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Davidson, Phebe – 1989
Black autobiography can only be viewed sensibly in the classroom if an attempt is made to come to terms with the social and historical milieu in which the work was produced and with the persona and ethos of the writer. Critical failure to do so puts critic and text at a serious disadvantage because such failure restricts critical vision to the…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Black Culture, Black Literature, Black Studies
Brunner, Diane D. – 1990
A literature class can be successfully taught and organized around content that confronts oppressions (subtle, moral and intellectual forms of discrimination) and empowers students to critique their conceived worlds which are often at odds with their perceived realities. First, selected writings for examination illuminate life in a resistant world…
Descriptors: Consciousness Raising, Dialog Journals, Discourse Modes, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
Weston, Ruth D. – 1990
In addition to her work as novelist and critic, Eudora Welty is also a valuable resource for the teaching of composition, particularly through both her theory and example, for she is always writing about writing. Many of Welty's essays on literary theory speak to problems encountered in the college writing class. Perhaps the most accessible text…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Reader Response, Twentieth Century Literature
Bishop, Wendy – 1990
Writing instructors and students alike need to cross the line between composition and creative writing far more often than they do. As students indicate in their essays, composition is often viewed as an unpleasant task, while creative writing is perceived as more enjoyable. Among teachers, creative writing instructors are phobic of critical…
Descriptors: College English, Creative Writing, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Blatt, Gloria; Rosen, Lois Matz – 1982
When students write in response to literature, they make reading a creative act. Recording their personal reaction to a poem or an excerpt from a larger work, students become aware of the complex web of past experiences, associations and ideas triggering their responses; they learn to interact more fully, more consciously, with the text. Besides…
Descriptors: Descriptive Writing, Expository Writing, Higher Education, Literary Criticism
Anne Arundel County Public Schools, Annapolis, MD. – 1985
Providing students with the opportunity to earn college credit while still in high school, the Advanced Placement English course described in this guide is designed to help students (1) want to choose from a wide range of literature for independent reading; (2) develop a critical awareness about literature; (3) recognize connections among works of…
Descriptors: Advanced Placement, Advanced Placement Programs, College School Cooperation, Course Descriptions
Chew, Charles, Ed.; And Others – 1986
Focusing on reader response in the classroom, the works collected in this book represent the results of a five-week summer institute in which 25 middle school, high school, and college teachers studied the principles and applications of literature instruction. The following essays are included: an introduction by G. Garber; "An Overview of the…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Literary Criticism
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
Sadoski, Mark; And Others – 1985
The spontaneous use of imaging and its relationships to verbal recall and literary analysis were investigated in a study in which 72 college students read a literary text under one of three sets of instructions that manipulated processing depth in an externally valid fashion. Imagery reports and free verbal recalls of the story were collected…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Imagery, Literary Criticism
Chapman, Shirley – 1988
Jonathan Culler's notion, that each change of perspective a reader makes brings something different from the text, is explored by using four curricula. They are: the traditional language arts curriculum, an active reading comprehension curriculum, a psychology curriculum, and a feminist curriculum. By analyzing the same text, "Snow White and…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Content Analysis, Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development
Bogdan, Deanne – 1988
A literary communication model cannot adjudicate the conflicting claims of transformation and enculturation: that literature is intrinsically educational, that it conduces to psychic growth as a process, irrespective of subject matter and free from the dangers of indoctrination, but that the imperative to make it instrumental to political ends…
Descriptors: Educational Objectives, English Curriculum, Epistemology, Foreign Countries
Loomis, Amy – 1988
In a televised performance which far surpassed that of any other witness in the Iran-Contra hearings of 1987, Lieutenant Colonel Oliver North came to the attention of Americans as a "national hero." To illustrate how North was able to portray himself as the hero/victim and to explore the ways in which he was able to transform the context…
Descriptors: Codes of Ethics, Communication Research, Cultural Traits, Discourse Analysis
Houser, William Evan – 1981
In 1978, the historic Camp David Peace Accords between Egypt and Israel were signed in a ceremony broadcast from the White House. The ceremony may be seen as a member of a rhetorical genre informally called the Presidential Parasocial Broadcast Announcement, but with a new twist. The genre has its roots in the Fireside Chats of Franklin D.…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Communication Skills, Comparative Analysis, Content Analysis
Hample, Dale – 1984
The two chief approaches to teaching argumentation and invention over the centuries have been first presenting a formal, abstract system, such as logic or topic, then emphasizing audience analysis. Sometimes these have been seen as alternatives, and sometimes as complements. Cursory attention is often paid to the ideal of investigating audience…
Descriptors: Audience Analysis, Cognitive Processes, Communication (Thought Transfer), Higher Education
Ede, Lisa – 1983
The Rogerian argument, as described by Young, Baker, and Pike in "Rhetoric: Discovery and Change," misrepresents Carl Rogers's own principles. Addressing the need for improved interpersonal communication both within and outside of therapy, Rogers describes three conditions for "listening with understanding": congruence, or…
Descriptors: Counseling Theories, Emotional Response, Empathy, Interpersonal Communication


