Literature: Difference between revisions
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[[Rhetorical Analysis]] | [[Rhetorical Analysis]] | ||
[[Category:Literature]] | [[Category:Literature]] | ||
See also [[Literary devices]] | |||
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* more particularly, ''literature'' refers to writing of artistic merit or value | * more particularly, ''literature'' refers to writing of artistic merit or value | ||
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== American high school literature == | == American high school literature == | ||
General works taught in American high schools: | |||
* Hamlet / Julius Caesar | * Hamlet / Julius Caesar | ||
* Animal Farm or 1984 | |||
* Gatsby | * Gatsby | ||
Latest revision as of 14:49, 13 October 2022
Literature English Skills Rhetorical Analysis
See also Literary devices
Literature definition[edit | edit source]
- by definition, anything in writing
- more particularly, literature refers to writing of artistic merit or value
Types of literature[edit | edit source]
inscriptions[edit | edit source]
pamphlets[edit | edit source]
poetry[edit | edit source]
prose[edit | edit source]
Ancient texts[edit | edit source]
Biblical[edit | edit source]
Chinese[edit | edit source]
Greek[edit | edit source]
English literature[edit | edit source]
Old English[edit | edit source]
Middle English[edit | edit source]
American literature[edit | edit source]
- "Moby Dick” by Melville
- "Huck Finn” by Twain
- Great Gatsby” by Fitzgerald
American high school literature[edit | edit source]
General works taught in American high schools:
- Hamlet / Julius Caesar
- Animal Farm or 1984
- Gatsby
- Lord of the Flies
- F451
- Things Fall Apart
- To Kill a Mockingbird
- A Raisin in the Sun
- The Crucible
- Beloved
- House on Mango Street