The Bedford Introduction to Literature responds to the teaching and learning needs of all kinds of literature classrooms -- and composition courses where literature is a focus. Author Michael Meyer understands that a particular challenge for instructors is that students do not necessarily see literature as relevant to their lives. They may be new to the study of literature, may have difficulty reading it, and may lack confidence in their critical abilities and writing skills. With these factors in mind, Meyer has put together a lively collection of stories, poems, and plays from many periods, cultures, and themes, with voices ranging from the traditional to the latest and hottest contemporary authors. As an experienced anthologist and instructor of literature, Meyer has a knack for choosing enticing selections -- including humorous works and readings from popular culture -- that students both enjoy and respond to. Complementing this unparalleled collection are proven editorial features that offer students real help with reading, appreciating, and writing about literature. The Bedford Introduction to Literature is a book designed to bring literature to life -- and to make students life-long readers.
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Michael Meyer has taught writing and literature courses for more than thirty years—since 1981 at the University of Connecticut and before that at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte and the College of William and Mary. In addition to being an experienced teacher, Meyer is a highly regarded literary scholar. His scholarly articles have appeared in distinguished journals such as American Literature, Studies in the American Renaissance, and Virginia Quarterly Review. An internationally recognized authority on Henry David Thoreau, Meyer is a former president of the Thoreau Society and coauthor (with Walter Harding) of The New Thoreau Handbook, a standard reference source. The American Studies Association awarded his first book, Several More Lives to Live: Thoreau’s Political Reputation in America, the Ralph Henry Gabriel Prize. . He is also the editor of Frederick Douglass: The Narrative and Selected Writings. He has lectured on a variety of American literary topics from Cambridge University to Peking University. His books for Bedford/St. Martin's include The Bedford Introduction to Literature; The Compact Bedford Introduction to Literature; Literature to Go; Poetry: An Introduction; and Thinking and Writing about Literature.
Overall, this book contains a lot of good stories and some were even fun to read. My main complaint is that it is so big and heavy it does not fit into my backpack. This means I have to carry this book around 5 days a week for an entire year. However, it is very useful to prop the door to my dorm room open if I need to carry out laundry or a heavy and large object and I cannot open the door. The main use this book has seen in my intro lit class is to prop open the window. It also works great if you are into weightlifting. The writing is fine, I just wish it were lighter and smaller.
Hamlet remains one of the greatest achievements in literature because it marries the personal and the universal, the political and the philosophical, the intimate and the cosmic. It is, at its core, a study of the paralysis that can come from overthinking, the destructive potential of unchecked ambition, and the inevitability of death.
For readers, the play is not just a story about revenge but a mirror held up to human nature. Hamlet’s indecision, his flashes of brilliance and cruelty, and his ultimate tragic fall speak to the contradictions within us all. Shakespeare’s genius lies in his ability to make one man’s struggle with grief and duty feel like a universal truth.
Even after centuries of analysis, Hamlet continues to provoke fresh interpretations. Is Hamlet mad, or merely feigning madness? Is Claudius a calculating villain or a man wracked with guilt? Is revenge ever justifiable? These unanswered questions ensure that every encounter with the play feels new, as though Shakespeare has written not a fixed story, but a prism through which we view ourselves.
In the end, Hamlet is inexhaustible. It is both literature and philosophy, drama and poetry, art and inquiry. For anyone who seeks to understand not only Shakespeare, but the human soul itself, Hamlet is indispensable.
This best-selling anthology continues to combine a generous and vibrant selection of stories, poems, and plays with editorial features proven to help students read, think, and write effectively about literature. Now featuring unique visual portfolios and a CD-ROM packed with activities and contextual material, the new edition brings literature to life for students as never before./
This was the book for my Introduction to Literature Course at Bakersfield College. It was an intense read as it has many examples for each of the sections it's divided into (Fiction, Poetry, Drama). I don't have any specific complaints...It holds many excellent excerpts, short stories, poems, and plays. It also does a pretty decent job of defining things. It's just A LOT to take in.
This one has been laying about for quite a while now and I pick it up and read something from it every now and then. But now all that's left to read is the poetry section and that's just not my cuppa. But the rest was very good.
This was an assigned textbook for a literature class I took this fall. It was very well written, had lots of great short stories and poems, and had lots of amazing tips for writing essays on literature! All together, this was a really nice textbook!