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Exploring Literature: Writing and Arguing about Fiction, Poetry, Drama, and the Essay, 4th Edition by Frank Madden, SUNY, Westchester Community College ZIP OR PDF for sale 

Table of Contents

I. MAKING CONNECTIONS

1. Participation: Personal Response and Critical Thinking

The Personal Dimension of Reading Literature

Personal Response and Critical Thinking

Writing to Learn

            Your First Response

                        Checklist: Your First Response

            Keeping a Journal or Reading Log

                        Double-Entry Journals and Logs

            The Social Nature of Learning: Collaboration

            Personal, Not Private

Ourselves as Readers

            Different Kinds of Reading

PETER MEINKE, Advice to My Son

Making Connections with Literature

            Images of Ourselves

Connecting Through Experience

PAUL ZIMMER, Zimmer in Grade School

Connecting Through Experience

Culture, Experience, and Values

Connecting Through Experience

ROBERT HAYDEN, Those Winter Sundays

Connecting Through Experience

MARGE PIERCY, Barbie Doll

Being in the Moment

NEW YORK TIMES, “Birmingham Bomb Kills 4”

DUDLEY RANDALL, Ballad of Birmingham

Participating, Not Solving

Using Our Imaginations

The Whole and Its Parts

2. Communication: Writing a Response Essay

The Response Essay

            Checklist: The Basics of a Response Essay

Voice and Writing

            Voice and Response to Literature

Connecting Through Experience

COUNTEE CULLEN, Incident

Writing to Describe

            Choosing Details

            Choosing Details from Literature

Connecting Through Experience

SANDRA CISNEROS, Eleven

Writing to Compare

            Comparing and Contrasting Using a Venn Diagram

Connecting Through Experience

ANNA QUINDLEN, Mothers

Connecting Through Experience

LANGSTON HUGHES, Salvation

            Possible Worlds

From First Response to Final Draft

            The Importance of Revision

            Using Your First Response

            Using First or Third Person in Formal Essays

II. ANALYSIS, ARGUMENTATION, AND RESEARCH

3. Exploration and Analysis: Genre and the Elements of Literature

Close Reading

Annotating the Text

            First Annotation: Exploration

PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY, Ozymandias

            Second Annotation: Analysis

            Literature in Its Many Contexts

            Your Critical Approach

Reading and Analyzing Fiction

            Summary Checklist: Analyzing Fiction

Narration

Point of View

Setting

Conflict

Plot

Character

Language and Style

            Diction

            Symbol

            Irony

            Theme

Getting Ideas for Writing About Fiction

KATE CHOPIN, The Story of an Hour

Reading and Analyzing Poetry

            Summary Checklist: Analyzing Poetry

Language and Style

            Denotation and Connotation

            Voice

            Tone

            Irony

STEPHEN CRANE, War Is Kind

            Imagery

HELEN CHASIN, The Word Plum

ROBERT BROWNING, Meeting at Night

                                                Parting at Morning

            Figurative Language: Everyday Poetry

LANGSTON HUGHES, A Dream Deferred

N. SCOTT MOMADAY, Simile

CARL SANDBURG, Fog

JAMES STEPHENS, The Wind

            Symbol

ROBERT FROST, The Road Not Taken

Sound and Structure

            Rhyme, Alliteration, and Assonance

            Finding the Beat: Limericks

            Meter

            Formal Verse: The Sonnet

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, Sonnet No. 29

            Blank Verse

            Free or Open Form Verse

WALT WHITMAN, When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer

Interpretation: What Does the Poem Mean?

            Explication

Types of Poetry

            Lyric Poetry

            Narrative Poetry

Getting Ideas for Writing About Poetry

MAY SWENSON, Pigeon Woman

Reading and Analyzing Drama

            Summary Checklist: Analyzing Drama

Reading a Play

            Point of View

            Set and Setting

            Conflict

            Plot

            The Poetics

            Tragedy

            Comedy

            Characterization

Language and Style

            Diction

            Symbol

            Irony

Theme

Periods of Drama: A Brief Background

            Greek Drama

            Shakespearean Drama

            Modern Drama

Getting Ideas for Writing About Drama

            Tips on Reading Antigonê

SOPHOCLES, Antigonê

Reading and Analyzing Essays

            Summary Checklist: Analyzing Essays

Types of Essays

            Narrative

            Expository

            Argumentative

Language, Style, and Structure

            Formal or Informal

            Voice

            Word Choice and Style

            Theme or Thesis: What’s the Point?

            The Aims of an Essay: Inform, Preach, or Reveal

Getting Ideas for Writing About the Essay

AMY TAN, Mother Tongue

4. Argumentation: Writing a Critical Essay

The Critical Essay

Interpretation and Evaluation

            Interpretation: What Does it Mean?

            Evaluation: How Well Does it Work?

Options for a Critical Essay: Process and Product

                        Checklist: Options for a Critical Essay

            An Analytical Essay

            A Comparative Essay

            A Thematic Essay

            A Philosophical or Ethical Evaluation

            A Contextual Essay

Argumentation: Writing a Critical Essay

            The Shape of an Argument

            Planning Your Argument

            Supporting Your Argument: Induction and Substantiation

            Opening, Closing, and Revising Your Argument

The Development of a Critical Essay

5. Research: Writing with Secondary Sources

The Research Essay

Creating, Expanding, and Joining Interpretive Communities

It Is Your Interpretation

Getting Started

            Choosing a Topic

            Some Popular Areas of Literary Research

Your Search

            Peer Support

            The Library

            Reference Works

            Finding Sources on the Internet

            Evaluating Internet Sources

            Checklist: Evaluating Internet Sources

Integrating Sources into Your Writing

            What Must Be Documented

            Where and How

            Paraphrasing and Summarizing

            Quoting

            Avoiding Plagiarism

From First Response to Research Essay

            Checklist: Writing a Research Essay

CASE STUDY IN RESEARCH

            Step 1: Using Your First Response

JAMES JOYCE, Eveline

            Step 2: Composing a Draft

                        Prof. Devenish’s Commentary

            Step 3: Revising the Essay

            Step 4: Kevin’s Revised Essay

III. A THEMATIC ANTHOLOGY

FAMILY AND FRIENDS

A Dialogue Across History

Family and Friends: Exploring Your Own Values and Beliefs

Reading and Writing About Family and Friends

Fiction

Connecting through Comparison: Sibling Relationships***

JAMES BALDWIN, Sonny’s Blues

LOUISE ERDRICH, The Red Convertible

CHINUA ACHEBE, Marriage Is a Private Affair

JOHN CHEEVER, Reunion

LINDA CHING SLEDGE, The Road

Connecting through Comparison: Parents and Children***      

AMY TAN, Two Kinds

JULIA ALVAREZ, Dusting

JANICE MIRIKITANI, For My Father

THEODORE ROETHKE, My Papa’s Waltz

CATHY SONG, The Youngest Daughter

MARGARET ATWOOD, Siren Song

JOHN CIARDI, Faces***

ROBERT FROST, Mending Wall

SEAMUS HEANEY, Digging

PHILIP LARKIN, This Be the Verse

LI-YOUNG LEE, The Gift

SHARON OLDS, 35/10

WILLIAM STAFFORD, Friends ***

STEVIE SMITH, Not Waving But Drowning

Connecting Through Comparison: Remembrance

ELIZABETH GAFFNEY, Losses That Turn Up in Dreams

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, When to the Sessions of Sweet Silent Thought (Sonnet No. 30)

Drama

TENNESSEE WILLIAMS, The Glass Menagerie

Essays

BELL HOOKS, Inspired Eccentricity 

CHRISTINE O’HAGAN, Friendship’s Gift***

CASE STUDY IN BIOGRAPHICAL CONTEXT

Thinking About Interpretation and Biography

Lorraine Hansberry and A Raisin in the Sun

LORRAINE HANSBERRY, A Raisin in the Sun

Lorraine Hansberry–In Her Own Words

In Others’ Words

JAMES BALDWIN, Sweet Lorraine

JULIUS LESTER, The Heroic Dimension in A Raisin in the Sun

ANNE CHENEY, The African Heritage in A Raisin in the Sun

STEVEN R. CARTER, Hansberry’s Artistic Misstep

MARGARET B. WILKERSON, Hansberry’s Awareness of Culture and Gender

MICHAEL ANDERSON, A Raisin in the Sun: A Landmark Lesson in Being Black

A Student’s Research Essay

Exploring the Literature of FAMILY AND FRIENDS: Options for Making Connections, Building Arguments, and Using Research

INNOCENCE AND EXPERIENCE

A Dialogue Across History

Innocence and Experiences: Exploring Your Own Values and Beliefs

Reading and Writing About Innocence and Experience

Fiction

Connecting through Comparison: Illusion and Disillusion

LILIANA HEKER, The Stolen Party         

JAMES JOYCE, Araby

JULIA ALVAREZ, Snow

TONI CADE BAMBARA, The Lesson

THOMAS BULFINCH, The Myth of Daedalus and Icarus

RALPH ELLISON, Battle Royal

HARUKI MURAKAMI, On Seeing the 100% Perfect Girl One Beautiful April Morning***

JOYCE CAROL OATES, WHERE ARE YOU GOING, WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN?

FRANK O’CONNOR, Guests of the Nation

TWO READERS/TWO DIFFERENT VIEWS: JOHN UPDIKE, A&P

Two Sample Student Essays

Poetry

Connecting Through Comparison: Images of Innocence and Experience

WILLIAM BLAKE, London

WILLIAM WORDSWORTH, Composed Upon Westminster Bridge,September 3, 1802

Connecting Through Comparison: The Chimney Sweeper

WILLIAM BLAKE, The Chimney Sweeper (From Songs of Innocence), The Chimney Sweeper (From Songs of Experience)

A. E. HOUSMAN, When I Was One-and-Twenty

ALBERTO RIOS, In Second Grade Miss Lee I Promised Never to Forget You and I Never Did***

EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON, Richard Cory

ANNE SEXTON, Pain for a Daughter

WALT WHITMAN, There was a Child Went Forth

STEPHEN CRANE, The Wayfarer

Connecting through Comparison: Young Death***

ROBERT FROST, “Out, Out ...”

SEAMUS HEANEY, Mid-Term Break

 Essays

DAN BARRY, Hurricane Katrina: The Corpse on Union Street

JUDITH ORTIZ COFER, I Fell in Love, or My Hormones Awakened

DAVID SEDARIS, The Learning Curve

CASE STUDY IN THEATRICAL CONTEXT

Interpretation and Performance

Multiple Interpretations of Hamlet

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, Hamlet, Prince of Denmark

Desperately Seeking Hamlet: Four Interpretations

                        Olivier’s Hamlet

                        Jacobi’s Hamlet

                        Gibson’s Hamlet

                        Branagh’s Hamlet

            From Part to Whole, From Whole to Part

            A Student’s Critical Essay–An Explication and Analysis of  the “To Be, or Not To Be” Soliloquy

HAMLET ON SCREEN

A Critic’s  Influential Interpretation

                        Ernest Jones, Hamlet’s Oedipus Complex

Hamlet On Screen

                        Bernice Kliman,  The BBC Hamlet: A Television Production

                        Claire Bloom, Playing Gertrude on Television

                        Stanley Kauffmann, At Elsinore: Branagh’s Hamlet

                        Russell Jackson, A Film Diary of the Shooting of

                                    Kenneth Branagh’s Hamlet

 

Exploring the Literature of INNOCENCE AND EXPERIENCE: Options for Making Connections, Building Arguments, and Using Research

CASE STUDY IN AESTHETIC CONTEXT

PIETER BRUEGHEL, Landscape with the Fall of Icarus  / W. H. AUDEN, Musée des Beaux Arts and ALAN DEVENISH, Icarus Again

JACOPO TINTORETTO, Crucifixion  / N. SCOTT MOMADAY, Before an Old Painting of the Crucifixion

EDWARD HOPPER, Nighthawks  / SAMUEL YELLEN, Nighthawks

VINCENT VAN GOGH, Starry Night  / ANNE SEXTON, The Starry Night

HENRI MATISSE, Dance / NATALIE SAFIR, Matisse’s Dance

UTAMARO, Two Women Dressing their Hair/ CATHY SONG, Beauty and Sadness***

EDWIN ROMANZO ELMER, The Mourning Picture  / ADRIENNE RICH, Mourning Picture

JAN VERMEER, The Loveletter  / SANDRA NELSON, When a Woman Holds a Letter

A Student’s Comparison and Contrast Essay: Process and Product

Exploring POETRY AND PAINTING: Options for Making Connections, Building Arguments, and Using Research

WOMEN AND MEN

A Dialogue Across History

Women and Men: Exploring Your Own Values and Beliefs

Reading and Writing About Women and Men

Fiction

ROBERT OLSEN BUTLER, Jealous Husband Returns as a Parrot***

CHARLOTTE PERKINS GILMAN, The Yellow Wallpaper

ERNEST HEMINGWAY, Hills Like White Elephants

D. H. LAWRENCE, The Horse Dealer’s Daughter

BOBBIE ANN MASON, Shiloh

ROSARIO MORALES, The Day It Happened

GLORIA NAYLOR, The Two***

Poetry

Connecting Through Comparison: Be My Love

CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE, The Passionate Shepherd to His Love

WALTER RALEIGH, The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd

ANDREW MARVELL, To His Coy Mistress

MAYA ANGELOU, Phenomenal Woman

MARGARET ATWOOD, You Fit into Me

ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING, How Do I Love Thee?

ROBERT BROWNING, Porphyria’s Lover

NIKKI GIOVANNI, Woman

JUDY GRAHN, Ella, in a Square Apron, Along Highway 80

DONALD HALL, The Wedding Couple***

ESSEX HEMPHILL, Commitments

MICHEAL LASSELL, How to Watch Your Brother Die

EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY, What Lips My Lips Have Kissed, and Where, and Why; Love Is Not All

SHARON OLDS, Sex Without Love

OCTAVIO PAZ, Two Bodies***

SYLVIA PLATH, Mirror

Connecting Through Comparison: Shall I Compare Thee?

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day? (Sonnet No. 18)

HOWARD MOSS, Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day?

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, My Mistress’ Eyes Are Nothing Like the Sun (Sonnet No. 130)

Connecting and Comparing Across Genres: Cinderella

JACOB LUDWIG CARL GRIMM AND WILHELM CARL GRIMM, Cinderella

ANNE SEXTON, Cinderella

BRUNO BETTELHEIM, Cinderella

Drama

ANTON CHEKHOV, The Proposal

Connecting and Comparing Across Genres: Drama and Fiction

SUSAN GLASPELL, The Play: Trifles

SUSAN GLASPELL, The Short Story: A Jury of Her Peers

Essays

STEVEN DOLOFF, The Opposite Sex***

VIRGINIA WOOLF, If Shakespeare Had a Sister

CASE STUDY IN HISTORICAL CONTEXT

Women in Culture and History

HENRIK IBSEN, A Doll’s House

The Adams Letters

A Husband’s Letter to His Wife

SOJOURNER TRUTH, “Ain’t I a Woman”

HENRIK IBSEN, Notes for the Modern Tragedy; The Changed Ending of A Doll’s House for a German Production; Speech at the Banquet of the Norwegian League for Women’s Rights

ELIZABETH CADY STANTON, Excerpt from The Solitude of Self

WILBUR FISK TILLETT, Excerpt from Southern Womanhood

DOROTHY DIX, The American Wife; Women and Suicide

CHARLOTTE PERKINS STETSON (GILMAN), Excerpt from Women and Economics

NATALIE ZEMON DAVIS AND JILL KER CONWAY, The Rest of the Story

A Student’s Response Essay

Exploring the Literature of WOMEN AND MEN: Options for Making Connections, Building Arguments, and Using Research

CULTURE AND IDENTITY

A Dialogue Across History

Culture and Identity: Exploring Your Own Values and Beliefs

Reading and Writing About Culture and Identity

Fiction

JOSE ARMAS, El Tonto del Barrio***

KATE CHOPIN, Désirée’s Baby

WILLIAM FAULKNER, A Rose for Emily

JAMAICA KINCAID, Girl

THOMAS KING, Borders

GABRIEL GARCIA MARQUEZ, The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World***

TAHIRA NAQVI, Brave We Are

ALICE WALKER, Everyday Use

Poetry

Connecting Through Comparison: The Mask We Wear

W. H. AUDEN, The Unknown Citizen

PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR, We Wear the Mask

T. S. ELIOT, The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock

SHERMAN ALEXIE, Evolution***

GLORIA ANZALDÚA, To Live in the Borderlands Means You

ELIZABETH BISHOP, In the Waiting Room

GWENDOLYN BROOKS, We Real Cool

E.E. CUMMINGS, anyone lived in a pretty how town

MARTIN ESPADA, Coca-Cola and Coco Fria***

Connecting Through Comparison: Immigration***           

EMILY LAZARUS, The New Colossus***

SHIRLEY GEOCK-LIN LIM, Learning to Love America***

PAT MORA, Immigrants

JOHN UPDIKE, Ex-Basketball Player

WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS, At the Ball Game

WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS, The Lake Isle of Innisfree

Connecting Through Comparison: What Is Poetry?

ARCHIBALD MACLEISH, Ars Poetica

LAWRENCE FERLINGHETTI, Constantly Risking Absurdity

BILLY COLLINS, Introduction to Poetry

Drama

SOPHOCLES, Oedipus Rex

LUIS VALDEZ, Los Vendidos

Essays

CHARLES FRUEHLING SPRINGWOOD AND C. RICHARD KING, “Playing Indian”: Why Native American Mascots Must End

JOAN DIDION, Why I Write

FREDERICK DOUGLASS, Learning to Read and Write

MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR., I Have a Dream

RICHARD RODRIGUEZ, Workers

JONATHAN SWIFT, A Modest Proposal

HENRY DAVID THOREAU, From Civil Disobedience

CASE STUDY IN CULTURAL CONTEXT

Writers of the Harlem Renaissance

ALAIN LOCKE, The New Negro

LANGSTON HUGHES, From The Big Sea

                                                The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain

                                                The Negro Speaks of Rivers

                                                I, Too

                                                The Weary Blues

                                                One Friday Morning

                                                Theme for English B

CLAUDE MCKAY, America

GWENDOLYN B. BENNETT, Heritage

JEAN TOOMER, Reapers

COUNTEE CULLEN, Yet Do I Marvel

                                                From the Dark Tower

ANNE SPENCER, Lady, Lady

GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON, I Want to Die While You Love Me

ZORA NEALE HURSTON, Sweat

Commentary on The Negro Speaks of Rivers

Langston Hughes

Jessie Fauset

Onwuchekwa Jemie

R. Baxter Miller

ALICE WALKER, Zora Neale Hurston: A Cautionary Tale and a Partisan View

A Student’s Critical Essay

Exploring the Literature of CULTURE AND IDENTITY: Options for Making Connections, Building Arguments, and Using Research

FAITH AND DOUBT

A Dialogue Across History

Faith and Doubt: Exploring Your Own Values and Beliefs

Reading and Writing About Faith and Doubt

Fiction

RAYMOND CARVER, Cathedral

NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE, Young Goodman Brown

TIM O’BRIEN, The Things They Carried

FLANNERY O’CONNOR, A Good Man Is Hard To Find

JOHN STEINBECK, The Chrysanthemums

Poetry

Connecting Through Comparison: Facing Our Own Mortality

JOHN DONNE, Death, Be Not Proud

JOHN KEATS, When I Have Fears That I May Cease To Be

MARY OLIVER, When Death Comes***

Connecting Through Comparison: Nature and Humanity

MATTHEW ARNOLD, Dover Beach

ROBERT BRIDGES, London Snow

ROBERT FROST, Fire and Ice

GALWAY KINNELL, Saint Francis and the Sow

WILLIAM STAFFORD, Traveling Through the Dark

WALT WHITMAN, Song of Myself 6

Connecting Through Comparison: September 11, 2001

DEBORAH GARRISON, I Saw You Walking

BRIAN DOYLE, Leap

BILLY COLLINS, The Names

Connecting Through Comparison: Belief in a Supreme Being

STEPHEN CRANE, A Man Said to the Universe,

THOMAS HARDY, HAP

Connecting Through Comparison: The Impact of War

THOMAS HARDY, The Man He Killed

WILFRED OWEN, Dulce et Decorum Est

CARL SANDBURG, Grass

YUSEF KOMUNYAKAA, Facing It

Connecting Through Comparison: Responding to the Deaths of Others

MARK DOTY, Brilliance

A. E. HOUSMAN, To an Athlete Dying Young

PABLO NERUDA, The Dead Woman***

DYLAN THOMAS, Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night

Drama

JOHN MILLINGTON SYNGE, Riders to the Sea 

DAVID MAMET,  Oleanna

Essays

ALBERT CAMUS, The Myth of Sisyphus

PLATO, The Allegory of the Cave

PHILIP SIMMONS, Learning to Fall

CASE STUDY IN CONTEXTUAL CONTEXT

Poetry and Criticism: Emily Dickinson

Her Life

Her Work

The Poems

            Success Is Counted Sweetest 

            Faith is a fine invention

            There’s a Certain Slant of Light

            I like a look of agony    

            Wild Nights–Wild Nights!   

            The Brain–is wider than the Sky   

            Much Madness Is Divinest Sense

            I’ve seen a dying eye   

            I Heard a Fly Buzz–When I Died–

            After Great Pain, a Formal Feeling Comes

            Some keep the Sabbath going to Church   

            This world is not conclusion   

            There is a pain–so utter–   

            Because I could not stop for death   

            The Bustle in a House 

             Tell All the Truth But Tell It Slant

Making Connections

Emily Dickinson–In Her Own Words

            A Letter to Susan Gilbert Dickinson–her sister-in-law. (1852)   

            A Letter to Thomas Wentworth Higginson (1862)   

In Others’ Words

            Thomas Wentworth Higginson, letter (1870)   

            Mary Loomis Todd, letter (1881)   

            Richard Wilbur, On Her Sense of Privation (1960)   

            Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar, On  Her White Dress (1979)   

Critical Commentary on Her Poetry

            Helen McNeil, Dickinson’s Method   

            Cynthia Griffin Woolf, The Voices in Dickinson’s Poetry   

            Allan Tate, On Because I Could Not Stop for Death   

            Paula Bennett, On I Heard a Fly Buzz–When I Died   

Poems about Emily Dickinson

            Linda Pastan, Emily Dickinson   

            Billy Collins, Taking Off Emily Dickinson’s Clothes   

A Student’s Critical Essay

Exploring the Literature of FAITH AND DOUBT: Options for Making Connections, Building Arguments, and Using Research

Appendix A:  Critical Approaches to Literature

Appendix B:  Writing About Film

Appendix C:  Documentation

 

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