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To: napscoordinator
My grandsons are in AP English. the one who will be a freshman has to read 'My Antonio' (or something like that) (the one who will be a junior also had to read it as a freshman - the topic or the author is 'a lesbian/ism'). The one who will be a junior has to read 'Fast Food Nation'. He can only read about 2-3 pages before going elsewhere. He has written Rush about it.

When one of the books he was having to read last year had bad language in it, I commented to his teacher. She has to pick material from the AP English website. She can't pick her own material (not that she would make different choices).

11 posted on 08/16/2007 3:49:54 AM PDT by mathluv (Never Forget!)
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To: mathluv
My grandsons are in AP English. the one who will be a freshman has to read 'My Antonio' (or something like that) (the one who will be a junior also had to read it as a freshman - the topic or the author is 'a lesbian/ism').

__________________________________________________

Your willingness to exhibit ignorance of one of the most important books and authors in American literature is astounding.

23 posted on 08/16/2007 7:11:19 AM PDT by wtc911 ("How you gonna get back down that hill?")
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To: mathluv
When one of the books he was having to read last year had bad language in it, I commented to his teacher. She has to pick material from the AP English website. She can't pick her own material (not that she would make different choices).

Not true.

At the College Board Web site you can download the description for AP English Lit. It specifically states, "There is no recommended or required reading list for the AP English Literature and Composition course. The following authors are provided simply to suggest the range and quality of reading expected in the course. Teachers may select authors from the names below or may choose others of comparable quality and complexity."

Here are SOME of the authors in the list; some modern authors are also listed.

Poetry: William Blake; Robert Browning; Geoffrey Chaucer; Samuel Taylor Coleridge; Emily Dickinson; T. S. Eliot; Robert Frost; John Milton; Edgar Allan Poe; Alexander Pope; William Shakespeare; Percy Bysshe Shelley; Alfred, Lord Tennyson; Walt Whitman; William Wordsworth; William Butler Yeats

Drama: Aeschylus; Samuel Beckett; Anton Chekhov; Oliver Goldsmith; Henrik Ibsen; Ben Jonson; Molière; Eugene O’Neill; Harold Pinter; William Shakespeare; George Bernard Shaw; Sophocles; Oscar Wilde; Tennessee Williams.

Fiction (Novel and Short Story: Jane Austen; Charlotte Brontë; Emily Brontë; Joseph Conrad; Stephen Crane; Charles Dickens; George Eliot; William Faulkner; Henry Fielding; F. Scott Fitzgerald; E. M. Forster; Thomas Hardy; Nathaniel Hawthorne; Ernest Hemingway; Herman Melville; Jonathan Swift; Leo Tolstoy; Mark Twain.

Expository Prose: Ralph Waldo Emerson; Samuel Johnson; H. L. Mencken; John Stuart Mill; George Orwell; Henry David Thoreau.

34 posted on 08/16/2007 8:01:36 AM PDT by StayAt HomeMother
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To: mathluv
A simple rule should apply

If a student can be disciplined for using certain words, those words should not appear in the assigned literature.

42 posted on 08/16/2007 8:55:22 AM PDT by CharacterCounts
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To: mathluv
The one who will be a junior has to read 'Fast Food Nation'. He can only read about 2-3 pages before going elsewhere. He has written Rush about it.

That's an interesting book. (If you don't believe me open the book and read about the life story of the potato king J.R. Simplot.) But getting teenagers to read these days is like leading a horse to water. There's nothing wrong with knowing where our food comes from.

44 posted on 08/16/2007 9:19:14 AM PDT by wideminded
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To: mathluv

Go to the School Board meeting and read excerpts from the books.


59 posted on 08/16/2007 11:00:32 AM PDT by AppyPappy (If you aren't part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem.)
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To: mathluv

The author of My Antonio did indeed live with women and therefore probably was lesbian, but she was also a political conservative who won the Pulitzer Prize in the 1920s. My Antonio is about the struggles of a family in Nebraska and is not about lesbianism or feminism.


62 posted on 08/16/2007 11:10:49 AM PDT by gracesdad
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To: mathluv

“My Antonia” is a wonderful book, written I guess about 1920 or so, about a pioneer Midwestern family. Willa Cather is the author; if she was a lesbian, it is not apparent from the book. The problem is not with the book, it’s that nowadays kids are REQUIRED to know about the author’s sexual proclivities as well. Who the EFF cares?? What I want to know is - does she write well? Is it a good story? and in this case the answer is yes.


107 posted on 08/17/2007 11:33:44 AM PDT by Shazolene
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