The art of literature will never die. Many people believe that there has been a decline in the reading and writing of literature, one of those people Dana Gioia wrote “Why Literature Matters” and she argues that the younger people of america although have had an increase in education their reading of literature has had a steep decline in recent years . Dana begins building her credibility with facts and sources, citing convincing facts and statistics, and successfully employing emotional appeal throughout the passage. Throughout the piece she uses many strong facts to strengthen her credibility and to appeal to logos, as well as build her argument.…
On this core Friday, Professor John Bultena from the Merritt Writing Program gave a lecture about comics. He doesn’t draw or write comics but he studied it for five years and been teaching about it. His goals for the lecture were to give an insight about what comics offer and the creation of behind it. There is more than enjoyment in comics and from visual information it can give a person deeper connection and understand through metaphor. Also in comics, there is always a question about how one panel goes to another, and the answer is always depending on the artist perception. John Bultena showed different styles of comic throughout the lecture but the first one he started out was with just a visual comic with no illustrations. This first one…
Comic books are loved by children, despite the lack of options they have on the market today. Comics aimed for children should be made about them, so they can relate to the story similar to the method used when writing scripts for TV shows and movies. With the electronics on the market today, comic books have to compete for the spot of entertainment in a child’s eyes.…
Lawn, J (2012). Frame by frame: Understanding the appeal of graphic novel for the middle years. Retrieved from http://search.informit.com.au.ezproxy1.acu.edu.au/fullText;dn=189967;res=AEIPT…
In “I Know Why the Caged Bird Cannot Read” Francine Prose confronts this plummeting interest in literature among teenagers. The United States has been afflicted with this disinterest for some time—young students are instilled with passion for math and science yet care little for English and literature. Attempting to explain this disparity, Prose argues that mediocre literature options and shoddy teaching methods leave students without any connection to the material they read. Unfortunately, while Prose’s ideas have some merit, her fallacious arguments, forceful tone, and jumpy logic negate any real impact her words could have.…
Sherman Alexie’s, “Superman and Me” helped me remember how I developed my passion for reading as a child. From the moment I was able to read, I cherished this form of media. While other children my age viewed reading as a chore or a burden, I read for the endless possibilities it provided my imagination. Reading gives an individual the opportunity to learn new information, while creating new thoughts. My parents worked multiple jobs to provide my sisters and me with what they considered necessary for us. Given out circumstances, we found other means of entertainment. When we did not have luxuries such as cable, my sisters and I would have to find other ways to keep ourselves entertained. When we weren’t riding our bikes around the block, we would collect old books from our friends and…
For this response, you are to take your chosen picture book (the one you plan to read to the kindergarten class at HVES) and analyze it both as a stand-alone book and in the context of the larger body of work of its author or illustrator. Since your analysis will vary somewhat depending on the author and/or book you choose, I’ve listed a series of questions to guide you below rather than an overarching, singular question.…
Reading is my life. It’s my escape from the world around me. I love getting lost in a story about monsters and myths, or a Cinderella gone wrong. If I didn’t draw as much as I did, I’d probably be the anti-social bookworm in the back, like in all those cliche teenage love stories. It’s actually quite surprising to see how many people dislike books, there’s nothing wrong with a little reading every once and awhile. But who am I to judge? I wasn’t a very big reader myself until maybe two years ago. Of course, that leads to the first reason why I enjoy reading so much.…
This essay “Superman and Me” by Sherman Alexie was about how he learned to read. For Alexie, he picked up the habit of wanting to read from his father. He explains how long before he could even read he would pick up his father’s books and just look at them. Looking at how the books were structured allowed him to grasp the concept of books and paragraphs but it also allowed him to relate it to his own life. He looked at his own life, his family and thought about how they are each like their own little paragraph. The very first time he started to read was with a superman comic when he was a younger kid. Throughout his essay he talks little about learning to read from the comic book but more of how hard it was to fit in wanting to be a smart indian. He felt it was hard growing up because indians didn’t approve of him being smart, they were supposed to be stupid to society. But it was the books, and ambition to read…
We need to reflect on how our children are really being educated, and create that adventurous and mysterious aspect of reading a…
I used to love reading. In kinder and first, my nose was stuck in a Magic Tree House book. Third, fourth, and fifth grade I basically lived at Hogwarts (in my rightfully sorted house, of course, I am a proud Hufflepuff). And in middle school, I discovered THE tween series of my generation, Maximum Ride. Reading was exciting, and even though I had done it for years every time I picked up a book it felt so novel. I was your ordinary bookworm until seventh grade when the joint power of Ms. Green’s teaching and James Patterson’s writing broke my will to read.…
Do you know how many comic books are sold every month throughout the world? Between ten to twelve million comics magazines are sold every month. However, a million dollars are spent by comic’s fans. Comics are the most interesting and effective way of storytelling and it has started its journey since people painted narratives of animals and hunting on the walls of their cave. The purpose of this paper is to show how comics can worth literature and its reflection on education and our society. For the paper’s flexibility I am taking the Avengers movie, different articles about comics and literature which will clearly show comics and its effect on literature. From the Avengers comics we can understand how comics can influence us. There arises much controversy that comics are a waste of time and it cannot be a part of literature. In my paper I will show that comics can be part of literature in three ways like it is the most interesting and effective way of storytelling, it can be educative and it has social influences.…
In the two stories “The Yellow Wallpaper” and “The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World” a common theme of isolation appears. The Yellow Wallpaper focuses on a woman with what her husband, also a physician, diagnoses as “slight hysterical tendency” (Gilman 677). She is forbidden to go outside her home and is completely isolated from the rest of the world. She is also forbidden to express herself through writing and has no mental stimulation, which enables her to focus all her time on the wallpaper. In “The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World” there is a basic community of men, women, and children but the different groups within the village and the village itself is isolated. There is no unity or common goal within the community until a dead man washes ashore and changes the entire villages perspective on life and on themselves. In both stories isolation plays a key role in the mental health and well-being of the characters experiencing it, which inevitably leads to the obsession of a certain object due to the lack of other forms of mental stimulation.…
Ever since then comic books have changed the world in many ways. You actually won’t believe this, but comic books have actually invented a few things. Donald Duck discovered Minecraft, Spider-Man invented ankle tracking monitors; Captain Marvel Jr. inspires everything about Elvis Presley, D.B Cooper was inspired by a comic book character, and the Fantastic Four’s cosmic rays will give you superpowers (Mccallum). Do you still think comic books are useless? I think they have definitely moved up on a higher importance level ever since the first one was created. I was surprised to find out that comic books or any other graphic material containing cartoons or animated subjects can actually benefit people when learning certain cultures, scriptures, or even history. Using comic books to learn is actually pretty genius. Think about it, when you pick up any sort of book, what’s the first thing you do? You look at the image on the front cover, you read the back of the book for a summary, and as soon as you do that you open the book to see if there are any visual pictures. I know I’m guilty in doing that. Face it; the majority of people want to see color, pictures, and animation. Hillary Chute, a teacher at the University of Chicago’s English department is interested in teaching new ways; her teaching includes comic book journalism. She likes to call this sort of teaching that she does “learning through graphic narratives” (Chute). She…
Many genres schools, and few realizations. These things happen because school libraries don’t check and think about the books they own in their libraries. We need to check the school libraries and organize the appropriate books that the schools own. Many people enjoy reading comics, silly books, and fictional books. However, we should make our libraries have more educational books that help students expand their knowledge, and understanding. Certain books should be banned from school libraries, because some books in school libraries are either useless or not school appropriate.…