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The Routledge History of Literature in English covers the main
developments in the history of British and Irish literature, with
accompanying language notes which explore the interrelationships
between language and literature at each stage. With a span from AD
600 to the present day, it emphasises the growth of literary
writing, its traditions, conventions and changing characteristics,
and includes literature from the margins, both geographical and
cultural. Extensive quotations from poetry, prose and drama
underpin the narrative. The third edition covers recent
developments in literary and cultural theory, and features: a new
chapter on novels, drama and poetry in the 21st century; examples
of analysis of key texts drawn from across the history of British
and Irish literature, including material from Chaucer, Shakespeare,
John Keats and Virginia Woolf; an extensive companion website
including extra language notes and key text analysis; lists of
Booker, Costa and Nobel literature prize winners; and an A-Z of
authors and topics. The Routledge History of Literature in English
is an invaluable reference for any student of English literature
and language.
Now Read On brings together literatures in English from around the world, combining an excellent choice of texts with sound methodological guidance.It contains approximately eighty texts and extracts from countries andcontinents including: *Africa *Australia *Great Britain *India *Malaysia *New Zealand *Philippines *Singapore Designed as course for both native and non-native English-speakers in how to read literature, this anthology begins with shorter starter texts and questions, and develops in complexity as the reader progresses through the book. Now Read On provides the user with *hands-on experience of working with a plurality of texts from around the world *questions, exercises, pointers and commentary, accompanying all the passages of literature, and providing the student with the tools and confidence to critically evaluate any text *an understanding of the major genres - poetry, short stories, drama and novels.
The Routledge History of Literature in English covers the main
developments in the history of British and Irish literature, with
accompanying language notes which explore the interrelationships
between language and literature at each stage. With a span from AD
600 to the present day, it emphasises the growth of literary
writing, its traditions, conventions and changing characteristics,
and includes literature from the margins, both geographical and
cultural. Extensive quotations from poetry, prose and drama
underpin the narrative. The third edition covers recent
developments in literary and cultural theory, and features: a new
chapter on novels, drama and poetry in the 21st century; examples
of analysis of key texts drawn from across the history of British
and Irish literature, including material from Chaucer, Shakespeare,
John Keats and Virginia Woolf; an extensive companion website
including extra language notes and key text analysis; lists of
Booker, Costa and Nobel literature prize winners; and an A-Z of
authors and topics. The Routledge History of Literature in English
is an invaluable reference for any student of English literature
and language.
This book is a user-friendly guide to English literature from 1960 to the present. Written by the authors of The Routledge History of Literature in English (now in its second edition), The Routledge Guide to Modern English Writing considers the development and status of English writing today. From Philip Larkin, Seamus Heaney and Ted Hughes to Caryl Churchill, Tom Stoppard and Alan Bennett, the book is essential reading for all readers of contemporary writing.
Contents: Part I Section 1. Poetry: Abdul Ghafar Ibrahim The Wall, Mutabaruka (Allan Hope) You Ask Me, William Carlos Williams This is Just to Say, Hilary Tham Offerings, Abdul Ghafar Ibrahim Hello, Arthur Gorges Her Face, Lord Byron So We'll Go No More A-Roving, Chinweizu Colonizer's Logic, J.R.D.A Dubreka Goodbye Europeans, Fadzillah Amin Dance. Section 2. Short Stories: Ambrose Pierce The Disinterested Arbiter, Ernest Hemingway In Our Times, Samuel Clemens A Fable, Fredric Brown The Weapon, Grace Paley Mother, Catherine Lim The Journey, Laurie Clancy Reading the Signs. Section 3. Plays: Edward Bond Bingo, Five Snippets, Oscar Wilde The Importance of Being Ernest, Harold Pinter Silence, William Shakespeare Macbeth, Anton Chekhov The Bear. Section 4. Novels: D.H.Lawrence Sons and Lovers, Ernest Hemingway For Whom the Bell Tolls, George Orwell Keep the Aspidistra Flying, Shahnon Ahmad No Harvest but a Thorn, Arundhati Roy The God of Small Things, Lloyd Fernando Scorpion Orchid, Anita Desai A Village by the Sea. Part II Section 5. Poetry: Pitika Ntuli In My Country, Keorapetse Kgositsile Mandela's Sermon, Mabel Segun Bride Price, Samuel Taylor Coleridge The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, John Keats La Belle Dame sans Merci, Alfred, Lord Tennyson The Charge of the Light Brigade, William Wordsworth Daffodils, John Agard Rainbow, Shirley Lim The Dulang-Washer, Maya Angelou Woman Work, The Joeys Men Are, Emily Dickinson A Narrow Fellow in the Grass, Muhammad Haji Salleh Three Beserah Fisherman, Thomas Hardy The Convergence of the Twain. Section 6. Short Stories: Three Points of Entry, W. Somerset Maugham The Force of Circumstance, Isaac Asimov True Love, Nick Joaquin May Day Eve, Katherine Mansfield The Garden Party, Janet Frame You Are Now Entering the Human Heart Section 7. Plays: William Shakespeare Macbeth, Harold Pinter A Night Out, Mahesh Dattani Dance Like a Man, Ramli Ibrahim In the Name of Love. Section 8. Novels: George Orwell Animal Farm, Jack Schaffer Shane, Harper Lee To Kill a Mocking Bird, James Vance Marshall Walkabout. Part III Section 9. Poetry: Kojo Gyinage Kyei Time, W.H.Auden Stop All the Clocks, Emily Dickinson Because I could not Stop for Death, Wilfred Owen Anthem for Doomed Youth, Futility, Edwin Brock Song of the Battery Hen, James Berry Fantasy of an African Boy, Sudeep Sen New York Times, John Keats When I Have Fears, To Autumn. Section 10. Short Stories: Steven Schutzman The Bank Robbery, Simon Tay Drive, Arthur Conan Doyle The Hound of the Baskervilles, Ruth Prawer Jhabvala Like Birds, Like Fishes, Siew Yue Killingley Everything's Arranged, Pira Sudham Rains, Saki (H.H.Munro) The Open Window. Section 11. Plays: George Bernard Shaw Pygmalion, Oscar Wilde The Importance of Being Ernest, William Shakespeare Hamlet, As You Like It, Julias Caesar Wole Soyinka The Swamp Dwellers, Athol Fugard Sizwe Bansi is Dead. Section 12. Novels: John Steinbeck Of Mice and Men, K.S.Maniam The Return, R.K.Narayan The Man-Eater of Malgudi, Chinua Achebe Things Fall Apart.
Series Information: Intertext
Language, Literature and the Learner is an edited volume evolving
from three international seminars devoted to the teaching of
literature in a second or foreign language. The seminars explicitly
addressed the interface between language and literature teaching to
investigate the ways in which literature can be used as a resource
for language growth at secondary, intermediate and
upper-intermediate level. This book presents the reader with a
practical classroom-based guide to how the teaching of language and
literature, until recently seen as two distinct subjects within the
English curriculum, can be used as mutually supportive resources
within the classroom. Through essays and case studies it reports on
the most recent developments in classroom practice and methodology
and suggests ways in which the curriculum could be reshaped to take
advantage of this integrated approach. The text will be essential
reading for students undertaking PGCE, TESOL/MA, UCLES, CTEFLA, RSA
and Teachers' Diploma courses worldwide. Students of applied
linguistics, those on stylistics courses and undergraduates
studying English language will welcome it as accessible
supplementary reading.
The Language of Poetry: * develops the student's ability to read
and evaluate poetic texts of many kinds * includes activities,
commentaries and extensions to each extract * covers a variety of
poetic language, ranging from songs, advertisements and spoken
language to the more traditional forms of the sonnet, ode and free
verse * includes poetry from Philip Larkin, Maya Angelou, Dylan
Thomas and Tony Harrison.
Language, Literature and the Learner is an edited volume evolving
from three international seminars devoted to the teaching of
literature in a second or foreign language. The seminars explicitly
addressed the interface between language and literature teaching to
investigate the ways in which literature can be used as a resource
for language growth at secondary, intermediate and
upper-intermediate level. This book presents the reader with a
practical classroom-based guide to how the teaching of language and
literature, until recently seen as two distinct subjects within the
English curriculum, can be used as mutually supportive resources
within the classroom. Through essays and case studies it reports on
the most recent developments in classroom practice and methodology
and suggests ways in which the curriculum could be reshaped to take
advantage of this integrated approach. The text will be essential
reading for students undertaking PGCE, TESOL/MA, UCLES, CTEFLA, RSA
and Teachers' Diploma courses worldwide. Students of applied
linguistics, those on stylistics courses and undergraduates
studying English language will welcome it as accessible
supplementary reading.
This second edition of The Penguin Guide to Literature in English:
Britain and Ireland provides an illustrated introduction to the
work of the most important writers and their historical background
from the year 600 to the end of the twentieth century. It covers
the works of novelists, dramatists and poets from Chaucer to
Shakespeare, Austen to Dickens, James Joyce to Seamus Heaney, right
through to modern-day authors such as Jeanette Winterson, Roddy
Doyle and Irvine Welsh.
In 1963 President John F. Kennedy was shot, Sylvia Plath published
"The Bell Jar" and the Beatles were in their prime. This was a
changing world, which British and Irish writers both contributed to
and reflected in drama, poetry and prose.;"The Routledge Guide to
Modern English Writing" tells the story of British and Irish
writing from 1963 to 2003. From the first performance of Tom
Stoppard's "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead" in the 1960s to
lad novels and chick lit in the 21st century, the authors guide the
reader through the major writers, genres and developments in
English writing over those 40 years.;Providing an in-depth survey
of the main genres and extensive treatment of a wide range of
writers including Philip Larkin, Ted Hughes, Angela Carter,
Benjamin Zephaniah and Nick Hornby, this readable handbook also
offers notes on language issues, quotations from selected works, a
timeline and a guide to other works. Written by the authors of "The
Routledge History of Literature in English" (second edition 2001),
this is a guide for all readers of contemporary writing.
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