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American Literary Movements (Native American Myths (Puritanism (Neo…
American Literary Movements
Native American Myths
Puritanism
Neo-Classicism
Romanticism
Transcendentalism
Realism
Modernism
Post Modernism
Contemporary Literature
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Fiction
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Fiction
Shirley Jackson "The Lottery"
Ursula Le Guin "Those Who Walk Away From Omelas"
Ernest Hemingway "The Man and the Bridge"
Flannery O'Connor "A Good Man is Hard to Find"
H. P. Lovecraft "The Outsider"
Beliefs
Stray from Social Impositions
Question Society
Decomposition and Isolation
Rejection of the past movement
Anti-establishment
Harlem Renaissance
James Weldon Johnson
Alain Locke
Zora Neal Hurston
Countee Cullen
W. E. B. Dubois
Jean Toomer
Paul Dunbar
Nella Larson
Claude McKay
If I Must Die
Countee Cullen
To the Swimmer
Langston Hughes
Dream Variations
Dreams
Harlem
I, Too
Let America Be America Again
Weary Blues
The Negro Speaks of Rivers
The Poets
Ezra Pound
In a Station of the Metro
T. S. Eliot
Lovesong of J. Alfred Prufrock
Robert Frost
The Road Not Taken
Birches
Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening
Home Burial
Marianne Moore
The Fish
Elizabeth Bishop
The Fish
One Art
e. e. cummings
Buffalo Bill
anyone lived in a pretty how town
since feeling is first
somewhere i have never traveled, beyond
r-p-o-p-h-e-s-s-a-g-r
William Carlos Williams
The Red Wheelbarrow
Spring and All
Wallace Stevens
Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird
Anecdote of a Jar
The Novelists
John Stienbeck
Of Mice and Men
F. Scott Fitzgerald
The Great Gatsby
Absolution
Walt Whitman
Leaves of Grass
Song of Myself
Mark Twain
A Presidential Candidate
Lifef on the Mississippi
Ambrose Bierce
An Occurence at Owl Creek Bridge
Stephen Crane
A Mystery of Heroism
Kate Chopin
The Story of an Hour
Beliefs
Idealism Questioned
Disillusionment
War in Literature
Literature as a representation of real life
Rise of the novel/fiction
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Self-Reliance
Nature
American Scholar
Henry David Thoreau
Walden, or Life in the Woods
Emily Dickinson
Tell the Truth but tell it slant
Success is counted sweetest
I died for Beauty-but was scarce
I heard a Fly buzz-when I died
Because I could not stop for Death
The Soul selects her own Society
Heat! We will forget him!
The 5 Qualities
Confidence
Self-Reliance
Nonconformity
Free Thought/Intuition
Nature
The 5 I's
Intuition
Imagination
Inspiration from Nature
Innocence
Individuality
Edgar Allan Poe
Dark Romanticism
Horror
Literary Criticism
Stories
The Black Cat
The Pit and the Pendelum
The Cask of Amontillado
The Masque of the Red Death
The Fall of the House of Usher
Mystery
Crime
Poets
William Cullen Bryant
Thanatopsis
Henry Wadworth Longfellow
The Tide Rises, the Tide Falls
The Cross of Snow
Oliver Wendell Holmes
The Chambered Nautilus
Old Ironsides
The Founding Fathers
Thomas Jefferson
Declaration of Indepence
Ben Franklin
Autobiography
Speech at the Convention
Beliefs
Democracy
Collective We
Ethos, Logos, Pathos
Speech Writers
Patrick Henry
Speech and the Convention
Thomas Paine
Common Sense
Crisis No. 1
Poets and Writers
Anne Bradstreet
Here Are a Few Verses Upon the Burning of Our House, July 10, 1666
To My Dear and Loving Husband
Edward Taylor
Huswifery
Jonathon Edwards
Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God
Nathaniel Hawthorne
The Scarlet Letter
Beliefs
Devotion to God
Pragmatism
Honesty
Reputaion
Arthur Miller
The Crucible
Types of Myths
Creation Stories
The Sky Tree
The Trickster
How Coyote Got His Cunning
How Coyote Stole Fire
Coyote Finishes His Work
Explanation of Nature Stories
White Buffalo Woman
House Made of Dawn
Snake With Big Feet
The Sun Still Rises in the Same Sky
How Coyote and Eagle Stole the Sun and the Moon