Resources

Readings

On Weekly Topics

Semantic Fields

Free Indirect Discourse

Grammtical Structures

Language Variation, Literacy and Power

Project Resources

On Authors

On Literary Periods

 

Readings

Jamaica Kincaid, "Girl"

On Weekly Topics

semantic fields--links to

a discussion of how college writers might draw on an awareness of semantic fields in their writing, with some good examples. 

advice for songwriters

free indirect discourse--links to

literary encyclopedia

a discussion of FID as narrated monologue

a good student posting in Amazon's Guide to Reading Literature

a useful, brief posting from a blog

free direct discourse

"Elements of Fiction" from The Guardian Unlimited.  Applied to examples from Jonathan Safran Foer.

on grammatical structures

HyperGrammar

Sentence and Text Level Grammar

The Tongue Untied.  University of Oregon grammar site.

on language variation

A dictionary of rap

on linking verbs and the copula

see the results of Rose's inquiry #14

Project Resources

carrying out an ethnographic study of a setting (an ethnography of communication), two chapters from my freshman writing book, Exploring Literacy (Longman, 2004) .

Chapter 5, "Analyzing Everyday Conversations"

Chapter 6, "Writing in Ethnographic Genres"  

On repetition as an aesthetic element in conversation

Tannen, "Repetition in Conversation:  Towards a Poetics of Talk"    

                                                        

On Authors

Jamaica Kincaid

Background on her life and work (BBC World Service--http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/arts/features/womenwriters/kincaid_life.shtml)

Leslie Marmon Silko

Biographical Info about Leslie Marmon Silko (http://www.nwhp.org/tlp/biographies/silko/bio.html)

with links to an interview

Carlisle Indian School history with a before and after photo

Carlisle Indian School photos

Alice Walker

Biographical information about Alice Walker (http://members.tripod.com/chrisdanielle/aliceindex.html)

Interview with Alice Walker (http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcfour/audiointerviews/profilepages/walkera1.shtml)

This BBC site will link you to instructions for installing RealPlayer, so that you can hear this audio file.

Toni Cade Bambara

Biographical information about Toni Cade Bambara  with a link to information about the Black Arts Movement  (http://voices.cla.umn.edu/vg/Bios/entries/bambara_toni_cade.html)

Roddy Doyle

A review/interview on The Woman Who Walked into Doors

Flannery O'Connor

Biographical information about Flannery O'Connor threaded into a writer's account of her journey to the places O'Connor lived and worked.  (http://www.literarytraveler.com/summer/south/oconnor.htm)

More biographical information and links for Flannery O'Connor  (http://mediaspecialist.org/index.html)

O'Connor's educational history with some photos

On Literary Periods

Realism

Notes on Realism (J.Lye)

Modernism

Some Attributes of Modernist Literature (J. Lye)

Postmodernism

Some Attributes of Post-Modernist Literature (J.Lye)

Comparison to Modernism (Klages)

On Language Variation, Literacy, and Power

"The Creole Origins of African American Vernacular English" John Rickford.  A careful review of evidence re. whether AAVE is a creole ["whether a significant number of the Africans who came to the United States between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries went through processes of pidginization, creolization and (maybe) decreolization in acquiring English (the creolists' position"]), or a dialect ["whether they learned the English of British and other immigrants fairly rapidly and directly, without an intervening pidgin or creole stage (the dialectologists' position)"].

"Liberating American Ebonics from Euro-English,"  Arthur Palacas.  An excellent argument for why AAVE should be seen linguistically as a distinct language and why this matters for teaching.  He argues that "language differences need to be taught, not in a remedial sense, but rather in an informative, scientific sense, and especially with the respect and joy that can come from belief in the language of the student."

"Hawaiian Pidgin Finds a Place in the Classroom"

"Hawaiian Sovereignty"

"Do You Speak American"  A PBS site with great information/activities re. varieties of American English

Jeopardy with a Twist:  and example a classroom game to help African-American kids with codeswitching while valuing their language.

Download Realplayer (free) to watch/listen to this video.

Hawaiian Creole English Grammar

Full on Pidgin   (a site with words and pronunciation for Hawaiian Pidgen/Pidgin/Creole)

Hawaiian Language Variation with quotations from Yamanaka--the words of Lovey and Mr. Harvey

Boston English

On Teaching English:  Writing and Grammar 

From the NCTE [National Council of Teachers of English]

"Beyond Grammar Drills: How Language Works
in Learning to Write." 
The Council Chronicle Online, October 25, 2006