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PREFACE  PART 1  Jumping In  The Pleasures of Reading—and of Writing about Literature  The Open Secret of Good Writing The Writing Process  A Checklist of the Basics    2—THE WRITER AS READER: READING AND RESPONDING      Kate Chopin, “Ripe Figs”      The Act of Reading      Reading with a Pen in Hand      Recording Your First Responses      Audience and Purpose      A Writing Assignment on “Ripe Figs”      The Assignment      A Sample Essay: “Images of Ripening in Kate Chopin’s ‘Ripe Figs’ ”      The Student’s Analysis Analyzed      Critical Thinking and the Study of Literature    3—THE READER AS WRITER: DRAFTING AND WRITING      Pre-writing: Getting Ideas      Annotating a Text      More about Getting Ideas: A Second Story by Kate Chopin, “The Story of an Hour”      Kate Chopin: “The Story of an Hour”      Brainstorming for Ideas for Writing      Focused Free Writing      Listing      Asking Questions      Keeping a Journal      Critical Thinking: Arguing with Yourself      Arriving at a Thesis and Arguing It      Writing a Draft      A Sample Draft: “Ironies in an Hour”      Revising a Draft                A Checklist for Revising for Clarity      Two Ways of Outlining a Draft                A Checklist for Reviewing a Revised Draft      Peer Review      The Final Version      Sample Essay: “Ironies of Life in Kate Chopin’s ‘The Story of an Hour’ ”       Quick Review: From First Response to Final Version: Writing an Essay about a Literary Work     4—TWO FORMS OF CRITICISM: EXPLICATION AND ANALYSIS       Explication       A Sample Explication: Langston Hughes’s “Harlem”      Working toward an Explication of “Harlem”       Analysis: The Judgment of Solomon       Thinking about Form      Thinking about Character      Thoughts about Other Possibilities     For Further reading and Analysis: The Parable of the Prodigal Son  NEW Comparison: An Analytic Tool            A Checklist: Revising a Comparison   For Further Reading and Comparison: Gwendolyn Brooks’s “We Real Cool” NEW      Finding a Topic      Considering the Evidence      Organizing the Material      Communicating Judgments      Review: How to Write an Effective Essay          1. Pre-writing           2. Drafting           3. Revising          4. Editing          For Further Reading, Explication, and Comparison: William Blake’s “The Tyger” NEW   5–OTHER KINDS OF WRITING ABOUT LITERATURE       A Summary      A Paraphrase      A Review      A Review of a Dramatic Production       PART 2  Standing Back: Thinking Critically about Literature    6–LITERATURE, FORM, AND MEANING      Literature and Form      Literature and Meaning      Arguing about Meaning      Form and Meaning       Robert Frost, “The Span of Life”       Literature, Texts, Discourses, and Cultural Studies Suggestions for Further Reading      Interpretation and Meaning       Sample Essay: “Stopping by Woods and Going On”   For Further Interpretation, Comparison, and Writing: Robert Frost’s “The Road Not Taken” NEW  Suggestions for Further Reading        A Checklist: Writing an Interpretation NEW   8–WHAT IS EVALUATION?       Morality and Truth as Standards       Suggestions for Further Reading            9–WRITING ABOUT LITERATURE: AN OVERVIEW       The Nature of Critical Writing       Formalist Criticism (New Criticism)       Marxist Criticism       Psychological (or Psychoanalytic) Criticism       Suggestions for Further Reading     PART 3  Up Close: Thinking Critically about Literary Forms    10—WRITING ABOUT FICTION: THE WORLD OF THE STORY       Writing about a Character       Foreshadowing       Organizing an Essay on Foreshadowing       Setting and Atmosphere      Symbolism      A Sample Essay on Setting as Symbol: “Spring Comes to Mrs. Mallard”       Point of View       Third-Person Narrators      First-Person Narrators      Notes and a Sample Essay on Narrative Point of View in James Joyce’s “Araby”       “The Three First-Person Narrators of Joyce’s ‘Araby’ ”       Theme: Vision or Argument?       Determining and Discussing the Theme       Preliminary Notes and a Sample Essay on the Theme of Eudora Welty’s “A Worn Path”       Preliminary Notes   Basing the Paper on Your Own Responses        A Second Essay about Theme: Notes and the Final Version of an Essay on Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery”       “ We All Participate in ‘The Lottery’ ”             A Checklist: Getting Ideas for Writing about Fiction             A Checklist: Getting Ideas for Writing about a Film Based on a Work of Literature    11–GRAPHIC FICTION   NEW         Letters and Pictures        Grant Wood’s “Death on the Ridge Road” (painting)        Topic for Writing        Reading an Image: A Short Story Told in One Panel        Tony Carillo’s “F Minus”    12–WRITING ABOUT DRAMA       A Sample Essay       Preliminary Notes       Types of Plays       Tragedy             A Checklist: Writing about Tragedy      Comedy Writing about Comedy     Aspects of Drama       Theme      Plot            A Checklist: Writing about Plot      Characterization and Motivation      Conventions      Costumes, Gestures, and Settings      A Sample Essay on Setting in Drama       “ What the Kitchen in Trifles Tells Us”      The Analysis Analyzed      Suggestions for Further Reading           A Checklist: Getting Ideas for Writing about Drama            A Checklist: Getting Ideas for Writing about a Film Based on a Play      A Student’s Essay on a Filmed Version of a Play       “Branagh’s Film of Hamlet”     13—WRITING ABOUT POETRY       The Speaker and the Poet       Emily Dickinson, “Wild Nights—Wild Nights”       Figurative Language       John Keats, “On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer”       Imagery and Symbolism William Blake, “The Sick Rose”      Structure       Robert Herrick, “Upon Julia’s Clothes”     Annotating and Thinking about a Poem   William Wordsworth, “A Slumber Did My Spirit Seal”   John Donne, “The Flea”       Explication       A Sample Explication of Yeats’s “The Balloon of the Mind”       Rhythm and Versification: A Glossary for Reference      Rhythm      Meter      Patterns of Sound      Stanzaic Patterns      Blank Verse and Free Verse       Preparing to Write about Prosody       “Sound and Sense in A. E. Housman’s ‘Eight O’Clock’ ”       Suggestions for Further Reading            A Checklist: Getting Ideas for Writing about Poetry    14–POEMS AND PICTURES   NEW     A Poem and a Sample Student Essay        Vincent van Gogn, “The Starry Night” (painting)         Anne Sexton, “The Starry Night”        Sample Essay: “Two Ways of Looking at a Starry Night”        The Language of Pictures        Writing about Pictures        Comparing and Contrasting        William Notman, “Foes in ’76, Friends in ‘85” (photograph)        Analyzing and Evaluating Evidence        Thinking Critically: Arguing with Oneself,                Asking Questions, and Comparing–E.E. Cummings’s “Buffalo Bill’s”               A Writing Assignment: Connecting a Picture with a Work of Literature        Sample essay: “Two Views of Buffalo Bill”   15–WRITING ABOUT AN AUTHOR IN DEPTH       A Case Study: Writing about Langston Hughes       Langston Hughes, “The South”       Langston Hughes, “Ballad of the Landlord”       PART 4  Inside: Style, Format, and Special Assignments    16–STYLE AND FORMAT       Principles of Style       Get the Right Word      Write Effective Sentences            A Checklist for Revising for Conciseness      Write Unified and Coherent Paragraphs            A Checklist: Revising Paragraphs      Write Emphatically      Notes on the Dash and the Hyphen      Remarks about Manuscript Form       Basic Manuscript Form      Quotations and Quotation Marks      What Research Is Not, and What Research Is       Primary and Secondary Materials       Locating Material: First Steps      Other Bibliographic Aids      The Basics      Moving Ahead: Finding Sources for Research Work      What Does Your Own Institution Offer?      Taking Notes      Incorporating Your Reading into Your Thinking: The Art and Science of Synthesis NEW  Drafting Your Paper      Focus on Primary Sources      Documentation      What to Document: Avoiding Plagiarism       Sample Essay with Documentation: “The Women in Death of a Salesman”             A Checklist: Reading the Draft of a Research Paper      Electronic Sources       Encyclopedias: Print and Electronic Versions       Evaluating Sources on the World Wide Web             A Checklist: A Review for Using the World Wide Web      Documentation: Citing a Web Source   A Checklist: Citing World Wide Web Sources        APPENDIX A: TWO STORIES     APPENDIX B: GLOSSARY OF LITERARY TERMS     APPENDIX C: HOW MUCH DO YOU KNOW ABOUT CITING SOURCES? A QUIZ WITH ANSWERS   CREDITS     INDEX OF AUTHORS, TITLES, AND FIRST LINES OF POEMS     INDEX OF TERMS   Table of Contents 
        
LETTER TO STUDENTS  
1—WRITING ABOUT LITERATURE: A CRASH COURSE 
    The Analysis Analyzed  
    Some Journal Entries  
    The Final Draft: “Langston Hughes’s ‘Harlem’ ”  
    The Analysis Analyzed  
                A Checklist: Drafting an Explication 
          An Editing Checklist: Questions to Ask Yourself When Editing 
    A Sample Review: “An Effective Macbeth”  
7–WHAT IS INTERPRETATION?  
    Is the Author’s Intention a Guide to Meaning?  
    Features of a Good Interpretation 
    An Example: Interpreting Pat Mora’s “Immigrants”  
    Thinking Critically about Literature  
    A Student Interpretation of Robert Frost’s “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening”  
    Criticism and Evaluation  
    Are There Critical Standards?  
    Other Ways to Think about Truth and Realism  
    Some Critical Approaches 
    Deconstruction  
    Reader-Response Criticism  
    Archetypal (or Myth) Criticism  
    Historical Criticism 
    The New Historicism  
    Biographical Criticism 
    Gender (Feminist, and Lesbian and Gay) Criticism  
    Plot and Character  
    A Sample Essay on a Character: “Holden’s Kid Sister”  
    The Analysis Analyzed  
    “Spring Comes to Mrs. Mallard”  
    The Analysis Analyzed  
    “Rising into Love” (essay on “A Worn Path”)  
    A Brief Overview of the Essay  
       A Checklist: Writing about Theme NEW
    A Note on Secondary Sources  
    The Analysis Analyzed  
    Suggestions for Further Reading  
    “The Solid Structure of The Glass Menagerie”  
          A Checklist: Writing about Comedy 
          A Checklist: Topics for Critical Thinking and Writing 
    The Language of Poetry: Diction and Tone  
    Edna St. Vincent Millay, “I, being born a woman and distressed”  
    Writing about the Speaker: Robert Frost’s “The Telephone”  
    Robert Frost, “The Telephone”  
    Journal Entries  
    Preparing to Write about Figurative Language 
    The Student’s Finished Essay: “Herrick’s Julia, Julia’s Herrick”  
    Some Kinds of Structure  
    Repetitive Structure
    Logical Structure
    Verbal Irony  
    Paradox  
    William Butler Yeats, “The Balloon of the Mind”  
    Walt Whitman, “When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer”  
    Sample Essay on Metrics: “Sound and Sense in A. E. Housman’s ‘Eight O’Clock’”  
    The Analysis Analyzed  
    Langston Hughes, “Ruby Brown” 
    Sample essay: “A National Problem: Race and Racism in the Poetry of Langston Hughes”  
    A Brief Overview of the Essay  
17–WRITING A RESEARCH PAPER 
          A Checklist for Avoiding Plagiarism  
    How to Document: Footnotes, Internal Parenthetical Citations, and a List of Works Cited (MLA Format)  
    The Internet/World Wide Web  
    James Joyce, “Araby”  
    Eudora Welty, “A Worn Path”  
Get Short Guide to Writing about Literature, A, 12th Edition by Sylvan Barnet, Tufts University William E. Cain, Wellesley College

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