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Help on my Anthology

 
 
x-rusty
 
Reply Mon 6 Sep, 2004 03:50 pm
Hello! I'm a sophomore student in highschool and I'm taking English Honors. For our first semester's major project, we were told to make our own anthology. In our anthology, we will need different genres of writing by different people and I'm here making a topic asking for help.

Well, Im not a novel/book reader. I enjoy reading books but the ones I enjoy are the ones with lots of characters and drawings in them like the Greek Gods, Ancient Egyptian Cultures. I also read magazines.
If you guys can help me in any of them, I'd really appreciate it. All you gotta give is the name of the book and by who.

All I need is the name of the book, you dont havta give me the exact selection as I would want to select the piece that I want.

What are those books called wherein theres a compilation of essays or poems by different people in them? Those are the books that I need. My teacher gave us a copy of a book that I just described thats full of essays but Im sure we are not allowed to get selections from there.

By the way, my teacher asked us to write a 5-page essay tying all the parts together. Im going to focus on the theme of Succeeding or Friendship. That is why I would want to pick out the selections themselves.


Well here is the list:

Works by Contemporary Women Writers
  • 1 Poem
  • 1 Selection from a work of short fiction
  • 1 Essay or Article
  • 1 Work from a genre 2 of your choice


Works by contemporary Mexican, Central or South American Writers
  • 2 Poems


Works by Contemporary Asian Writers
  • 2 Poems


Works by writers who have WON THE NOBEL PRIZE FOR LITERATURE SINCE 1982 (you must choose a Nobel laureate who is not from America, Canada or England)
  • 3 Works from a genre of your choice


Samples from one or more PUBLISHED ARTICLES or ESSAYS (these may be humorous, political, economical, social essays, sport essays, etc.) by contemporary writers
  • 3 (A sample consists of at least 200 words, not necessarily consecutive)


Work by a contemporary writer that focuses on CURRENT SOCIAL PROBLEM (violence, AIDS, hunger, gun control, racism, etc.)
  • 1 This can be a poem, an essay, an article (or part of an article) a play (or part of a play), anything


10 Poems by poets who are still living or who have died in the last 25 years



Thanks again, I know I would specially need help on the Nobel Prize one. Thanks a lot!
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dlowan
 
  1  
Reply Mon 6 Sep, 2004 04:00 pm
I will be back later to help if your question is not answered when I get back from work. Hafta go!
0 Replies
 
princesspupule
 
  1  
Reply Tue 7 Sep, 2004 10:46 am
Here's one of my favorite essays: "What It's Like to Be a Bat," by Thomas Nagel.
http://www.silcom.com/~teragram/bat.html

Of course, tying it in to being successful and being a friend is gonna be a little bit hard... Basically, in a nutshell, it is saying that what is perceived is all subjective, so you could claim that success is subjective, which of course it is... <scratches head>

Now, a contemporary poet on social commentary, hm, do you have access to Haunani-Kay Trask's works? Light in the Crevice Never Seen is an amazing work!
http://www.asianweek.com/2002_08_23/arts_haunani.html Her sister, Mililani Trask is also a feminist, has spoken at events w/Gloria Steinem (who should be referenced by you, natch. Wink)

How about Gabriel Garcia Marquez for a latino writer? Or, did Laura Esquivel ever write poetry? Like Water for Chocolate reads like poetry...
0 Replies
 
fbaezer
 
  1  
Reply Tue 7 Sep, 2004 10:56 am
Dear Lord, not Laura Esquivel!
García Márquez is a great novelist, but no poet.

Great Latin American poets of the XX Century:

Octavio Paz, Nobel Prize of Literature, Mexico
Pablo Neruda, Nobel Prize of Literature, Chile.

For Paz, a very useful link:

One of several Paz webpages

For Neruda, a thread in A2K:

Pablo Neruda turns 100

Good luck.
0 Replies
 
Walter Hinteler
 
  1  
Reply Tue 7 Sep, 2004 11:21 am
Nobel Prize

Günther Grass

José Saramago
0 Replies
 
Walter Hinteler
 
  1  
Reply Tue 7 Sep, 2004 11:26 am
More links for

Octavio Paz

Neruda won the prize in 1971, which is little bit before 1982 :wink:
0 Replies
 
fbaezer
 
  1  
Reply Tue 7 Sep, 2004 11:32 am
A more contemporary Mexican poet, José Emilio Pacheco
0 Replies
 
princesspupule
 
  1  
Reply Tue 7 Sep, 2004 02:26 pm
fbaezer wrote:
Dear Lord, not Laura Esquivel!


What's wrong with Laura Esquivel- besides her science fiction book on love...?
0 Replies
 
princesspupule
 
  1  
Reply Tue 7 Sep, 2004 02:31 pm
I thought of an asian woman poet (modern) you might enjoy checking out... Marilyn Chin! Very Happy

http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/a_f/chin/online.htm
Quote:

Also, thought I'd mention Nagel's bat essay is in an anthology of essays compiled by Douglas Hofstadter and Daniel Dennett, called, The Mind's I.
0 Replies
 
princesspupule
 
  1  
Reply Tue 7 Sep, 2004 02:37 pm
Even better by Marilyn Chin:

http://www.poets.org/poems/poems.cfm?prmID=1495


an essay on assimilation

I am Marilyn Mei Ling Chin
Oh, how I love the resoluteness
of that first person singular
followed by that stalwart indicative
of "be," without the uncertain i-n-g
of "becoming." Of course,
the name had been changed
somewhere between Angel Island and the sea,
when my father the paperson
in the late 1950s
obsessed with a bombshell blond
transliterated "Mei Ling" to "Marilyn."
And nobody dared question
his initial impulse--for we all know
lust drove men to greatness,
not goodness, not decency.
And there I was, a wayward pink baby,
named after some tragic white woman
swollen with gin and Nembutal.
My mother couldn't pronounce the "r."
She dubbed me "Numba one female offshoot"
for brevity: henceforth, she will live and die
in sublime ignorance, flanked
by loving children and the "kitchen deity."
While my father dithers,
a tomcat in Hong Kong trash--
a gambler, a petty thug,
who bought a chain of chopsuey joints
in Piss River, Oregon,
with bootlegged Gucci cash.
Nobody dared question his integrity given
his nice, devout daughters
and his bright, industrious sons
as if filial piety were the standard
by which all earthly men are measured.

*

Oh, how trustworthy our daughters,
how thrifty our sons!
How we've managed to fool the experts
in education, statistic and demography--
We're not very creative but not adverse to rote-learning.
Indeed, they can use us.
But the "Model Minority" is a tease.
We know you are watching now,
so we refuse to give you any!
Oh, bamboo shoots, bamboo shoots!
The further west we go, we'll hit east;
the deeper down we dig, we'll find China.
History has turned its stomach
on a black polluted beach--
where life doesn't hinge
on that red, red wheelbarrow,
but whether or not our new lover
in the final episode of "Santa Barbara"
will lean over a scented candle
and call us a "bitch."
Oh God, where have we gone wrong?
We have no inner resources!

*

Then, one redolent spring morning
the Great Patriarch Chin
peered down from his kiosk in heaven
and saw that his descendants were ugly.
One had a squarish head and a nose without a bridge
Another's profile--long and knobbed as a gourd.
A third, the sad, brutish one
may never, never marry.
And I, his least favorite--
"not quite boiled, not quite cooked,"
a plump pomfret simmering in my juices--
too listless to fight for my people's destiny.
"To kill without resistance is not slaughter"
says the proverb. So, I wait for imminent death.
The fact that this death is also metaphorical
is testament to my lethargy.

*

So here lies Marilyn Mei Ling Chin,
married once, twice to so-and-so, a Lee and a Wong,
granddaughter of Jack "the patriarch"
and the brooding Suilin Fong,
daughter of the virtuous Yuet Kuen Wong
and G.G. Chin the infamous,
sister of a dozen, cousin of a million,
survived by everbody and forgotten by all.
She was neither black nor white,
neither cherished nor vanquished,
just another squatter in her own bamboo grove
minding her poetry--
when one day heaven was unmerciful,
and a chasm opened where she stood.
Like the jowls of a mighty white whale,
or the jaws of a metaphysical Godzilla,
it swallowed her whole.
She did not flinch nor writhe,
nor fret about the afterlife,
but stayed! Solid as wood, happily
a little gnawed, tattered, mesmerized
by all that was lavished upon her
and all that was taken away!
0 Replies
 
fbaezer
 
  1  
Reply Tue 7 Sep, 2004 04:18 pm
princesspupule wrote:
fbaezer wrote:
Dear Lord, not Laura Esquivel!


What's wrong with Laura Esquivel- besides her science fiction book on love...?


princesspupule, "Como Agua Para Chocolate" is a nice tale, but written very very amateurishly. Laura Esquivel writes in the style of the average female magazine editor, full of common places and with a very limited lexicon.

Perhaps the English translation improved it. Who knows.

The other book was a total flop. And that's all she's done.

There are literally several dozens of better authors than Esquivel in this continent.
0 Replies
 
x-rusty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 7 Sep, 2004 09:13 pm
Thanks to all of you! Ill check them out tomorrow in the library afterschool. Imma post what I find =D Thanks again!

I wanna get over the essays and novels now, so I can do the poems last =P
0 Replies
 
 

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