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Contents
*New to the 13th Edition
Resources for Reading and Writing about Literature
Preface for Instructors
Introduction: Reading Imaginative Literature
The Nature of Literature
*Danusha LamĂ©ris, âFeeding the Wormsâ
The Value of Literature
The Changing Literary Canon
*Approaching Sensitive Subjects
Fiction
The Elements of Fiction
1. Reading Fiction
Reading Fiction Responsively
Kate Chopin, âThe Story of an Hourâ
A SAMPLE CLOSE READING: An Annotated Section of âThe Story of
an Hourâ
A SAMPLE PAPER: Differences in Responses to Kate Chopinâs âThe Story of an Hourâ
Explorations and Formulas
Ann Beattie, âJanusâ
2. Plot
T.C. Boyle, âThe Hit Manâ
*Joy Harjo, âThe Reckoningâ
William Faulkner, âA Rose for Emilyâ
PERSPECTIVE: William Faulkner, On âA Rose for Emilyâ
A SAMPLE CLOSE READING: An Annotated Section of âA Rose for Emilyâ
A SAMPLE STUDENT RESPONSE: Conflict in the Plot of William Faulknerâs âA Rose for Emilyâ
Andre Dubus, âKillingsâ
3. Character
Tobias Wolff, âPowderâ
*Zadie Smith, âMartha, Marthaâ
James Baldwin, âSonnyâs Bluesâ
4. Setting
Ernest Hemingway, âSoldierâs Homeâ
Ursula LeGuin, âThe Ones Who Walk Away from Omelasâ
Charlotte Perkins Gilman, âThe Yellow Wallpaperâ
5. Point of View
Third-Person Narrator (Nonparticipant)
First-Person Narrator (Participant) John Updike, âA & Pâ
Jamaica Kincaid, âGirlâ
Manuel Muñoz, âZigzaggerâ
*Lorrie Moore, âHow to Become a Writerâ
6. Symbolism
Louise Erdrich, âThe Red Convertibleâ
Ralph Ellison, âKing of the Bingo Gameâ
Cynthia Ozick, âThe Shawlâ
A SAMPLE STUDENT RESPONSE: Layers of Symbol in Cynthia Ozickâs âThe Shawlâ
7. Theme
*Adrian Tomine, âIntrudersâ (graphic short story)
*A SAMPLE STUDENT RESPONSE: Danger among Us: Distilling the Theme in âIntrudersâ
Nathaniel Hawthorne, âThe Ministerâs Black Veilâ
*Carmen Maria Machado, âEight Bitesâ
8. Style, Tone, and Irony
Style
Tone
Irony
Shirley Jackson, âThe Lotteryâ
Mark Twain, âThe Story of the Good Little Boyâ
*Virginia Woolf, âThe Man Who Loved His Kindâ
PERSPECTIVE: Virginia Woolf, âOn Conventions in Writingâ
Approaches to Fiction
Thematic Approaches
9. Thematic Case Study: War and Its Aftermath
Tim OâBrien, âHow to Tell a True War Storyâ
Kurt Vonnegut, âHappy Birthday, 1951â
Edwidge Danticat, âThe Missing Peaceâ
10. Thematic Case Study: Privacy
Oscar Wilde, âThe Sphinx without a Secret: An Etchingâ
David Long, âMorphineâ
ZZ Packer, âDrinking Coffee Elsewhereâ
John Cheever, âThe Enormous Radioâ
Genre Studies
11. Genre Case Study: Speculative Fiction
*Peter Ho Davies, âMinotaurâ
*N. K. Jemisin, âSinners, Saints, Dragons, and Haints, in the City beneath the Still Watersâ
*Mariana Enriquez, âBack When We Talked to the Deadâ
*Philip K. Dick, âTo Serve the Masterâ
Authors in Depth
12. *A Study of Alice Munro
An Introduction
A Brief Biography
Alice Munro:
*âWalker Brothers Cowboyâ
*âThe Moons of Jupiterâ *âSilenceâ
PERSPECTIVES:
*Alice Munro, âIn Her Own Wordsâ (Nobel Lecture in absentia)
*Margaret Atwood, âAlice Munro: An Appreciationâ
*Beverly Rasporich, âDance of the Sexes: Art and Gender in the
Fiction of Alice Munroâ
*W.R. Martin and Warren U. Ober, âAlice Munro as Small-Town
Historian: âSpaceships Have Landedââ
SUGGESTIONS FOR TOPICS FOR LONGER PAPERS: Alice Munro
13. A Study of Flannery OâConnor
A Brief Biography and Introduction
Flannery OâConnor:
âA Good Man is Hard to Findâ
âGood Country Peopleâ
*âThe Life You Save May Be Your Ownâ
PERSPECTIVES:
Flannery OâConnor, âOn the Use of Exaggeration and Distortionâ
Josephine Hendin, âOn OâConnorâs Refusal to âDo Prettyââ
Claire Katz, âThe Function of Violence in OâConnorâs Fictionâ
Edward Kessler, âOn OâConnorâs Use of Historyâ
TIME Magazine, âOn A Good Man is Hard to Find and Other
Storiesâ
14. A Study of Dagoberto Gilb: The Author Reflects on Three Stories
An Introduction
A Brief Biography
Dagoberto Gilb:
âHow Books Bounceâ (Introduction)
âLove in L.A.â (Story)
âOn Writing âLove in L.A.ââ (Essay)
âShoutâ (Story)
âOn Writing âShoutââ (Essay)
âUncle Rockâ (Story)
âOn Writing âUncle Rockââ (Essay)
PERSPECTIVES:
Dagoberto Gilb:
âOn Physical Laborâ
âOn Distortions of Mexican American Cultureâ
âMichael Meyer Interviews Dagoberto Gilbâ
FACSIMILES: Dagoberto Gilb, Two Draft Manuscript Pages
Further Reading
15. Stories for Further Reading
Judith Ortiz Cofer, âVolarâ
Zora Neale Hurston, âSweatâ
James Joyce, âEvelineâ
*Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi, âLetâs Tell This Story Properlyâ
Joyce Carol Oates, âTickâ
Edgar Allan Poe, âThe Cask of Amontilladoâ
George Saunders, âI Can Speak âąâ
Alice Walker, âThe Flowersâ
John Edgar Wideman, âAll Stories are Trueâ
Poetry
The Elements of Poetry
16. Reading Poetry
Reading Poetry Responsively
Lisa Parker, âSnapping Beansâ
*Linda Pastan, âJump Cablingâ
John Updike, âDogâs Deathâ
The Pleasure of Words
Gregory Corso: âI am 25â
A SAMPLE CLOSE READING: An Annotated Version of âI am 25â
Robert Francis, âCatchâ
A SAMPLE STUDENT ANALYSIS: Tossing Metaphors in Robert Francisâs âCatchâ
*Jane Hirshfield, âThis Morning, I Wanted Four Legsâ
Robert Morgan, âMountain Graveyardâ
E. E. Cummings, âl(aâ
Anonymous, âWestern Windâ
Regina Barreca, âNighttime Firesâ
Suggestions for Approaching Poetry
Poetic Definitions of Poetry
Marianne Moore, âPoetryâ
Billy Collins, âIntroduction to Poetryâ
Ruth Forman, âPoetry Should Ride the Busâ
Charles Bukowski, âa poem is a cityâ
*Ada LimĂłn, âThe End of Poetryâ
Recurrent Poetic Figures: Five Ways of Looking at Roses
Robert Burns, âA Red, Red Roseâ
Edmund Waller, âGo, Lovely Roseâ
William Blake, âThe Sick Roseâ
Dorothy Parker, âOne Perfect Roseâ
H.D. (Hilda Doolittle), âSea Roseâ
Poems for Further Study
Mary Oliver, âThe Poet with His Face in His Handsâ
Jim Tilley, âThe Big Questionsâ
Alberto RĂos, âSeniorsâ
Alfred, Lord Tennyson, âThe Eagleâ
Edgar Allan Poe, âSonnet â To Scienceâ
Cornelius Eady, âThe Supremesâ
17. Word Choice, Word Order, and Tone
Word Choice
Randall Jarrell, âThe Death of the Ball Turret Gunnerâ
Allusion
Word Order
Tone
Marilyn Nelson, âHow I Discovered Poetryâ
Katharyn Howd Machan, âHazel Tells LaVerneâ
A SAMPLE STUDENT RESPONSE: Tone in Katharyn Howd Machanâs âHazel Tells Laverneâ
MartĂn Espada, âLatin Night at the Pawnshopâ
*Joy Harjo, âGranddaughtersâ
Diction and Tone in Four Love Poems
*Shamim Azad, âFirst Loveâ
*Elizabeth Barrett Browning, âSonnet XLIIIâ
*John Frederick Nims, âLove Poemâ
*Pablo Neruda, âDrunk as drunk on turpentineâ
Poems for Further Study
Walt Whitman, âThe Dalliance of the Eaglesâ
Kwame Dawes, âHistory Lesson at Eight a.m.â
Cathy Song, âThe Youngest Daughterâ
John Keats, âOde on a Grecian Urnâ
Alice Jones, âThe Lungsâ
Louis Simpson, âIn the Suburbsâ
A Note on Reading Translations
Sappho, âImmortal Aphrodite of the broidered throneâ (trans. Henry T. Wharton)
Sappho, âBeautiful-throned, immortal aphroditeâ (trans. Thomas Wentworth Higginson)
Sappho, âPray to my lady of Paphosâ (trans. Mary Barnard)
18. Images
Poetryâs Appeal to the Senses
William Carlos Williams, âPoemâ
Walt Whitman, âCavalry Crossing a Fordâ
*Suji Kwock Kim, âThe Korean Community Garden in Queensâ
David Solway, âWindsurfingâ
Poems for Further Study
Adelaide Crapsey, âNovember Nightâ
Ruth Fainlight, âCrocusesâ
Mary Robinson, âLondonâs Summer Morningâ
William Blake, âLondonâ
A SAMPLE STUDENT RESPONSE: Imagery in William Blakeâs âLondonâ and Mary Robinsonâs âLondonâs Summer Morningâ Kwame Dawes, âThe Habits of Loveâ
*Charles Simic, âHouse of Cardsâ
Sally Croft, âHome-Baked Breadâ
John Keats, âTo Autumnâ
PERSPECTIVE: T. E. Hulme, âOn the Differences between Poetry and Prose
19. Figures of Speech
William Shakespeare, From Macbeth
Simile and Metaphor
Langston Hughes, âHarlemâ
Jane Kenyon, âThe Socksâ
Anne Bradstreet, âThe Author to Her Bookâ
Other Figures
Edmund Conti, âPragmatistâ
Dylan Thomas, âThe Hand That Signed the Paperâ
Janice Townley Moore, âTo a Waspâ
Tajana Kovics, âText Messageâ
Poems for Further Study
William Carlos Williams, âTo Waken an Old Ladyâ
Ernest Slyman, âLightning Bugsâ
Martin Espada, âThe Mexican Cabdriverâs Poem for His Wife, Who Has Left Himâ
Judy Page Heitzman, âThe Schoolroom on the Second Floor of the Knitting Millâ
Robert Pinsky, âIciclesâ
Jim Stevens, âSchizophreniaâ
Kay Ryan, âLearningâ
Ronald Wallace, âBuilding an Outhouseâ
Elaine Magarrell, âThe Joy of Cookingâ
PERSPECTIVE: John R. Searle, âFiguring Out Metaphorsâ
20. Symbol, Allegory, and Irony
Symbol
Robert Frost, âAcquainted with the Nightâ
Allegory
James Baldwin, âGuilt, Desire, and Loveâ
Irony
Edward Arlington Robinson, âRichard Coryâ
A SAMPLE STUDENT RESPONSE: Irony in Edwin Arlington Robinsonâs âRichard Coryâ
*Gwendolyn Brooks, âSadie and Maudâ
E. E. Cummings, ânext to of course god america iâ
Stephen Crane, âA Man Said to the Universeâ
Poems for Further Study
Christina Rossetti, âGoblin Marketâ
Jane Kenyon, âThe Thimbleâ
Kevin Pierce, âProof of Originâ
Carl Sandburg, âA Fenceâ
Julio MarzĂĄn, âEthnic Poetryâ
Mark Halliday, âGraded Paperâ
Robert Browning, âMy Last Duchessâ
William Blake, âA Poison Treeâ
PERSPECTIVE: Ezra Pound, âOn Symbolsâ
21. Sounds
Listening to Poetry
*Kamau Brathwaite, âOgunâ
John Updike, âPlayer Pianoâ
Emily Dickinson, âA Bird came down the Walk ââ
A SAMPLE STUDENT RESPONSE: Sound in Emily Dickinsonâs âA Bird came down the Walkââ
Rhyme
Richard Armour, âGoing to Extremesâ
Robert Southey, from âThe Cataract of Lodoreâ
PERSPECTIVE: David Lenson, âOn the Contemporary Use of Rhymeâ
Sound and Meaning
Gerard Manley Hopkins, âGodâs Grandeurâ
Poems for Further Study
Lewis Carroll (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson), âJabberwockyâ
William Heyen, âThe Trainsâ
Alfred, Lord Tennyson, âBreak, Break, Breakâ
John Donne, âSongâ
Kay Ryan, âDewâ
Andrew Hudgins, âThe Ice-Cream Truckâ
Robert Francis, âThe Pitcherâ
Helen Chasin, âThe Word Plumâ
Richard Wakefield, âThe Bell Ropeâ
Jean Toomer, âUnsuspectingâ
John Keats, âOde to a Nightingaleâ
Howard Nemerov, âBecause You Asked about the Line between Prose and Poetryâ
Major Jackson, âAutumn Landscapeâ
22. Patterns of Rhythm
Some Principles of Meter
William Wordsworth, âMy Heart Leaps Upâ
Suggestions for Scanning a Poem
Timothy Steele, âWaiting for the Stormâ
A SAMPLE STUDENT RESPONSE: The Rhythm of Anticipation in Timothy Steeleâs âWaiting for The Stormâ
William Butler Yeats, âThat the Night Comeâ
Poems for Further Study
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, âMnemonicâ
John Maloney, âGood!â
Alice Jones, âThe Footâ
A .E. Housman, âWhen I was one-and-twentyâ
Robert Herrick, âDelight in Disorderâ
Ben Jonson, âStill to Be Neatâ
E. E. Cummings, âO sweet spontaneousâ
William Blake, âThe Lambâ
William Blake, âThe Tygerâ
Carl Sandburg, âChicagoâ
PERSPECTIVE: Louise Bogan, âOn Formal Poetryâ
23. Poetic Forms
Some Common Poetic Forms
A.E. Housman, âLoveliest of trees, the cherry nowâ
Robert Herrick, âUpon Juliaâs Clothesâ
Sonnet
John Keats, âOn First Looking into Chapmanâs Homerâ
William Wordsworth, âThe World Is Too Much With Usâ
William Shakespeare, âShall I compare thee to a summerâs day?â
William Shakespeare, âMy mistressâ eyes are nothing like the sunâ
Edna St. Vincent Millay, âI will put Chaos into fourteen linesâ
Mark Jarman, âUnholy Sonnetâ
R.S. Gwynn, âShakespearean Sonnetâ
Villanelle
Dylan Thomas, âDo Not Go Gentle into That Good Nightâ
*Denise Duhamel, âPlease Donât Sit Like A Frog, Sit Like A Queenâ
Sestina
Algernon Charles Swinburne, âSestinaâ
Florence Cassen Mayers, âAll-American Sestinaâ
Julia Alvarez, âBilingual Sestinaâ
Epigram
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, âWhat Is an Epigram?â
David McCord, âEpitaph on a Waiterâ
Paul Laurence Dunbar, âTheologyâ
Limerick
Arthur Henry Reginald Buller, âThere was a young lady named Brightâ
Laurence Perrine, âThe limerickâs never averseâ
Haiku
Matsuo Basho, âUnder cherry treesâ
Carolyn Kizer, âAfter Bashoâ
Amy Lowell, âLast night it rainedâ
Gary Snyder, âA Dent in a Bucketâ
Ghazal
Mirza Asadullah Khan Ghalib, âGhazal 4â
Patricia Smith, âHip-Hop Ghazalâ
Elegy
Ben Jonson, âOn My First Sonâ
Thomas Gray, âElegy Written in a Country Churchyardâ
Kate Hanson Foster, âElegy of Colorâ
Ode
Alexander Pope, âOde on Solitudeâ
Parody
Blanche Farley, âThe Lover Not Takenâ
Gwendolyn Brooks, âWe Real Coolâ
Joan Murray, âWe Old Dudesâ
Picture Poem
Michael McFee, âIn Medias Resâ
Open Form
Walt Whitman, from âI Sing the Body Electricâ
PERSPECTIVE: Walt Whitman, âOn Rhyme and Meterâ
A SAMPLE STUDENT RESPONSE: The Power of Walt Whitmanâs Open Form Poem âI Sing the Body Electricâ
*William Carlos Williams, âThe Red Wheelbarrowâ
Julio MarzĂĄn, âThe Translator at the Reception for Latin American Writersâ
Major Jackson, âThe Chaseâ
David Hernandez, âAll-Americanâ
PERSPECTIVE: Elaine Mitchell, âFormâ
Approaches to Poetry
24. *A Thematic Case Study: Poetry and Protest
*Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, âEliza Harrisâ
*Claude McKay, âThe Lynchingâ
*Tillie Lerner Olsen, âI Want You Women Up North to Knowâ
*Genevieve Taggard, âOde in a Time of Crisisâ
*Audre Lorde, âPowerâ
*June Jordan, âPoem About My Rightsâ
*Denise Levertov, âA Poem at Christmas, 1972, During the Terror-Bombing of North Vietnamâ
*Kimberly Blaeser, âApprenticed to Justiceâ
*Tato Laviera, âLatero Storyâ
*Claudia Rankine, âStop-and-Friskâ
*Danez Smith, ânot an elegy for Mike Brownâ
*Aja Monet, #sayhername
SUGGESTED TOPICS FOR LONGER PAPERS
25. *A Thematic Case Study: Our Fragile Planet
*Eileen Cleary, âThe Way We Fledâ
*Tess Gallagher, âChoicesâ
*Joy Harjo, âSinging Everythingâ
J. Estanislao Lopez, âMeditation on Beautyâ
Gail White, âDead Armadillosâ
Allen Ginsburg, âSunflower Sutraâ
Mary Oliver, âWild Geeseâ
Sylvia Plath, âPheasantâ
*Teresa Mei Chuc, âRainforestâ
*Jennifer Franklin, âMemento Mori: Apple Orchardâ
SUGGESTED TOPICS FOR LONGER PAPERS
26. A Case Study: Song Lyrics as Poetry
Frederic Weatherly, âDanny Boyâ
*Bessie Smith and W.C. Handy, âCareless Love Bluesâ
*Woody Guthrie, âPretty Boy Floydâ
Hank Williams, âIâm So Lonesome I Could Cryâ
Bob Dylan, âItâs Alright, Ma (Iâm Only Bleeding)â
John Lennon and Paul McCartney, âI Am the Walrusâ
Joni Mitchell, âCold Blue Steel and Sweet Fireâ
*Paul Simon, âSlip-Slidinâ Awayâ
*Ani DiFranco, âNot a Pretty Girlâ
*Richard Buckner, â4 AMâ
Tom Waits, âAliceâ
*GZA, âAlphabetsâ
*Chance the Rapper, âInterlude (Thatâs Love)â
*Common, âLetter to the Freeâ
*Noname, âDonât Forget About Meâ
*Adrianne Lenker, âNotâ
*Little Simz, âIntrovertâ
27. *A Thematic Case Study: The Poetry of Solitude
*Jim Moore, âHow to Come Out of Lockdownâ
Emily Dickinson, âThe Soul selects her own Societyââ
Robert Frost, âStopping by Woods on a Snowy Eveningâ
*John Keats, âTo Solitudeâ
*Elisa Gonzalez, âIn Quarantine, I Reflect on the Death of Opheliaâ
William Wordsworth, âI wandered lonely as a cloudâ
Robert Lowell, âSkunk Hourâ
*Galway Kinnell, âWhen One Has Lived a Long Time Aloneâ
Robert Hayden, âThose Winter Sundaysâ
Matthew Arnold, âDover Beachâ
*Dionisio D. MartĂnez, âFlood: Years of Solitudeâ
*Li Bai, âThe Solitude of Nightâ
28. A Cultural Case Study: The Harlem Renaissance
Claude McKay
âThe Harlem Dancerâ
âIf We Must Dieâ
âThe Tropics in New Yorkâ
âAmericaâ
âThe White Cityâ
âThe Barrierâ
Georgia Douglas Johnson
âYouthâ
âForedoomâ
âCalling Dreamsâ
âLost Illusionsâ
âFusionâ
âPrejudiceâ
Langston Hughes
âThe Negro Speaks of Riversâ
âJazzoniaâ
âThe Weary Bluesâ
âLenox Avenue: Midnightâ
âBallad of the Landlordâ
Countee Cullen
âYet Do I Marvelâ
âIncidentâ
âHeritageâ
PERSPECTIVES:
Karen Jackson Ford, âHughesâs Aesthetics of Simplicityâ
David Chinitz, âThe Romanticization of Africa in the 1920sâ
Alain Locke, âReview of Georgia Douglas Johnsonâs Bronze: A Book
of Verseâ
Countee Cullen, âOn Racial Poetryâ
Onwuchekwa Jemie, âOn Universal Poetryâ
SUGGESTED TOPICS FOR LONGER PAPERS
Poetry and the Visual Arts
Questions for Responsive Reading and Writing
American Gothic
Grant Wood, âAmerican Gothicâ (Painting)
John Stone, âAmerican Gothicâ (Poem)
Girl Powdering Her Neck
Cathy Song, âGirl Powdering Her Neckâ (Poem)
Kiagawa Utamaro, âGirl Powdering Her Neckâ (Woodblock Print)
The Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall
Yusef Komunyakaa, âFacing Itâ (Poem)
Maya Lin, âThe Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wallâ (Sculpture)
Two Monkeys
Wislawa Szymborska, âBrueghelâs Two Monkeysâ (Poem)
Pieter Bruegel The Elder, âTwo Chained Monkeysâ (Painting)
House by the Railroad
Edward Hirsch, âEdward Hopper and the House by the Railroadâ
(Poem)
Edward Hopper, âHouse by the Railroadâ (Painting)
The Milkmaid
Wislawa Szymborska, âVermeerâ (Poem)
Vermeer, âThe Milkmaidâ (Painting)
Four Poets in Depth
29. A Study of Emily Dickinson
A Brief Biography
An Introduction to Her Work
Emily Dickinson:
âIf I can stop one Heart from breakingâ
âIf I shouldnât be aliveâ
âThe Thought beneath so slight a filmââ
âTo make a prairie it takes a clover and one beeâ
âSuccess is counted sweetestâ
âWater, is taught by thirstâ
âSome keep the Sabbath going to Churchââ
âI taste a liquor never brewedââ
ââHeavenââis what I cannot reach!â
âI like a look of Agonyâ
âWild NightsâWild Nights!â
âMuch Madness is divinest Senseââ
âI dwell in Possibilityââ
âI heard a Fly buzzâwhen I diedââ
âBecause I could not stop for Deathââ
âTell all the Truth but tell it slantââ
âOh Sumptuous momentâ
âA Route of Evanescenceâ
âFrom all the Jails the Boys and Girlsâ
PERSPECTIVES ON EMILY DICKINSON:
Emily Dickinson, âA Description of Herselfâ
Thomas Wentworth Higgonson, âOn Meeting Dickinson for the
First Timeâ
Mabel Loomis Todd, âThe Character of Amherstâ
Sandra M. Gilbert and Susan Gubar, âOn Dickinsonâs White Dressâ
Paula Bennett, âOn âI heard a Fly buzzâwhen I diedâââ
Martha Nell Smith, âOn âBecause I could not stop for Deathâââ
Questions for Writing about an Author in Depth
A SAMPLE IN-DEPTH STUDY
Emily Dickinson:
ââFaithâ is a fine inventionâ
âI know that He existsâ
âI never saw a Moorââ
âApparently with no surpriseâ
A SAMPLE STUDENT PAPER: Religious Faith in Four Poems by Emily Dickinson
SUGGESTED TOPICS FOR LONGER PAPERS
30. A Study of Robert Frost
A Brief Biography
An Introduction to His Work
Robert Frost
âThe Road Not Takenâ
âThe Pastureâ
âMowingâ
âMending Wallâ
âBirchesâ
âOut, Outââ
âFire and Iceâ
âThe Need of Being Versed in Country Thingsâ
âNothing Gold Can Stayâ
âNeither Out Far nor In Deepâ
âDesignâ
âDesert Placesâ
âThe Gift Outrightâ
PERSPECTIVES ON ROBERT FROST:
Robert Frost, âOn Living Part of a Poemâ
Amy Lowell, âOn Frostâs Realistic Techniqueâ
Herbert R. Coursen Jr. âA Parodic Interpretation of âStopping by Woods on a Snowy Eveningââ
SUGGESTED TOPICS FOR LONGER PAPERS
31. A Study of Julia Alvarez: The Author Reflects on Five Poems
A Brief Biography
An Introduction to Her Work
Julia Alvarez:
âQueens, 1963â (Poem)
âOn Writing âQueens, 1963ââ (Essay)
âHousekeeping Cagesâ (Poem)
âOn Writing âHousekeeping Cagesâ and Her Housekeeping Poemsâ (Essay)
âDustingâ (Poem)
âOn Writing âDustingââ (Essay)
âIroning Their Clothesâ (Poem)
âOn Writing âIroning Their Clothesââ (Essay)
âSometimes the Words Are So Closeâ (Poem)
Drafts of âSometimes the Words Are So Closeâ: A Poetâs Writing Process
âOn Writing âSometimes the Words Are So Closeââ (Essay)
FACSIMILES: Julia Alvarez, Four Manuscript Pages: âSometimes the Words Are So Closeâ
PERSPECTIVES:
Marny Requa, âFrom an Interview with Julia Alvarezâ
Kelli Lyon Johnson, âMapping an Identityâ
32. A Study of Billy Collins: The Author Reflects on Five Poems
A Brief Biography and Introduction to His Work
Billy Collins:
âHow Do Poems Travel?â (Introduction)
âOsso Bucoâ (Poem)
âOn Writing âOsso Bucoââ (Essay)
âNostalgiaâ (Poem)
âOn Writing âNostalgiaââ (Essay)
âQuestions About Angelsâ (Poem)
âOn Writing âQuestions About Angelsââ (Essay)
âLitanyâ (Poem)
âOn Writing âLitanyââ (Essay)
âBuilding with Its Face Blown Offâ (Poem)
PERSPECTIVE: Billy Collins, âOn âBuilding with Its Face Blown Offâ: Michael Meyer Interviews Billy Collinsâ
Draft Poems
SUGGESTED TOPICS FOR LONGER PAPERS
An Anthology of Poems
33. An Anthology of Classic Poems
W.H. Auden, âThe Unknown Citizenâ
Charles Baudelaire, âA Carrionâ
Aphra Behn, âSong: Love Armedâ
William Blake, âInfant Sorrowâ
Anne Bradstreet, âBefore the Birth of One of Her Childrenâ
Emily BrontĂ«, âStarsâ
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, âKubla Khan: Or, a Vision in a Dreamâ
John Donne, âThe Fleaâ
T.S. Eliot, âThe Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrockâ
Gerard Manley Hopkins, âPied Beautyâ
John Keats, âWhen I Have Fears That I May Cease to Beâ
Philip Larkin, âSad Stepsâ
Emma Lazarus, âThe New Colossusâ
Andrew Marvell, âTo His Coy Mistressâ
Edna St. Vincent Millay, âSpringâ
John Milton, âWhen I consider how my light is spentâ
Edgar Allan Poe, âAnnabelle Leeâ
Edwin Arlington Robinson, âMiniver Cheevyâ
William Shakespeare, âWhen, in disgrace with Fortune and menâs eyesâ
Percy Bysshe Shelley, âOzymandiasâ
Stevie Smith, âNot Waving but Drowningâ
Wallace Stevens, âThirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbirdâ
Phillis Wheatley, âTo S.M., a young African Painter, on seeing his Worksâ
Walt Whitman, âWhen I Heard the Learnâd Astronomerâ
William Butler Yeats, âThe Lake Isle of Innisfreeâ
34. An Anthology of Recent Poems
*JosĂ© Angel Araguz, âThe Nameâ
Michelle Cliff, âThe Land of Look Behindâ
Gregory Corso, âMarriageâ
Rita Dove, âDaystarâ
Lawrence Ferlinghetti, âConstantly Risking Absurdityâ
*Amanda Gorman, âIn This Place (An American Lyric)â
Seamus Heaney, âDiggingâ
Brionne Janae, âAlternative Factsâ
Luisa Lopez, âJunior Year Abroadâ
Audre Lorde, âLearning to Writeâ
Naomi Shihab Nye, âTo Manageâ
Adelia Prado, âDenouementâ
*Lois Red Elk, âAll Thirst Quenchedâ
*Patricia Smith, âWhat Itâs Like to Be a Black Girl (for those of you who arenât)â
Tracy K. Smith, âSelf Portrait as the Letter Yâ
*Natasha Trethewey, âGraveyard Bluesâ
Drama
The Study 0f Drama
35. Reading Drama
Reading Drama Responsively
Susan Glaspell, Trifles
A SAMPLE CLOSE READING: An Annotated Section of Trifles
PERSPECTIVE: Susan Glaspell, âFrom âA Jury of Her Peers,â the Short Story Version of Triflesâ
Elements of Drama
Plays in Performance
Photos of scenes from:
*Trifles
Oedipus the King
*Othello
The Importance of Being Earnest
*Water by the Spoonful
Proof
Fences
36. A Study of Sophocles
Theatrical Conventions of Greek Drama
Tragedy
Sophocles, Oedipus the King (trans. by David Grene)
PERSPECTIVES ON SOPHOCLES:
Aristotle, âOn Tragic Characterâ
Sigmund Freud, âOn the Oedipus Complexâ
Muriel Rukeyser, âOn Oedipus the Kingâ
David Wiles, âOn Oedipus the King as a Political Playâ
37. A Study of William Shakespeare
Shakespeareâs Theater
The Range of Shakespeareâs Drama: History, Comedy, and Tragedy
A Note on Reading Shakespeare
William Shakespeare, Othello, the Moor of Venice
PERSPECTIVES ON SHAKESPEARE:
The Mayor of London (1597), âObjections to the Elizabethan Theaterâ
Lisa Jardine, âOn Boy Actors in Female Rolesâ
Samuel Johnson, âOn Shakespeareâs Charactersâ
Jane Adamson, âOn Desdemonaâs Role in Othelloâ
David Bevington, âOn Othelloâs Heroic Struggleâ
James Kincaid, âOn the Value of Comedy in the Face of Tragedyâ
SUGGESTED TOPICS FOR LONGER PAPERS
38. Modern Drama
Realism
Naturalism
Theatrical Conventions of Modern Drama
Oscar Wilde, The Importance of Being Earnest
39. *Contemporary Drama
Beyond Realism
Musical Theater
*Drama in Popular Forms
*Suzan Lori Parks:
*âVeuve Clicquotâ
*âHere Comes the Messageâ
*âFine Animalâ
*âThe Ends of the Earthâ
*âBeginning, Middle, Endâ
*âWhat Do You See?â
*âThis is Shitâ
*âBarefoot and Pregnant in the Parkâ
*âOrangeâ
*â(Again) Groundhogâ
40. *A Cultural Case Study: Quiara AlegrĂa Hudesâs Water by the Spoonful
*Quiara AlegrĂa Hudes, Water by the Spoonful
PERSPECTIVES:
*Quiara AlegrĂa Hudes, âAtonality,â from My Broken Language
*John Coltrane and Leonard Feather, âInterview, 1964â
*Elliott Ackerman, âA Summary of Action,â from Places and Names: On War, Revolution, and Returning
*Anonymous, From Stepping Stones to Recovery from Cocaine
*A SAMPLE STUDENT PAPER: Water by the Spoonful: Exploring the Internetâs Role in Bettering the Self
41. A Collection of Plays
David Auburn, Proof
Lynn Nottage, âPOOF!â
August Wilson, âFencesâ
PERSPECTIVE: David Savran, âAn Interview with August Wilsonâ
Strategies for Reading and Writing
42. Critical Strategies for Reading
Critical Thinking
Formalist Strategies
Biographical Strategies
Psychological Strategies
Historical Strategies
Marxist Criticism
New Historicist Criticism
Cultural Criticism
Gender Strategies
Feminist Criticism
LGBTQ+ Criticism
Mythological Strategies
Reader-Response Strategies
Deconstructionist Strategies
*Affect Theory Approaches
43. Writing about Literature
Why Am I Being Asked to Do This?
From Reading and Discussion to Writing
Reading the Work Closely
Prewriting
Arguing about Literature
Writing
Revising and Editing
Questions for Writing: A Revision Checklist
Types of Writing Assignments
Explication
Emily Dickinson, âThereâs a certain Slant of lightâ
A SAMPLE STUDENT EXPLICATION: A Reading of Emily Dickinsonâs âThereâs a certain Slant of Lightâ
Elizabeth Bishop, âMannersâ
An Annotated Version of âMannersâ
A SAMPLE STUDENT ANALYSIS: Memory in Elizabeth Bishopâs âMannersâ
*A SAMPLE STUDENT COMPARISON: âCoping with Loss in Alice Munro's âSilenceâ and David Auburn's âProofâ
Writing about Fiction, Poetry, And Drama
Writing about Fiction
Questions for Responsive Reading and Writing about Fiction
A SAMPLE STUDENT ESSAY: John Updikeâs âA & Pâ as a State of Mind
Writing about Poetry
Questions for Responsive Reading and Writing about Poetry
The Elements Together
John Donne, âDeath Be Not Proudâ
A SAMPLE CLOSE READING: An Annotated Version of âDeath Be Not Proudâ
A Sample First Response
Organizing Your Thoughts
A Sample Informal Outline
The Elements and Theme
A SAMPLE EXPLICATION: The Use of Conventional Metaphors for Death in John Donneâs âDeath Be Not Proudâ
Writing about Drama
Questions for Responsive Reading and Writing about Drama
A SAMPLE STUDENT PAPER: The Feminist Evidence in Susan Glaspellâs Trifles
44. The Literary Research Paper
Choosing a Topic
Finding Sources
Evaluating Sources and Taking Notes
Developing a Draft, Integrating Sources, and Organizing the Essay
Documenting Sources and Avoiding Plagiarism
A SAMPLE STUDENT PAPER: How William Faulknerâs Narrator Cultivates a Rose for Emily
Glossary of Literary Terms
Index of First Lines
Index of Authors and Titles
Index of Terms
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