English III Early American Literature Native American Experience

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English III
Early American Literature
Native American Experience
“Coyote Finishes His Work”
“ Coyote and the Buffalo” pp. 48-52
Exploration and Early Settlers
The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano pp. 84-88
The Puritan Tradition
-Anne Bradstreet
“To My Dear and Loving Husband” p.116
“Upon the Burning of Our House July 10th, 1666” p. 118
-Jonathan Edwards
Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God pp. 124-129
-Arthur Miller
The Crucible pp.136-212
Salem Witchcraft Trials pp.
McCarthyism p.217
Writers of the Revolution
-Patrick Henry
“Speech to Virginia Convention” pp. 230-234
-Thomas Jefferson
The Declaration of Independence pp. 240-244
-Thomas Paine
The Crisis pp. 250-255
-Abigail Adams
“Letter to John Adams” p. 262-264
-Benjamin Franklin
The Autobiography p. 270
Poor Richard’s Almanack p. 275
American Romanticism
The Early Romantics
-Washington Irving
“The Devil and Tom Walker” pp. 320-332
“Rip Van Winkle”
“The Legend of Sleepy Hollow”
The Fireside Poets
-William Cullen Bryant
“Thanatopsis” pp. 338-339
-Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
“A Psalm of Life” pp. 344-345
“The Tide Rises, The Tide Falls” p. 346
The Transcendentalists
-Ralph Waldo Emerson
“Self-Reliance” pp. 370-372
Nature pp. 373-374
-Henry David Thoreau
Walden pp. 380-387
“Civil Disobedience” pp. 390-396
Gandhi pp. 400-401
American Gothic
-Edgar Allan Poe
“The Fall of the House of Usher” pp. 412-430
“The Raven” pp. 436-440
“The Masque of the Red Death” pp. 446-452
-Nathaniel Hawthorne
“The Minister’s Black Veil” pp. 470-482
“Young Goodman Brown”
“Rappaccini’s Daughter”
“Dr. Heidegger’s Experiment”
Brilliant Mavericks
-Walt Whitman
“I Hear America Singing” p.532
Song of Myself pp. 534-537
“A Noiseless Patient Spider” p. 538
“Beat! Beat! Drums!” p. 539
-Emily Dickinson
“Because I could not stop for Death-” p. 548
“Success is counted sweetest” p. 550
“Much Madness is divinest Sense-“ p. 551
“My life closed twice before its close-“ p. 551
“The Soul selects her own Society-“ p. 552
“I heard a Fly buzz-when I died-“ p. 553
“My Life had stood-a Loaded Gun-“ p. 554
Literature of the Civil War
-Frederick Douglass
Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave pp. 560-569
-Sojourner Truth
“Ain’t I a Woman?”
-Abraham Lincoln
The Gettysburg Address p. 586
The Emancipation Proclamation pp. 528-589
Realism
-Stephen Crane
The Red Badge of Courage p. 601
-Ambrose Bierce
“An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” pp. 604-614
Regionalism and Local Color
-Mark Twain
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
“The Notorious Jumping Frog of Calaveras County” pp. 684-690
-Edith Wharton
Ethan Frome
“Roman Fever”
Harlem Renaissance
-Langston Hughes
“Harlem” p. 880
“The Negro Speaks of Rivers” p. 882
“I, Too” p. 883
“The Weary Blues” p. 884
-Claude McKay”
“If We Must Die” p. 890
-Countee Cullen
“Tableau”
“Incident”
“Any Human to Another” p. 894
-Zora Neale Hurston
Their Eyes Were Watching God
-Toni Morrison
The Bluest Eye
The Jazz Age
-F. Scott Fitzgerald
The Great Gatsby pp. 1002-1004
“Winter Dreams” pp. 978-998
The New Poetry
-Edwin Arlington Robinson
“Richard Cory” p. 922
“Miniver Cheevy” pp. 924-925
“Lucinda Matlock” p. 926
-Carl Sandburg
“Chicago” pp. 930-931
“Grass” p. 932
-Robert Frost
“The Road Not Taken”
“Acquainted with the Night” p. 938
“Nothing Gold Can Stay” p. 940
“Out, Out-“ p. 941
“The Death of the Hired Man” pp. 944-949
-Ezra Pound
“In a Station of the Metro” p. 954
-H. D.
“Helen” p. 954
-William Carlos Williams
“The Red Wheelbarrow”
“The Great Figure”
“This Is Just to Say” p. 957
-E. E. Cummings
“anyone lived in a pretty how town” p. 962
“what if a much of a which of a wind”
-T.S. Eliot
“The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” pp. 970-973
-Ernest Hemingway
The Grapes of Wrath pp. 1027-1032
“Hills Like White Elephants”
The Modern Short Story
-Eudora Welty
“A Worn Path” pp. 1050-1059
-William Faulkner
“A Rose for Emily” pp. 1066-1074
-Flannery O’Connor
“The Life You Save May Be Your Own” pp. 1080-1089
The Legacy of an Era - Dramas
-Tennessee Williams
The Glass Menagerie p. 1165
-Arthur Miller
Death of a Salesman p. 1167
-Lorraine Hansberry
A Raisin in the Sun
Responses to War
-Randall Jarrell
“The Death of the Ball Turrett Gunner” p. 1175
-Tim O’Brien
The Things They Carried
Civil Rights Movement and Protest Literature
-Martin Luther King, Jr.
“Stride toward Freedom” pp. 1220-1223
-Dudley Randall
“Ballad of Birmingham” p. 1214
-Malcolm X
“Necessary to Protect Ourselves” pp. 1224-1227
-Anne Moody
“Coming of Age in Mississippi” pp. 1240-1246
-Alice Walker
“In Search of Our Mother’s Gardens” pp. 1280-1284
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