NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 5 results Save | Export
Stegner, Wallace – Smithsonian, 1990
Describes the development of environmentalism in the United States as presented in literary works and through prominent early American thinkers up to Earth Day 1970. (MCO)
Descriptors: Authors, Background, Conservation (Environment), Environmental Education
Taylor, Caroline – Humanities, 1988
Describes a discussion between Cleanth Brooks and Eudora Welty about the state of the story in today's fiction. Characterizes the narrative form as the spine of literature. Points out that, too often, contemporary writers neglect this form of writing and instead emphasize a type of prose poetry. Notes that authors today overemphasize the present…
Descriptors: Authors, Fiction, Literary Criticism, Literary Genres
Lee, Betsy – 1979
Dr. Charles Alexander Eastman was a product of two worlds--the Indian and the White. A member of the Santee Sioux Tribe, he was respected and admired in both of these worlds for the work he did on behalf of American Indians, first as a young doctor caring for the sick on the Reservation, and later as a writer and speaker, showing the richness of…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American History, American Indian Reservations, American Indians
Atherton, John – Phi Delta Kappan, 1986
Presents a humorous, fictional account of a scientist's secret addiction to a forbidden psychological stimulant: literature. Suggests that the polarization of the teaching of science and of literature has reached alarming and unhealthy proportions. (IW)
Descriptors: Art, Art Education, Artists, Authors
Taylor, Caroline – Humanities, 1988
Reports a conversation between Cleanth Brooks and Willie Morris concerning changes in literature during the postmodern era. Discusses narrative form, arguing that contemporary literature is moving away from story telling. Contends that the small percentage of the public which reads serious fiction is the reason for this shift. (KO)
Descriptors: Authors, Contemporary Literature, Fiction, Literary Criticism