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Laird, Ellen A. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2011
His father had been hacked to death in his own bed with an ax the previous November. His mother was similarly brutalized and left for dead with her husband but survived. On the last Monday of that August, after several months and many investigative twists, turns, and fumbles, there sat the son--the prime suspect--in Ellen Laird's literature class,…
Descriptors: College Instruction, Community Colleges, United States Literature, Fiction
Showalter, Elaine – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Thirty years ago, every American academic going on a research trip or a sabbatical to England carried a copy of David Lodge's comic classic, "Changing Places" (1975), which told a tale of two 40-year-old professors of English literature and two embattled campuses in the eventful spring of 1969. An ineffectual British academic, Philip…
Descriptors: Novels, Educational Change, Cultural Differences, Higher Education
Cassuto, Leonard – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Richard Wright's literary career begins with a lynching and ends with a serial murderer. "Big Boy Leaves Home," the 1936 story that leads off Wright's first book, "Uncle Tom's Children" (1938), renders the vicious mob-execution of a young black man falsely accused of rape. "A Father's Law," Wright's last novel, left unfinished at his unexpected…
Descriptors: United States History, United States Literature, Social Attitudes, Authors
Howard, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
The Social Science Research Network, an online clearinghouse popular among social scientists, has created a Humanities Research Network (HRN) that is similar. To begin with, the new network will cover three areas--philosophy, classics, and English and American literature--broken down into detailed subcategories. More disciplines will be added in…
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), Social Science Research, Copyrights, Social Sciences
Pells, Richard – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
In this article, the author contends that the vast majority of American historians no longer regard American culture--whether high culture or mainstream popular culture--as an essential area of study. The much-vaunted culture turn in the humanities has run its course in one of the first disciplines it influenced. Indeed, most of the books today…
Descriptors: United States History, Social History, Art History, Historians