摘要 | 第1-3页 |
Abstract | 第3-5页 |
中文文摘 | 第5-8页 |
Synopsis | 第8-15页 |
Introduction | 第15-17页 |
Chapter One A general introduction of Philip Roth and Portnoy's Complaint | 第17-22页 |
Ⅰ.1. An introduction of Philip Roth | 第17-18页 |
Ⅰ.2. An introduction of Portnoy's Complaint | 第18-19页 |
Ⅰ.3. Responses to the publication of Portnoy's Complaint and critical reviews on Roth and the book | 第19-22页 |
Chapter Two Shylock—the "Other" at the Hands of a Christian Author | 第22-38页 |
Ⅱ.1. A brief introduction of the "other" in literature | 第22-23页 |
Ⅱ.2. Jews in England—the "other" in the Christian dominant world | 第23-29页 |
Ⅱ.2.1 Jews in Early England | 第23-24页 |
Ⅱ.2.2. Jews in Elizabethan Society—the alien "other" | 第24-29页 |
Ⅱ.2.2.1. Jews during an xenophobic age in Elizabethan England—the social "other" | 第24-26页 |
Ⅱ.2.2.2. Jews under the climate of religious intolerance in Elizabethan time—the religious "other" | 第26-27页 |
Ⅱ.2.2.3. Jews in the then literature at the hands of Christian writers——the cultural "other" | 第27-29页 |
Ⅱ.3. Shylock: an alien "other" figure created for the Elizabethan audience in the form of anti-Semitism | 第29-36页 |
Ⅱ.3.1. Shylock is stripped of his name | 第29-30页 |
Ⅱ.3.2. Shylock is dehumanized as a villain | 第30-32页 |
Ⅱ.3.3. Shylock as a devil | 第32页 |
Ⅱ.3.4. Shylock as a murder | 第32-34页 |
Ⅱ.3.5. Shylock as a counter-character of the Christians in the play | 第34-36页 |
Ⅱ.4. A brief conclusion | 第36-38页 |
Chapter Three Portnoy—a Frustrated Jewish Son Trying to Cross from a Subculture to Mainstream Through Transgress | 第38-56页 |
Ⅲ.1. Portnoy's frustration in his assimilation experience | 第38-48页 |
Ⅲ.1.1. Eastern-European Jews' assimilation experience in America | 第38-44页 |
Ⅲ.1.1.1 The melting pot policy | 第40-41页 |
Ⅲ.1.1.2. Anti-Semitism in America in the WWII and the Post-War Jewry | 第41-44页 |
Ⅲ.1.2. Portnoy's confusion in his frustrating assimilation experience | 第44-48页 |
Ⅲ.2. Portnoy's attempts to cross from a subculture to the mainstream in a liberal time | 第48-54页 |
Ⅲ.2.1. Liberalism and the Hippy Movement | 第48-54页 |
Ⅲ.2.1.2. Portnoy—a hippie | 第52-54页 |
Ⅲ.3. A brief conclusion | 第54-56页 |
Chapter Four Sophie Portnoy—the Scapegoat for the Frustrated Jewish Son | 第56-67页 |
Ⅳ.1. Sophie Portnoy—Jewish son's a scapegoat for his frustration in the process of assimilation due to his subcultural position in mainstream culture | 第57-59页 |
Ⅳ.2. Sophie—a target for Roth's lashing out his resentment against feminism and his anxiety of Jewish masculinity in the mainstream world | 第59-65页 |
Ⅳ.2.1. Feminism in 1960s and male writers' response to it | 第60-61页 |
Ⅳ.2.2. Sophie—the dominant family person filling the patriarchal vacuum | 第61-65页 |
Ⅳ.3. A conclusive analysis of Roth's negative presentation of the Jewish mother | 第65-67页 |
Conclusion | 第67-71页 |
Bibliography | 第71-75页 |
Ae腼owledgement | 第75页 |
Acknowledgement | 第75-76页 |
个人简历 | 第76-77页 |
福建师范大学学位论文使用授权声明 | 第77页 |