Writing about Reading

Writing about Reading

Author: Janet Angelillo

Publisher: Heinemann Educational Books

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 164

ISBN-13:

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Janet Angelillo introduces us to an entirely new way of thinking about writing about reading. She shows us how to teach students to manage all the thinking and questioning that precedes their putting pen to paper. More than that, she offers us smarter ways to have students write about their reading that can last them a lifetime. She demonstrates how students' responses to reading can start in a notebook, in conversation, or in a read aloud lead to thinking guided by literary criticism reflect deeper text analysis and honest writing processes result in a variety of popular genres--book reviews, author profiles, commentaries, editorials, and the literary essay. She even includes tools for teaching-day-by-day units of study, teaching points, a sample minilesson, and lots of student examples-plus chapters on yearlong planning and assessment. Ensure that your students will be readers and writers long after they leave you. Get them enthused and empowered to use whatever they read-facts, statistics, the latest book--as fuel for writing in school and in their working lives. Read Angelillo.


Literary Reading, Cognition and Emotion

Literary Reading, Cognition and Emotion

Author: Michael Burke

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2010-10-18

Total Pages: 392

ISBN-13: 1136890645

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This work seeks to chart what happens in the embodied minds of engaged readers when they read literature. Despite the recent stylistic, linguistic, and cognitive advances that have been made in text-processing methodology and practice, very little is known about this cultural-cognitive process and especially about the role that emotion plays. Burk’s theoretical and empirical study focuses on three central issues: the role emotions play in a core cognitive event like literary text processing; the kinds of bottom-up and top-down inputs most prominently involved in the literary reading process; and what might be happening in the minds and bodies of engaged readers when they experience intense or heightened emotions: a phenomenon sometimes labelled "reader epiphany." This study postulates that there is a free-flow of bottom-up and top-down affective, cognitive inputs during the engaged act of literary reading, and that reading does not necessarily begin or end when our eyes apprehend the words on the page. Burke argues that the literary reading human mind might best be considered both figuratively and literally, not as computational or mechanical, but as oceanic.


Reading Beyond the Book

Reading Beyond the Book

Author: Danielle Fuller

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2013-04-02

Total Pages: 371

ISBN-13: 1135080372

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Literary culture has become a form of popular culture over the last fifteen years thanks to the success of televised book clubs, film adaptations, big-box book stores, online bookselling, and face-to-face and online book groups. This volume offers the first critical analysis of mass reading events and the contemporary meanings of reading in the UK, USA, and Canada based on original interviews and surveys with readers and event organizers. The resurgence of book groups has inspired new cultural formations of what the authors call "shared reading." They interrogate the enduring attraction of an old technology for readers, community organizers, and government agencies, exploring the social practices inspired by the sharing of books in public spaces and revealing the complex ideological investments made by readers, cultural workers, institutions, and the mass media in the meanings of reading.


How to Read Literature

How to Read Literature

Author: Terry Eagleton

Publisher: Yale University Press

Published: 2013-05-21

Total Pages: 228

ISBN-13: 0300190964

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DIV A literary master’s entertaining guide to reading with deeper insight, better understanding, and greater pleasure /div


The Literary Reader

The Literary Reader

Author: George Rhett Cathcart

Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand

Published: 2024-08-02

Total Pages: 446

ISBN-13: 3385554381

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Reprint of the original, first published in 1877.


Literary Depictions of Dangerous Reading

Literary Depictions of Dangerous Reading

Author: Kevin R. West

Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield

Published: 2019-04-15

Total Pages: 211

ISBN-13: 1498563724

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Literary Depictions of Dangerous Reading explores how selected American and European literary texts, from the classic to the contemporary, represent reading as a dangerous endeavor. It investigates how the texts being read or the conditions of reading may produce danger and considers the various qualities of the dangers depicted: literal or metaphorical, real or imagined, minor or mortal. Whereas readers can readily imagine being depressed or bored by a book, or even perhaps corrupted in some moral fashion, readers typically assume that the mere words on a page cannot directly affect their health. Nevertheless, literature can and does stage readings in which readers suffer actual harm from the magical or supernatural qualities of a given text. Such impossibly dangerous reading fascinates, the author argues, by exaggerating the dangers that may inhabit certain real experiences of reading.


Reading Women

Reading Women

Author: Jennifer Phegley

Publisher: University of Toronto Press

Published: 2005-01-01

Total Pages: 313

ISBN-13: 0802089283

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Literary and popular culture has often focused its attention on women readers, particularly since early Victorian times. In Reading Women, an esteemed group of new and established scholars provide a close study of the evolution of the woman reader by examining a wide range of nineteenth- and twentieth-century media, including Antebellum scientific treatises, Victorian paintings, and Oprah Winfrey's televised book club, as well as the writings of Charlotte Brontë, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Zora Neale Hurston. Attending especially to what, how, and why women read, Reading Women brings together a rich array of subjects that sheds light on the defining role the woman reader has played in the formation, not only of literary history, but of British and American culture. The contributors break new ground by focusing on the impact representations of women readers have had on understandings of literacy and certain reading practices, the development of books and print culture, and the categorization of texts into high and low cultural forms.


The New Oxford Annotated Bible Containing the Old and New Testaments

The New Oxford Annotated Bible Containing the Old and New Testaments

Author: Bruce Manning Metzger

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Published: 1991

Total Pages: 2164

ISBN-13:

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Edited by Bruce Manning Metzger and Roland E. Murphy Detailed, updated annotations Extensive essays and book introductions Outlines Textual notes Footnotes Larger pages with wide margins 36 pages of full-color maps with Index Essay by Metzger on how to use Annotated Bible Imprintable Smyth-sewn 7 x 9 3/8 % Font size: 10