Reading and Responding to LiteratureHarcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1990 - 328 Seiten This book "will show you that there is pleasure in reading a poem, play, or prose work, and how to freely react to literature - to form opinions, express feelings, and relate the art to your own life."--Preface. |
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Seite 23
... tion may interfere with your reading until you recognize the narrative technique . Emily Dickinson , for example , wrote some poems from the point of view of someone who is dying or dead . You may find yourself asking , How can a dead ...
... tion may interfere with your reading until you recognize the narrative technique . Emily Dickinson , for example , wrote some poems from the point of view of someone who is dying or dead . You may find yourself asking , How can a dead ...
Seite 96
... tion may leave an audience unsettled , the dramatic effect is powerful . In The Normal Heart , Larry Kramer sees little or no immediate resolu- tion of the problems affecting AIDS patients . Other Plot Devices Foreshadowing is a ...
... tion may leave an audience unsettled , the dramatic effect is powerful . In The Normal Heart , Larry Kramer sees little or no immediate resolu- tion of the problems affecting AIDS patients . Other Plot Devices Foreshadowing is a ...
Seite 235
... tion marks is unnecessary . Close the quotation with the final punctua- tion mark , skip two spaces , and then cite the documentation . ( The MLA system of documentation , discussed in the next section , uses parenthetical references to ...
... tion marks is unnecessary . Close the quotation with the final punctua- tion mark , skip two spaces , and then cite the documentation . ( The MLA system of documentation , discussed in the next section , uses parenthetical references to ...
Inhalt
Responding through Journal Writing | 28 |
Responding through Creative Activities | 45 |
Analyzing and Synthesizing | 61 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
action allusions analysis analyze Anson approach archetypal audience Bartleby Bartleby the Scrivener bayou beginning bibliography Cask of Amontillado chapter character child conflict critical death discover drama Emily Dickinson evaluation examine example faith feel fiction final freewriting genre Goodman Brown Horse Dealer's Daughter ideas images Infant Sorrow instructor interpretation irony journal entry language literary literature class Mabel meaning metonomy murder narrator nonfiction prose Norma Jean novel Oedipus complex paragraph paraphrase passage pattern Paula play plot Poe's poem poet poetry point of view psychological questions quotation readers reading reread Research Paper rhyme Rich Boy Rose for Emily rough draft sentence setting short story sound speaker specific stanza structure Student Essay summary superego syllables symbols T. S. Eliot tell Tell-Tale Heart theme thesis tion tone topic verse words Writing a Research Yahweh Young Goodman Brown