Garth
Armadillo Pup
Stop that.
Posts: 9
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Post by Garth on May 29, 2011 22:50:37 GMT -5
So, out of curiosity, what reading have you guys been assigned for the upcoming semester(s)? Fortunately, my professors posted all of their books online for the students to see, so that makes it a little easier to know how much they're all going to cost (assuming we haven't read/purchased them prior to class starting). I've been assigned: - The Crucible
- Tuesdays with Morrie
- Eight Habits of the Heart
- The Collected Poems of W. B. Yeats
- The Canterbury Tales
- The House of Seven Gables
- Nature, and other Essays
- The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket
- Uncle Tom's Cabin
- Leaves of Grass
- Clotel
- Wigwam and the Cabin
- The Song of Hiawatha
- Pride and Prejudice
- The Monk
- Mrs. Dalloway
- Henry IV, Part I
- Life of Henry V
- Paradise Lost
- Dracula
Many of these I'd never even heard of. Many of them I'd heard of, but had simply never had a chance to read - like Paradise Lost, Dracula, and Pride and Prejudice. So I think this will be a great chance to read a lot of novels that I'd otherwise never had any time to read. I'm really looking forward to Dracula and Paradise Lost, since I've heard so much about them for so long now. And of course Uncle Tom's Cabin, since it's such an important work in American literature. Goodness gracious, I am out of the loop.
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rayyychul
Armadillo
On ne voit bien qu'avec le c?ur. L'essentiel est invisible pour les yeux.
Posts: 159
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Post by rayyychul on May 29, 2011 23:29:42 GMT -5
I haven't registered for courses yet in the fall, so I'll post my reading lists from last semester:
20th Century Literature (Apocalypse) - No Country for Old Men by Cormac McCarthy - Brave New World by Aldous Huxley - 1894 by George Orwell - Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad (which, funnily enough, I never actually read) - The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood - Slouching Towards Bethlehem by Joan Didion - We by Yevgeny Zamyatin
Issues in Literature and Culture (Rock 'n' Roll) - Hellfire: The Jerry Lee Lewis Story by Nick Toches - Angel Riots by Ibi Kaslik - Never Mind the Pollacks by Neal Pollack - Hardcore Logo by Michael Turner - High Fidelity by Nick Hornby - The Commitments by Roddy Doyle
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Gina
Armadillo
Every second is a highlight.
Posts: 203
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Post by Gina on May 29, 2011 23:33:24 GMT -5
I'm only in high school, and I'm not sure about all of the books we are reading, but I do know some: - Hamlet - The Kite Runner - Frankenstein I'm looking forward to a great year! P.S.- Garth, if you haven't already read The Crucible, you will LOVE it! It's one of my favorite plays.
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Post by Dodger Thirteen on May 30, 2011 1:41:59 GMT -5
Going into my final year of uni, but still have a good many books to read. Taking that damned grammar course finally, and one other English class next semester (in addition to an anthropology course, beginner's Italian, and finishing up my Math/Science credits).
That being said, I'll be reading:
-The Dutch Courtesan by John Marston -Edward II by Christopher Marlowe -Epicoene by Ben Jonson -Measure for Measure by William Shakespeare -Titus Andronicus by William Shakespeare -The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd
I've never read any of these, so it should be interesting.
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Post by cyanea on May 30, 2011 2:33:23 GMT -5
I'm only taking two English courses this semester as I catch up with my History minor/potential second major. Of those two, only one has posted its reading list. It's some class on 20th Century Lit focusing on AIDS literature. It's not really my kind of thing, but I'm taking it with a few friends of mine and a professor that comes highly recommended, so I don't think it'll be that bad.
Allen Barnett, The Body and Its Dangers and Other Stories (1990) [selections] Rebecca Brown, The Gifts of the Body (1995) Mark Doty, My Alexandria: Poems (1993) [selections] Essex Hemphill, Ceremonies: Prose and Poetry (1992) [selections] Amy Hoffman, Hospital Time (1997) Jamaica Kincaid, My Brother (1998) Tony Kushner, Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes (1992) Paul Monette, Borrowed Time: An AIDS Memoir (1988) Sonia Sanchez, Does Your House Have Lions? (1998)
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krista
Young Armadillo
Warrior of Words
Posts: 52
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Post by krista on May 31, 2011 13:00:06 GMT -5
So, out of curiosity, what reading have you guys been assigned for the upcoming semester(s)? Fortunately, my professors posted all of their books online for the students to see, so that makes it a little easier to know how much they're all going to cost (assuming we haven't read/purchased them prior to class starting). I've been assigned: - The Crucible
- Tuesdays with Morrie
- Eight Habits of the Heart
- The Collected Poems of W. B. Yeats
- The Canterbury Tales
- The House of Seven Gables
- Nature, and other Essays
- The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket
- Uncle Tom's Cabin
- Leaves of Grass
- Clotel
- Wigwam and the Cabin
- The Song of Hiawatha
- Pride and Prejudice
- The Monk
- Mrs. Dalloway
- Henry IV, Part I
- Life of Henry V
- Paradise Lost
- Dracula
Many of these I'd never even heard of. Many of them I'd heard of, but had simply never had a chance to read - like Paradise Lost, Dracula, and Pride and Prejudice. So I think this will be a great chance to read a lot of novels that I'd otherwise never had any time to read. I'm really looking forward to Dracula and Paradise Lost, since I've heard so much about them for so long now. And of course Uncle Tom's Cabin, since it's such an important work in American literature. Goodness gracious, I am out of the loop. I just graduated college so this is the first summer I won't be buying my books ahead of time to try and read them over the next few months! I'm in denial...let's not discuss it. Anyway, I'm thrilled you're reading Tuesdays with Morrie, The Canterbury Tales and Paradise Lost. I personally would not have liked The Canterbury Tales or Paradise Lost if I hadn't read them in school. Have you heard about the new film adaptation for Paradise Lost? Right now, it lists Bradley Cooper as Lucifer and I truly cannot see him playing the part.
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Post by Lizzie on May 31, 2011 17:56:49 GMT -5
Considering I am taking all general requirement classes and an Intro to Digital Processing class for my possible Graphic Design minor, I won't be taking any English courses and therefore will be reading zero novels, plays, or short stories. It's going to be a long semester.
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casey
Armadillo Pup
Posts: 20
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Post by casey on Jun 17, 2011 1:29:36 GMT -5
I'm taking a survey course for my major that I hadn't got around to taking for some reason. It's pretty basic, Brit Lit pre-1700. Just working out of a Norton probably. Works include:
- Beowulf - Sir Gawain and the Green Knight - Canturbury Tales - Chaucer - Utopia - Sir Thomas Moore - Faerie Queene - Spenser - King Lear - Way of the World - Congreve
etc.
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Post by Dodger Thirteen on Jun 17, 2011 2:12:19 GMT -5
I'm taking a survey course for my major that I hadn't got around to taking for some reason. It's pretty basic, Brit Lit pre-1700. Just working out of a Norton probably. Works include: - Beowulf - Sir Gawain and the Green Knight - Canturbury Tales - Chaucer - Utopia - Sir Thomas Moore - Faerie Queene - Spenser - King Lear - Way of the World - Congreve etc. Norton? Hrm...maybe. Doubtful, though. The Faerie Queene is wicked long. Not sure if you'd read the whole thing, though.... More than likely you'll be "assigned" Penguin classics. <3 those
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Post by devilishlybookish on Jun 17, 2011 3:12:20 GMT -5
^Love Penguin. My university always went for Dover or Oxford University, though.
I'm sad to say I won't have any more reading lists. I'll just have to make some for myself...[/color]
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Post by KatjevanLoon on Jun 17, 2011 17:43:05 GMT -5
So, out of curiosity, what reading have you guys been assigned for the upcoming semester(s)? Only one English course for me next semester (trying to finish my First Nations Studies degree), and that's the only class that's posted the assigned reading already. - Bishop, Anne. Becoming an Ally, Breaking the Cycle of Oppression. Halifax: Fernwood Publishers, 1995.
- Clements, Marie. The Unnatural and Accidental Women. Vancouver, Talonbooks, 2005.
- Helin, Calvin. Dances with Dependency. Orca Spirit Publishing.
- Hill, Barbara-Helen. Shaking the Rattle: Healing the Trauma of Colonization. Penticton, BC: Theytus Books. 1995.
- Razack, Sherene. Looking White People in the Eye: Gender, Race and Culture in the Courtrooms and Classrooms. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1998.
- Sterling, Shirley. My Name is Seepeetza. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntrye, 1992.
The course is called "The Effects of Colonization on Aboriginal Women."
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ThatsMyPie
Armadillo Pup
Why is a raven like a writing desk?
Posts: 19
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Post by ThatsMyPie on Jun 19, 2011 18:44:53 GMT -5
According to my school's website, my Junior Year of High School's AP Lang. and Comp consists of:
The Scarlet Letter - Nathaniel Hawthorne The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn - Mark Twain The Road - Cormac McCarthy My Antonia - Willa Cather Winesburg, Ohio - Sherwood Anderson The Great Gatsby - F. Scott Fitzgerald The Grapes of Wrath - John Steinbeck Death of a Salesman - Arthur Miller A Contemporary Novel
and I think we're going to read The Age of Reason.
-----------------------
On second thought, it says that the Honors English II curriculum is way different than what I read, even though the Honors English I curriculum is exactly what I did. Who knows? Maybe my teacher had pulled some string.
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andy
Young Armadillo
Posts: 80
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Post by andy on Jun 21, 2011 1:17:14 GMT -5
^Love Penguin. My university always went for Dover or Oxford University, though. I'm sad to say I won't have any more reading lists. I'll just have to make some for myself... [/color][/quote] You should try emailing course conveners and asking them for the reading list, they should be set by now although they're not posted online. Next term for English Lit, Comp Lit and Classical civilisation, I have to read: Chinua Achebe - Things Fall ApartJoseph Conrad - Heart of Darkness and Other TalesJonathan Swift - Gulliver's TravelsUrsula K. Le Guin Le Guin - The Dispossessed John Milton - Paradise Lost David Greig - Dunsinane Walter Scott - Redgauntlet Shakespeare - Troilus and CressidaAndre Gide - If It DieThomas Mann - Death In Venice Laura Esquivel - Like Water for ChocolateBrian Friel - Translations (play)Karel Capek - Letters from EnglandBohumil Hrabal - I Served the King of EnglandHomer - OdysseyHesiod - Theogony and Works and DaysHerodotus - The HistoriesAristotle - The Athenian Constitution
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Post by evermore on Jun 21, 2011 23:26:23 GMT -5
I'm only in high school, but these are what I have to read over the summer. If anyone has every read any of these (especially the more obscure ones) your opinion on them would be greatly appreciated. (:
The Illiad - Homer Nineteen Minutes - Jodi Picoult The Book Thief - Markus Zusak The Hour I First Believed - Wally Lamb The Fortress of Solitude - Jonathan Lethem
I'm also reading a book in Italian for my Italian class (I've been speaking Italian for 5 years now) but I forget the title and I doubt anyone would know it. And I also have to read The Hunger Games but I've already read it and thought it was very good. (: Thanks for your reply in advance!
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Post by Meaghan on Jun 22, 2011 4:23:32 GMT -5
I'm only going into my Junior year of high school to take AP Lang, but for summer reading I have The Color of Water and The Autobiography of Malcolm X, and for the school year we'll be reading - The Great Gatsby
- The Scarlet Letter
- The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Which really doesn't seem like much. I suppose it is a writing-based course though.... I'm surprised at many of your lists, though. It seems like much of what you guys are doing in college we did in high school, while a lot of what other high school students are doing I've never even heard of.
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