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Pollock, Eric J.; Chun, Hye Won – Online Submission, 2008
Everyone loves a mystery story, probably for two reasons: The first is that the mystery story is the only literary genre that is written for the reader to follow and match their intellectual acumen with the protagonist. By doing so, the genre invites the reader into its own world as an active participant, not merely an innocent bystander (Pollock,…
Descriptors: Literary Genres, Fiction, Etiology, Instructional Materials
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Weiner, Stephen – English Journal, 2004
The students can explore an entirely fascinating new world through graphic novels introduced into the classrooms. The graphic novels include genre fiction like superhero and horror stories that combine words and pictures, which are appealing to the students. Several titles with connections to traditional English literature are recommended.
Descriptors: Novels, English Literature, Teaching Methods, Illustrations
Pearson, Kit – Horn Book Magazine, 1983
Discusses the first in a series of 12 children's books written by Arthur Ransome between 1930 and 1947. (AEA)
Descriptors: Authors, Book Reviews, Childrens Literature, Elementary Education
Good, Howard – 1986
The work of war correspondents involves violence, danger, and drama; and what they endure to get a story is often as interesting as the actual news itself. Anglo-American fiction tends toward an ironic, even cynical, view of combat reporting that serves as a corrective to the notion, fostered in journalists' autobiographies, that war is fun. It…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Characterization, English Literature, Ethics
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MacLennan, Hugh – English Quarterly, 1981
Traces the history of English prose from Francis Bacon to the present, commenting on the quality of various authors' writing and of fiction today. (HTH)
Descriptors: Authors, English Literature, Fiction, Literary Criticism
Fiedler, Leslie – 1991
This collection of lectures and articles was occasioned by the author's 70th birthday and his many decades of teaching in the English departments at the University of Montana and at the State University of New York at Buffalo, where he is the self-proclaimed "apostle to the gentiles." The book explores the often conflicting paradox of…
Descriptors: Anti Semitism, Cultural Context, English Literature, Fiction
Rees, David – 1980
The purposes of this collection of 15 essays on specific works of fiction for children and adolescents are threefold: to explore some of the similarities and differences in fiction for children in England and the United States; to point out some of the qualities of American literature that are of particular interest to children in England and to…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Authors, Childrens Literature, Cross Cultural Studies
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Piper, David – English Quarterly, 1986
Presents some personal experimental work relating to world metaphors together with that of others working in the areas of logic, psychology, and philosophy. (NKA)
Descriptors: English Instruction, English Literature, Fiction, Language Processing
Greenwood, John – 1983
A stylistic approach to the teaching of English literature is required--one that focuses on the use of specific language styles instead of the traditional singular focus on theme. The only justification for studying English literature in its original language (i.e., English) is because the language used by the writer is a crucial element in the…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, English, English Literature, Fiction