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genoveva
07-23-2006, 02:11 PM
I've been asked to teach high school level American Literature in the fall. I'm seeking suggestions of really good American authors to include. I'm disappointed in the provided textbook, and am hoping to provide great supplemental reading. I'm also curious if anyone else on the forum has taught it- and how. Usually it is taught by date beginning with Columbus up to modern times. But, in my opinion, what is taught in schools with the early stuff just isn't my favorite. It's usually religious and dry and very slanted towards the powerful. Even though I would not consider Christopher Columbus an American writer (uh, he was Italian!) I am fine with integrating writings from his journals that tell more than just describe the land and animals. (He did rape and kidnap too!) Has anyone taught it by state? Or I wonder if there is a new and fresh way to teach it rather than by date.

Any suggestions or comments are welcomed!

Charles Darnay
07-23-2006, 05:16 PM
Stienbeck (Grapes of Wrath or East of Eden) is a great sample of American lit. So is Faulkner - depenidng on what level your calss is, this may be challenging.

If I was teaching an American lit class, I would try to provide samples of different styles, from different periods/cultures.

I'd definatly consider poetry - some great American poets (Walt Whitman)
I'd probably teach "Invisible Man" by Ralph Ellison, a powerful novel representing a part of America that is usually washed over by the mast majority of white authors.

Those are just some suggestions. There's a lot to choose from, you just have to consider your class (age, type of students)

mono
07-24-2006, 03:19 PM
To me, authors like John Steinbeck, Mark Twain, Ambrose Bierce, J.D. Salinger, and Zora Neale Hurston never grow old. Of course, if you really want the 'nitty-gritty' and origins of American Literature, you can always try Jonathan Edwards, though he had some creepy short stories.
With poetry, perhaps Walt Whitman (though he may get a little dry for high school readers), but also Emily Dickinson, Robert Frost, Maya Angelou, maybe Sylvia Plath, Langston Hughes, or perhaps some of the beat poets.
Good luck!

Danika_Valin
07-25-2006, 12:57 AM
Just some suggestions (and since I'm feeling lazy tonight, I'm only going to put them in list format):

Mary Rowlandson--A Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson

Philip Freneau--The Wild Honey Suckle, The Indian Burial Ground, On the Religion of Nature (My three favorite poems!)

Phillis Wheatley--On Being Brought from Africa to America, To the Right Honorable William, Earl of Dartmouth

Washington Irving--The Legend of Sleepy Hollow

Edgar Allen Poe--The Raven, The Cask of Amontillado, The Telltale Heart

Ralph Waldo Emerson--Self-Reliance

Nathaniel Hawthorne--The Scarlet Letter, Young Goodman Brown, The Maypole of Merry Mount, The Minister's Black Veil

Herman Melville--Moby Dick

John Steinbeck--Of Mice and Men, The Grapes of Wrath

Of course, your students will probably hate Emerson and try to get you fired for making them read Moby Dick and/or The Grapes of Wrath.

Virgil
07-25-2006, 07:13 AM
Of those not already mentioned:

Fiztgerald's The Great Gatsby

Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises

Ralph Elison's Invisble Man

Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter

Henry James, The Beast In The Jungle

Stephan Crane's, The Red Badge of Courage, The Open Boat, The Blue Hotel

Toni Morrison's Beloved

Theorou's Walden Pond

Faulkner's Light In August, The Sound and the Fury, Absalom, Absalom!

Pensive
07-25-2006, 10:42 AM
I can't agree more to some of the suggestions listed here:

~John Steinbeck
~Mark Twain
~Edgar Allen Poe

mono
07-25-2006, 02:18 PM
As with others' suggestions, I definitely second the movement in promoting anything by Edgar Allan Poe, Washington Irving, perhaps Ralph Waldo Emerson (but his works can get quite heavy), Nathaniel Hawthorne, Ernest Hemingway (The Old Man And The Sea seems a short, but worth-while read), Henry David Thoreau, and Henry James.

genoveva
07-25-2006, 02:40 PM
Of course, your students will probably hate Emerson and try to get you fired for making them read Moby Dick and/or The Grapes of Wrath.

Please do explain!

Thanks all for the great and very helpful suggestion! What do people think of using Thoreau's Civil Disobedience at the high school level?

Danika_Valin
07-25-2006, 03:46 PM
Please do explain!

As one who graduated high school not too long ago, I know that students (excluding me) tend to think Emerson is extremely dull and will moan about having to read any book over 400 pages.

Of course, we all know that The Grapes of Wrath and Moby Dick are splendid books, will greatly enrich their lives and make them better people. However, they don't know that yet. :D


I think you should do an entire week at least on transcendentalism, covering both Emerson and Thoreau. Civil Disobedience is a wonderful piece.

kao218
07-29-2006, 07:56 PM
i might want to caution you a bit genoveva. i think it is great that you want to take a fresh approach to your curriculum and integrate texts that will speak to your students. but where will you get these novels? are they provided by your school? if not buying class sets gets expensive. also as a first year teacher you need to be careful not to step on too many toes. does your department head expect you to follow the curriculum or do you have creative control? you might not want to try and change/challenege everything your first year.

now while some of the older america lit is not fun per se you can always make it relevent. for instance, if you have to read columbus' journals make them interrogate the journals. what do they reveal about columbus? how do his journals challenge the myth of columbus they have been taught? use other short texts written by native americans to challenge columbus' point of view. this could raise all sort of interesting questions and challenge many assumptions. you could also connect this to current events. what are we as americans told about other cultures that may be spinned or untruths (you could look at the media representations of those deemed "other")

Danika_Valin
07-30-2006, 01:30 AM
You could also talk about how America in early American Literature wasn't unified. Each state had it's own identity, the settlers/immigrants brought ideas and culture with them from the old world, and even the so called "founding fathers" differed in their goals for the new country. You could relate that to present day. What is America? Who are the Americans? Are only legal citizens American, or are immigrants and visitors also part of our identity? Do we have less nationalism than other countries or more? What are our ideals? What did the settlers hope to achieve?

Pensive
07-30-2006, 10:45 AM
Oops, I forgot to mention Betty Smith's A Tree Grows In Brooklyn.

holograph
07-30-2006, 11:30 AM
I am a high school student, and in my American lit. class we read: Ethan Frome, Grapes of Wrath, Huck Finn, The Assistant, etc. and a bunch of Poe short stories, Whitman poetry, Thoreau, Emerson, the list goes on. And we got plenty of personal assignments where we read literature on our own accord--I read Song of Solomon on my own for example. Perhaps this will be useful to you. If it were me, I would definetely look into time periods of American history and associate them with literature. So start from the beginning and work slowly to the end, and give the kids a general idea of overall American lit, from the classics to the modern time. And poetry is very important, at least to me. --alina

mono
07-30-2006, 12:00 PM
Holograph's post reminds me, genoveva, of certain so-called 'banned' books from American public schools (I think Mark Twain's The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn made the list one year) - ridiculous, I know, very, very ridiculous, but I would certainly look into whatever books you intend on teaching, and their 'status,' particularly for the safety and security of your job. ;)

AllisonForbes
09-17-2006, 11:29 PM
Flannery O'Connor is an excellent author to include. Her short stories are easy reads but packed with excellence.

genoveva
09-18-2006, 02:33 PM
Hey, thanks for the advice! I started teaching the class and we are starting off with Columbus, then moving onto Native American authors (Sherman Alexie!). I'm letting the class select the novels we will read, so we will see how that goes!

Turk
09-28-2006, 07:52 AM
As a Turk, (:)) i can advice John Steinbeck's novellas, such as Of Mice and Men (great novella), The Pearl, in addition i can advice Truman Capote, although his style is different than Steinbeck's (you can easily see effects of magical realism in Capote's writings), he's good as Steinbeck at using the language. His short stories are good, also he wrote a good novella named Breakfast At Tiffany's.

I can also advice Hemingway stories and novellas, novels, such as Snows Of Kilimanjaro or The Sun Also Rises. I could advice William Faulkner too, but his style is too hard for high school boys.

Since people don't like to read books, you should start from novellas and short stories to make'em literature addicts step by step. ;) That's why i firstly adviced some best novellas and short stories. I think novels such as Grapes of Wrath or Sound And Fury or Farewell To Arms etc. is hard for %95 of 15-16 years old students.

That's all i can say for now. I hope you done your job successfully.

cuppajoe_9
10-07-2006, 03:35 PM
J. D. Salinger, bros, J. D. Salinger. The Catcher in the Rye is short, brilliant, easy to read and makes for some awesome essays. Raise High the Roofbeam Carpenters, while more of a short story, is hillarious and probably a less controvertial choice, although I don't know if it was ever published as its own volume.

Gordon Comstock
10-25-2006, 10:17 PM
Genoveva, how are your classes going? I have just become a member and found your thread. I have been teaching a short time after a first career. I had some of the same questions as you, I was wanting to change the world through the adventures of reading and found that my students had much different interests or more specifically non-interests. It was a great challenge. I hope you are having success and finding peace in your adventure.

jon1jt
04-02-2007, 02:32 AM
I've been asked to teach high school level American Literature in the fall. I'm seeking suggestions of really good American authors to include. I'm disappointed in the provided textbook, and am hoping to provide great supplemental reading. I'm also curious if anyone else on the forum has taught it- and how. Usually it is taught by date beginning with Columbus up to modern times. But, in my opinion, what is taught in schools with the early stuff just isn't my favorite. It's usually religious and dry and very slanted towards the powerful. Even though I would not consider Christopher Columbus an American writer (uh, he was Italian!) I am fine with integrating writings from his journals that tell more than just describe the land and animals. (He did rape and kidnap too!) Has anyone taught it by state? Or I wonder if there is a new and fresh way to teach it rather than by date.

Any suggestions or comments are welcomed!

American Literature should include listening to the great music that inspired the writers of the American novel. Billy Holiday and Sarah Vaughn; Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonius Monk; Buddy Guy and BB King; Bob Dylan and Tom Waits. you get the idea. have students recite favorite passages and hold a discussion over pizza and the music. they'll read, trust me.

Daizee
05-05-2007, 11:44 AM
Of Mice and Men and The Grapes of Wrath (Steinbeck)

and

Beloved (Morrison)...

...are definitely some of my all time favourites from when i was in secondary school.

Loved Beloved when I read it in 6th form, still love it now. Morrison is a genius!

the silent x
05-08-2007, 10:43 PM
E.A.Poe's the Masque of the Red Death, the Cask of Amontiallo(i think that's how its spelled).

Aunty-lion
05-08-2007, 11:55 PM
American Literature should include listening to the great music that inspired the writers of the American novel. Billy Holiday and Sarah Vaughn; Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonius Monk; Buddy Guy and BB King; Bob Dylan and Tom Waits. you get the idea. have students recite favorite passages and hold a discussion over pizza and the music. they'll read, trust me.

That's a great idea. Even if you don't have time to study the music per se, you could just start each class by playing a relevant tune. One of my lecturers last year did this, and it really helped set the tone. She'd just ask us, "why do you think I'm playing this song" and we'd briefly discuss its relevance.

Also, what about some slightly more modern American writers??
Maybe Don DeLillo (he really focuses on what it means to be a modern American), and what about Kerouac? Surely On The Road is exactly the kind of book that teenagers love!:thumbs_up

pal_lover
05-17-2007, 07:10 AM
May anyone of you mention for us the main charactrestics of American Literature ???

plzzzzzzzzzzzz....

keg1313
09-02-2011, 02:36 PM
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
The Great Gatsby
The Crucible
And Their Eyes Were Watching God
Ethan Frome
The Scarlet Letter

Text: Norton Anthropology

Varenne Rodin
09-02-2011, 03:07 PM
Stephen King.

Dodo25
09-02-2011, 04:49 PM
Kurt Vonnegut.