of her relations and takes it upon herself to look after their well-being. Feeling afflicted when her sister Marianne is hurt by Willoughby, she tries her best to comfort her sister, resolve the situation, and find out the facts of what happened.

Jane can also be considered the backbone of her family. After she dies, the family is not as close as they were ring her lifetime. Jane became very close with two of her nieces, Fanny Austen and Anna Austen. She counseled them on men and marriage when they reached the age of choosing a suitor. She often helped with delivering her sister-in-law's babies. During her thirties, she lived with her brother Frank for several weeks. She cooked the meals for his family and cared for his children while his wife was confined to her bed. After several weeks of such a life, she felt she needed a break and solitude, but she continued to help her brother and his family until her services were no longer needed. Like the character she creates in Elinor, she sticks by her family and helps them when they need her.

Marianne Dashwood, Elinor's younger sister, represents the type of girl Jane wanted to be. Marianne is light and airy with a flighty personality. Her emotions dictate her actions. Jane's nieces remember her as being "youthful, playful, and inventive" (Nokes 368) before she prematurely turned into middle-age. Only once in her life did Jane behave similarly to Marianne, and it was an evening she relived until her death. When she was twenty, Jane attended a ball given by the Lefroys at Manydown House. There she met Tom Lefroy, a handsome young Irishman who had come to stay with his aunt and uncle (Tomalin 113). Jane danced and flirted with him the entire evening - more than was proper for a young lady. In writing to her sister the night after the ball, Jane writes unabashedly for her sister to imagine "everything most profligate and shocking in the way of dancing and sitting down together" (Tomalin 114). Throughout her years of spinsterhood she looked back on the evening when she acted like Marianne, controlled solely by her emotions. She did not let the dictates of society control her that evening.

Austen's life closely parallels that of Elizabeth Bennet in Pride and Prejudice. Austen begins the novel with the line, "It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife" (3). This statement reflects the opinion of the time that a woman had to be married or else she had no social standing. Just as Elizabeth and her sisters feel immense pressure to get married and procure a good match, so too did Jane. Until she was twenty-five she still retained a small spark of hope that she would one day marry and have children.

Jane Austen created Elizabeth as one girl among five. While Lizzy, as she was affectionately called, was surrounded by girls, Jane was surrounded with boys. She had five brothers, and her parents ran a school for boys in their house as part of their rectory. "Growing up in a school meant that Jane knew exactly what to expect of boys, and was always at ease with them; boys were her natural environment, and boys' jokes and boys' interests were the first she learnt about" (Tomalin 30). One can imagine that growing up amidst so many boys, Jane must have often wished for sisters to play with. She creates Elizabeth with a family that she must have wished for herself.

The most significant similarity between Jane and Lizzy is their close relationships with their sisters. Jane and her sister Cassandra were extremely close. They lived together their entire lives. When they moved into a house in Chawton, they shared a bedroom. They were dependent upon each other and supported each other in all aspects of their lives. They supported each other's decisions and wrote to each other when apart. They even wore the same bonnet. Cassandra said of Jane after her death, "She was the sun of my life, the gilder of every pleasure, the soother of every sorrow, I had not a thought concealed from her, & it is as if I had lost a part of myself" (Tomalin 269). Lizzy and her older sister Jane were extremely close. They too supported each other's decisions and were always there for the other. They discussed suitors and marriage just as Jane and her sister must have done.

Fanny Price is sent away at the crucial age of ten to live with her cousins she has never met. At first she is timid and scared and cries herself to sleep every night. These must have been the feelings Jane expressed when she was sent to boarding school. Like the Fanny she creates, Jane missed her family and brothers and longed for home.

Jane creates Fanny as an extremely modest character, which is a quality held by Jane. When referring to her book in a letter to her sister, Jane fails to capitalize the title of her book. She believes it will not be acclaimed or widely recognized. When her books are finally published, Jane publishes them anonymously. Only her immediate family knows that she is the author of the books that have received wide recognition and acclaim in England. The Columbia Encyclopedia writes that "she received little public recognition in her lifetime." Only years later does Jane allow her name as author of the books to be made public. Some say that if Jane were alive today to witness the extent of her celebrity and how much she is revered, her "porcelain English cheeks might have colored like a tea rose" (Eady 87). Fanny Price is also a very modest character. She lets herself be treated poorly by her aunt and cousins, for she feels she is entitled to nothing better. She does not feel fit to converse in the evenings with her cousins and their friends. She declines to participate in their conversations. Both Jane and Fanny have low recognition of themselves and are modest women.

All of Jane's female characters end up happily married, a state Jane herself never felt. A woman was defined in terms of her husband; if she did not marry, she had nothing. Jane's aunt traveled to India in order to find a husband. Well into her twenties, Jane still had dreams of getting married. When she was twenty-five, Harris Bigg, a brother of her good friends, proposed marriage to Jane. At first she accepted: she would become mistress of a large estate, and "be able to ensure the comfort of her parents to the end of their days" (Tomalin 180). Most importantly, she would have children and raise a family of her own. The next day, however, Jane reneged the proposal. She did not love him and did not want a "marriage based on nothing but money" (Grunwald A16). After this proposal, Jane gave up all hopes of ever having a family of her own. Instead, she fulfilled her dreams through her characters and found "passion" (Romano 424) through them. All her characters marry for love (which happens to also be financially advantageous). They make Jane's dreams become a reality within her imagination.

Jane died on July 18, 1817, at the age of forty-one, having five widely-acclaimed books to her name, and two published posthumously. Although she never married, she lived through her characters, and through their experiences she felt fulfilled. She often referred to her novels as her "own darling Child" (Tomalin 219). As children reflect upon the parents and often mirror aspects of their parents, so too did many of Jane's characters mirror herself and the people around her.

㈤ 急求理智与情感的议论文素材、、、、5篇。。。。

1-提出论点
2-解释理智与情感
3-阐述理智与情感直接的对立和统一
4-提出论据证明理智主导情感是一种正确的观点
5-反证情感决定理智的弊端
总结自己的论点

㈥ 《理智与情感》论文

http://www.cqvip.com/qk/86484x/2008012/29345543.html
只帮你找到这个了 。。。。。

㈦ 让理智战胜情感 议论文

1-提出论点
2-解释理智与情感
3-阐述理智与情感直接的对立和统一
4-提出论据证明理智主导情感是一种正确的观点
5-反证情感决定理智的弊端
总结自己的论点

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