小妇人中主要的人物性格浅析英语毕业论文(编辑修改稿)内容摘要:

nt Meg allows the Moffats to dress her up in fancy clothes, covering her in makeup and jewelry and making her show far more cleavage than a demure, protestant, nieenthcentury girl really should. She even – we know you39。 ll be horrified here – drinks champagne at one point! It only takes Meg one bout of this kind of vanity and wealthworship to realize that the people she39。 s trying to impress are unbelievably shallow. She doesn39。 t feel like herself, and when she hears someone at the party say that she39。 s dressed up like a doll, she realizes that39。 s exactly what she39。 s turned herself into, and she never does it again. Even at her wedding, Meg wears a simple dress that she makes herself by hand. unusual virtue In spite of her small vanities, Meg had a sweet and pious nature, which unconsciously influenced her sisters, especially Jo, who loved her very tenderly, and obeyed her because her advice was so gently given. As she is the eldest of the four, she knew her responds. When her sisters met troubles, she is always willing to help them. As the oldest daughter, she has always shouldered a fair amount of responsibility, particularly with not having her father at home. She39。 s also the most typical of the sisters – we think of her as everything that you might expect a nieenthcentury American girl from a good family to be. She39。 s the only sister who can really remember when her family used to be wealthy, and she feels nostalgic about those good old days. Boyish Jo March’s Character general description Jo March is the second daughter of Mrs. March. She had a decided mouth, a ical nose, and sharp, gray eyes, which appeared to see everything, and were by turns fierce, funny, or thoughtful. Round shoulders had Jo, big hands and feet, a flyaway look to her clothes, and the unfortable appearance of a girl who was rapidly shooting up into a woman and didn39。 t like it. Jo loves writing, dreaming of being a famous writer and making money to have her family live a better life. She looks like a boy, and reacts with impatience to the many limitations placed on women and girls. Her character is based in large part on Louisa May Alcott herself. Jo’ s character is outstanding other girls. . Her unusual characterboyish The reason why Jo stood out can be best illustrated by her characteristic. It was her characteristic that made her different from all the other girls in the family. Unlike other girls who behaved like quiet water, Jo was neither soft nor gentle. She was just like a vigorous flame giving endless happiness and energy. And she was always optimistic and brave to share the burden of the family. She acted like a boy and determined to be like a man. In the beginning of the book, she claimed that: I hate to think I39。 ve got to grow up and be Miss March, and wear long gowns, and look as prim as a China Aster. It39。 s bad enough to be a girl, any way, when I like boy39。 s games and work and manners. I can39。 t get over my disappointment in not being a boy, and it39。 s worse than ever now, for I39。 m dying to go and fight with papa, and I can only stay at home and knit like a poky old woman.② (7。 ) When we first meet Jo March, she39。 s a tomboyish, hottempered, geeky fifteenyearold girl. She loves activity and can39。 t bear to be left on the sidelines。 it drives her crazy that she can39。 t go and fight in the Civil War alongside her father, who has volunteered as a chaplain. Instead, Jo has to stay at home and try to reconcile herself to a nieenthcentury woman39。 s place in the domestic sphere, which is extremely difficult for her. Her behavior is often most unladylike – she swears (mildly), burns her dress while warming herself at the fire, spills things on her only gloves, and barely tolerates her cranky old Aunt March. She39。 s so boyish that Mr. March has referred to her as his son JO in the past, and her best friend Laurie sometimes calls her my dear fellow. There were many significant moments in the book in which Jo acted with a strong will like a man. One of the moments happened in chapter three: ―But Jo, who didn39。 t care much for girls or girlish gossip, stood about, with her back carefully against the wall, and felt as much out of place as a colt in a flower garden. Half a dozen jovial lads were talking about skates in another part of the room, and she longed to go and join them, for skating was one of the joys of her life.‖ ③ (3。 ) This speech perfectly delivered the nature of Jo acts like a boy. Jo is the only one of the four girls who braves and challenges the oppressive and restrictive true womanhood, she alone exhibits the spirit of independence and unconventionality. Dreaming of being a boy, she ridicules and discards wherever possible the etiquette and decorum required of true girls. She even brushes away the respectability of a middleclass girl by working as a governess in New York. advantage Jo also loves literature, both reading and writing it. She poses plays for her sisters to perform and writes stories that she eventually gets published. She imitates Dickens and Shakespeare and Scott, and whenever she39。 s not doing chores she curls up in her room, in a corner of the attic, or outside, pletely absorbed in a good book. Not being a genius, like Keats, it won39。 t kill me...when I39。 m ready, I39。 ll up again...Though not the oldest daughter of the family, Jo put herself in the position of the man of the house in father39。 s absence. Jo devotes her literary gifts to helping support her family. She is often selfsacrificing, and has a strong maternal connection over her sister Beth who she adores. After reading father39。 s wish for the girls in his letters, Jo tried to live up what their father had expected her to do. She detected that she was not the only one struggling with outbursts of anger. Much to her amazement, she found her mother al。
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