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Gerson, Carole – College English, 1988
Recounts the history of the development of a Canadian national literature from romantic retrospection to commitment to the future. (RAE)
Descriptors: Canadian Literature, Foreign Countries, Literary History, Literary Styles

Ayd, Joseph D. – English Journal, 1980
An analysis and appreciation of H. L. Mencken the writer, and Henry Mencken the man. (RL)
Descriptors: Authors, Biographies, Journalism, Literary Styles
Augusti, Valeria – Horizontes, 1997
Considers the set of representations that configure the images of the literature of Brazilian Romanticism. Notes the capacity of this literature to transform both values and social patterns of behavior. (PA)
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literary Criticism, Literary History, Literary Styles
Hamilton, William H., Jr. – 1989
"Dust Tracks on a Road," author Zora Neale Hurston's autobiography, is not a typical black autobiography. Hurston is a complex woman and author who addresses both black and white audiences, shifting the cadences of her voice to invoke a readership that can hear the textures of many voices and respond to an underlying call to a world…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Authors, Autobiographies, Black Literature

MacLennan, Hugh – English Quarterly, 1981
Traces the history of English prose from Francis Bacon to the present, commenting on the quality of various authors' writing and of fiction today. (HTH)
Descriptors: Authors, English Literature, Fiction, Literary Criticism
Stock, Tom – Outdoor Communicator, 1981
The personal comments of literary naturalist, John Burroughs, whose 60-year writing career began in the 1860s, can guide writing teachers today. Recommended techniques include literary walks, a fermentation process between contact with nature and writing about it, emphasis on clarity and truth, and keeping a journal. (NEC)
Descriptors: Authors, Experiential Learning, Literary Styles, Naturalism

Vajda, Gyorgy M. – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 1980
Examines the background to and the stylistic characteristics of the Art Nouveau movement in its literary and artistic manifestations, emphasizing its nature as a synthesis of various contemporary, artistic, and intellectual trends. (SJL)
Descriptors: Architecture, Art, Art History, Literary History

Hudson-Weems, Clenora – Western Journal of Black Studies, 1992
The protest poetry of Claude McKay, a leading writer of the Harlem Renaissance, is couched in the Western sonnet form. How the poetic form supports or conflicts with the messages of African-American pride and contempt for racism is examined. (SLD)
Descriptors: Activism, Black Culture, Blacks, Creative Writing
Locklear, J. Grady – Quill and Scroll, 1988
Presents the history and present status of the high school literary art feature magazine. Contends that high school magazines must become contemporary to survive. (MS)
Descriptors: Art, High Schools, Journalism Education, Literary Styles

Cairns, Robert B. – Developmental Psychology, 1992
James Baldwin's ideas, such as that of a genetic science, and their influence on later theorists such as Piaget, Vygotsky, and Kohlberg, are described. The further Baldwin moved from the study of infancy, the more speculative and the less empirically verifiable became his ideas. (BC)
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Evolution, Genetics, Individual Development
Linn, Ray – 1996
Based on the idea that the study of postmodernism is a useful and valuable pursuit because it engages students in discussions of fundamental questions about the individual's situation in the world, this book takes an interdisciplinary approach to address postmodernism effectively. The book conceives postmodernism as a widespread cultural…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, High Schools, Higher Education, Intellectual History
Smart, Karl – 1990
One of the greatest myths or fictions of nonfiction is that it contains no fiction. Ben Franklin's flight from Boston to Philadelphia illustrates how changes occur in the retelling of the "facts" of a life. In his "Autobiography," Franklin writes that his friend, Collins, arranged for a ship's passage for Franklin by telling…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Biographies, Discourse Analysis, Literary Devices
Scott, Dorothea Hayward – 1980
This book surveys the essential elements of both the written and the oral traditions that have contributed to the literary background of China's children. Chapter topics include (1) Chinese literature and its transmission from early times; (2) myths, legends, and symbolism; (3) traditional education and the classics; (4) storytellers, puppets, and…
Descriptors: Children, Childrens Literature, Chinese, Chinese Culture

Shavit, Zohar – Journal of Research and Development in Education, 1983
There is a strong link between the notion of childhood prevalent in a society and presumptions about children as readers. Versions of "Little Red Riding Hood" written in different centuries illustrate how the character of texts for children have changed as society's views of children and of education have evolved. (PP)
Descriptors: Child Role, Childrens Literature, Educational Attitudes, Elementary Education

Lalla, Barbara – Journal of Black Studies, 1990
Reviews the use of humor in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Black Creole Jamaican literature and song. Concludes that irony is inherent in the creative expression of early Jamaicans and writers about Jamaica, arising from inconsistencies of attitudes of Blacks toward Whites and toward themselves. (FMW)
Descriptors: Black Attitudes, Black Influences, Eighteenth Century Literature, Foreign Countries
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