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Williams, John A. – Community Review, 1991
Discusses the largely negative image of African Americans in U.S. literature. Predicts that the genteel censorship against African-American male writing--which has existed since African-American male writers began putting forth new unwelcome images of African-American people--will inevitably, eventually end and a new image of African-American…
Descriptors: Black Literature, Black Stereotypes, Censorship, Literary History
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Tuan, Yi-Fu – Journal of Geography, 1985
By critically reading Conan Doyle's "Sherlock Holmes," geography students can learn about the major beliefs, values, and fears of late Victorian England. The geographical scope of the work is discussed, as well as what the work tells us about beliefs concerning nature, environmental influence, and human nature of the period. (RM)
Descriptors: Beliefs, Cultural Background, Cultural Traits, Geography Instruction
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Hudson, Anna E. – French Review, 1996
An approach to teaching French literature that uses a Jules Verne novel published only in 1994 is described. The novel, "Paris in the 20th Century," is the basis for a series of written and oral exercises about the novel, its social and cultural context, the author, and the actual changes that have occurred in Paris in comparison with…
Descriptors: Authors, Classroom Techniques, Cultural Education, Fantasy
Resch, Kenneth E. – 1986
Poetry of the romantic age is often uninviting to students, leaving them puzzled because they do not sense the connections between the poetry and themselves. Yet, much romantic poetry can be enjoyed and comprehended if approached in terms of some personal, reflective, and connective readings. Wordsworth and Whitman are often avoided because they…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Literature Appreciation
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Gelfand, Elissa; Switten, Margaret – French Review, 1988
A Mount Holyoke College course on gender and the development of modern fiction focused on the novel in eighteenth-century France, emphasizing women writers, writings about women, and the application of modern feminist criticism to the genre. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Curriculum, Course Descriptions, Feminism, French
Bidault, Frederique; And Others – Francais dans le Monde, 1986
Texts from a variety of genres (letter, narrative, biography, film scenario, and dialogue) and a variety of French authors of the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries are provided as examples of discourse with the common theme of passion and as sources for the study of the semiotics of passion. (MSE)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Eighteenth Century Literature, French, French Literature
Kashuba, Irma Mercedes – 1985
Although it is rare to see French literature in the French civilization syllabus, it is relatively easy to incorporate short stories into the course which allow for quick reading and discussion. It is best to choose the best writers, who communicate the spirit of the time in which they wrote, from the point of view of the artist rather than the…
Descriptors: Cultural Education, Eighteenth Century Literature, French, French Literature
Valencia Community Coll., Orlando, FL. – 1984
This teacher's guide was developed for the third of four courses in Valencia Community College's Interdisciplinary Studies program, a 2-year core general education curriculum which chronologically examines the major developments in the evolution of human knowledge. The guide provides an introductory overview of the course's topic (i.e., Western…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Course Content, Course Objectives, Epistemology
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Chilcoat, George W. – Social Studies Texan, 1990
Presents a class activity that uses the dime novel in a critical mode as an avenue to increase student's knowledge of the concepts and themes of women's experiences during the nineteenth century. Provides background of the dime novel. Asks students to compose their own dime novel, and provides a student handout that outlines the process. (RW)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Critical Thinking, Elementary Secondary Education, Females
Schatzberg, Walter, Ed.; And Others – 1987
This annotated bibliography is offered as a resource tool for literary scholars, historians of science, and historians of ideas. Annually since 1939, a bibliography of scholarship on the relations of literature and science has been compiled by the Modern Language Association. The present bibliography incorporates the work of the annual…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, College Science, Eighteenth Century Literature, Literature
Golden, Catherine – 1987
A literature course entitled "The Victorian Illustrated Book: A Marriage of Image and Word," offered at Skidmore College in New York, was designed to help students make connections between art and literature. Based on the premise that illustrations in Victorian books can be "decoded" much like a written text, students were…
Descriptors: Art Education, Art History, Authors, Course Content
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Falletta, Barbara – Art Education, 1996
Presents a series of instructional resources that includes three color plates illustrating the work of three sculptresses. Portrays the historical subjects: colonial America's Virginia Dare, the biblical Hagar, and ancient history's Zenobia. Activities include researching the artist, the subject, and the historical period. Discusses the White…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Appreciation, Art Education, Art History
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Koza, Julia Eklund – Journal of Research in Music Education, 1990
Examines views expressed in "Godey's Lady's Book," a U.S. nineteenth-century women's magazine, about the role of music and music instruction. Ideologies, biases, and controversies were expressed in the magazine. Comments that music instruction and decisions about who should receive musical training was highly controversial. Identifies…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Content Analysis, Cultural Influences, Feminism
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Vincent, Tim; Reiland, Bob – Interdisciplinary Humanities, 1995
Illustrates the social construction of scientific knowledge by examining the modernist literary works of Chekhov, Ibsen, and Kafka. Demonstrates philosophical conflicts among the authors centering on the benefits and drawbacks of scientific inquiry and modernism. Students also read textbooks and treatises on the history of science. (MJP)
Descriptors: Bibliographies, Creative Teaching, Curriculum Enrichment, Holistic Approach
Crossett, Becky F.; And Others – 1994
This unit of study for junior-high level high-ability language arts students explores five themes in 19th century American history through literature of the times: romanticism, transcendentalism, abolitionism, industrialism, and feminism. Each of the five "isms" has its own "literature box" that contains appropriate documents…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Computer Software, Feminism, Gifted
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