大学思辨英语war原文
Preparatory Work
(1) According to Britannica, Luigi Pirandello was winner of the 1934 Nobel Prize for Literature. With his invention of the “theatre within the theatre” in the play Seipersonaggi in cercad’autore (1921; Six Characters in Search of an Author), he became an important innovator in modern drama. Influenced by his catastrophic personal experiences, he developed a literary style characterized by “the exploration of the tightly clod world of the forever changeable human personality” (Britannica). “War” reflects this style of psychological realism, for instead of depicting external circumstances of the Great War, it choos to underline the cruelty of war from the perspective of the soldiers’ anxious, grieving parents.
(2) The story was t in a train carriage at dawn. The war referred to in the story is most probably World War I, for during this war the author himlf was a psychologically tormented father, both of who sons were captured as prisoners of war. The World War I w
as an international conflict that resulted from clashes of interest among the world’s economic great powers asmbled in two opposing alliances, the Allies (including the United Kingdom/British Empire, France and the Russian Empire) versus the Central Powers of Germany and Austria-Hungary. Italy was a member of the Triple Alliance alongside Germany and Austria-Hungary, though it did not join the Central Powers (Willmott 15). It is generally believed by historians that World War I was “virtually unprecedented in the slaughter, carnage, and destruction it caud” (Britannica). It led to the fall of four great imperial dynasties (Germany, Russia, Austria-Hungary, and Turkey), resulted in the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia, and, in its destabilization of European society, laid the groundwork for World War II.
(3) Common symptoms of grief caud by bereavement include wistfulness, lethargy, hysteria, depression and so forth. According to the psychologist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, people who have lost someone clo usually go through five emotional stages: denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance.