One Hundred Great Essays / Edition 5

One Hundred Great Essays / Edition 5

by Robert DiYanni
ISBN-10:
0134053389
ISBN-13:
9780134053387
Pub. Date:
10/24/2014
Publisher:
Pearson Education
ISBN-10:
0134053389
ISBN-13:
9780134053387
Pub. Date:
10/24/2014
Publisher:
Pearson Education
One Hundred Great Essays / Edition 5

One Hundred Great Essays / Edition 5

by Robert DiYanni
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Overview

One Hundred Great Essays is published as part of the Penguin Academic Series, a series of low-cost, high quality offerings intended for use in introductory college courses.
One Hundred Great Essays collects that number of the most teachable and rewarding essays used in today's college composition class. The anthology combines classic essays that are commonly taught in composition courses together with the most frequently anthologized essays of recent note by today's most highly regarded writers. The selections exhibit a broad range of diversity in subject matter and authorship. All essays have been selected for their teachability, both as models for writing and for their usefulness as springboards for student writing. An introductory section informs students about the qualities of the essay form and offers instruction on how to read essays critically and use the writing process to develop their own essays.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780134053387
Publisher: Pearson Education
Publication date: 10/24/2014
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 656
Sales rank: 655,338
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.40(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Robert DiYanni is Director of International Services in the Advanced Placement Program at The College Board. Dr. DiYanni, who holds a B.A. from Rutgers University and a Ph.D. from the City University of New York, has taught English and Humanities at a variety of institutions, including NYU, CUNY, and Harvard. He has written and edited more than two dozen books, mostly for college students of writing, literature, and humanities.

Table of Contents

* indicates new selections.

Preface.


Introduction: Reading and Writing Essays.

History and Context.

Pleasures of the Essay.

Types of Essays.

Reading Essays.

Reading Annie Dillard's “Living Like Weasels.”

Writing Essays.

Arriving at an Interpretation.



1. Maya Angelou, Graduation.


2. Gloria Anzaldua, How to Tame a Wild Tongue.


3. Francis Bacon, Of Studies.


4. Russell Baker, Growing Up.


5. James Baldwin, Notes of a Native Son.


6. Dave Barry, Road Warrior.


7. Mary Catherine Bateson, Attending a World.


8. * Sven Birkerts, Into the Electric Millennium.


9. * Judy Brady, I Want a Wife.


10. Susan Brownmiller, Femininity.


11. Jane Brox, Influenza 1918.


12. Angela Carter, The Wound in the Face.


13. Judith Ortiz Cofer, Casa: A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood.


14. * K. C. Cole, Calculated Risks.


15. Bernard Cooper, Burl's.


16. Aaron Copland, How We Listen.


17. * William Cronon, The Trouble with Wilderness.


18. Charles Darwin, Natural Selection.


19. Guy Davenport, The Geography of the Imagination.


20. Joan Didion, Marrying Absurd.


21. Joan Didion, On Self-Respect.


22. Annie Dillard, Living Like Weasels.


23. Annie Dillard, Jest and Earnest.


24. John Donne, No Man Is an Island.


25. Frederick Douglass, Learning to Read and Write.


26. W. E. B. Du Bois, Of Our Spiritual Striving.


27. Gretel Ehrlich, About Men.


28. Queen Elizabeth I, Speech to the Troops at Tilbury.


29. Ralph Ellison, Living with Music.


30. Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nature.


31. Anne Fadiman, Never Do That to a Book.


32. Benjamin Franklin, Arriving at Perfection.


33. Sigmund Freud, The Interpretation of Dreams.


34. Henry Louis Gates, Jr., In the Kitchen.


35. * Atul Gawande, Crimson Tide.


36. * Malcolm Gladwell, The Tipping Point.


37. Ellen Goodman, The Company Man.


38. Mary Gordon, More than Just a Shrine—Ellis Island.


39. Stephen Jay Gould, Women's Brains.


40. William Hazlitt, On the Pleasure of Hating.


41. Edward Hoagland, The Courage of Turtles.


42. Barbara Holland, Naps.


43. Langston Hughes, Salvation.


44. * Zora Neale Hurston, How It Feels to Be Colored Me.


45. * Pico Iyer, Nowhere Man.


46. Thomas Jefferson, The Declaration of Independence.


47. Jamaica Kincaid, On Seeing England for the First Time.


48. Martin Luther King, Jr., Letter from Birmingham Jail.


49. * Martin Luther King, Jr., I Have a Dream.


50. * Barbara Kingsolver, Stone Soup.


51. Maxine Hong Kingston, On Discovery.


52. Charles Lamb, A Bachelor's Complaint.


53. Robin Tolmach Lakoff, You Are What You Say.


54. D. H. Lawrence, On Ben Franklin's Virtues.


55. Chang-rae Lee, Coming Home Again.


56. Abraham Lincoln, The Gettysburg Address.


57. Barry Lopez, The Stone Horse.


58. Niccolo Machiavelli, The Morals of the Prince.


59. Nancy Mairs, On Being a Cripple.


60. Karl Marx and Friederich Engels, The Communist Manifesto.


61. John McPhee, from “The Encircled River.”


62. H. L. Mencken, Portrait of an Ideal World.


63. * Howard Miner, Body Ritual Among the Nacirema.


64. N. Scott Momaday, The Way to Rainy Mountain.


65. Michel de Montaigne, Of Smells.


66. George Orwell, Politics and the English Language.


67. George Orwell, Shooting an Elephant.


68. Cynthia Ozick, The Seam of the Snail.


69. Alexander Petrunkevitch, The Spider and the Wasp.


70. Plato, The Allegory of the Cave.


71. Katherine Anne Porter, The Necessary Enemy.


72. Anna Quindlen, Between the Sexes, A Great Divide.


73. * Richard Rodriguez, Aria: Memories of a Bilingual Childhood.


74. Scott Russell Sanders, Under the Influence.


75. * Luc Sante, What Secrets Tell.


76. Chief Seattle, Speech on the Signing of the Treaty of Port Elliott.


77. Richard Selzer, The Masked Marvel's Last Toehold.


78. * Leonard Shlain, Verbal/Nonverbal.


79. Leslie Marmon Silko, Landscape, History, and the Pueblo Imagination.


80. Susan Sontag, A Woman's Beauty: Put-Down or Power Source?


81. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions.


82. Brent Staples, Just Walk on By: Black Men and Public Space.


83. Shelby Steele, On Being Black and Middle Class.


84. Jonathan Swift, A Modest Proposal.


85. * Margaret Talbot, Les Tres Riches Heures de Martha Stewart.


86. Amy Tan, Mother Tongue.


87. Lewis Thomas, The Corner of the Eye.


88. Henry David Thoreau, Why I Went to the Woods.


89. James Thurber, University Days.


90. Sojourner Truth, Aren't I a Woman?


91. Mark Twain, Reading the River.


92. Alice Walker, Beauty: When the Other Dancer Is the Self.


93. Eudora Welty, from “Listening.”


94. E. B. White, Once More to the Lake.


95. E. B. White, The Ring of Time.


96. Tom Wolfe, Only One Life.


97. Mary Wollstonecraft, A Vindication of the Rights of Women.


98. Virginia Woolf, The Death of the Moth.


99. Virginia Woolf, Professions for Women.


100. Richard Wright, Writing and Reading.


Credits.


Index.
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