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WEEK 4 AUTHORS
AND READINGS
World Citizenry and the Changing American Dream
Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1840) is best remembered for his
macabre short stories and poems. He’s often considered
the inventor of the modern short-story form and the inventor
of the modern detective story. Additionally, Poe wrote many
poems, including “The Raven” and “Annabel Lee,” and he
published literary criticism.
You will read in the biography in your textbook about Poe’s
complex and troubled life. His father abandoned his family,
his mother died when Poe was young, and Poe was taken in
by the Allan family. His relationship with the Allans
soured, and Poe eventually struggled with debt and alcoholism. Poe’s characters are
often dark and demonstrate a gothic quality. His works also tend to show the dark side
of the American Dream; materialism and competition often give way to loneliness and
isolation.
As you read “The Black Cat” this week, look for ways that the protagonist demonstrates
these qualities.
World Citizenry and the Changing American Dream
Robert Frost (1874-1963) is considered one of America’s
greatest poets. His poems are associated with the middle class
and known for their use of everyday language that make them
accessible to readers. Although he is commonly associated with
the “folksy” side of New England life, his work often touches on
universal themes.
As you read “Mending Wall” this week, think about what the
narrator of the poem is saying about fences and how that might
relate to the intersection of cultures. Does the narrator believe
that the fence is necessary? What does his neighbor believe,
and what might the fence represent symbolically? Why do “Good fences make good
neighbors,” and why should that thinking be challenged (Frost, 2023/1914, Vol. 2 p. 674)?
The narrator of the poem points out that the men are repairing the fence out of a sense of
tradition. The speaker of the poem says that the neighbor “will not go behind his father’s
saying” (Frost, 2023/1914, Vol. 2 p. 674). The speaker is challenging the traditional way of
thinking. Why?
World Citizenry and the Changing American Dream
Art Spiegelman (b. 1948) is a New-York-based American
cartoonist, editor, and comics advocate. He is best known for
his graphic novel Maus, which firmly established the relevance
of this genre. Maus describes an interview between a father
and son, Art and Vladek Spiegelman, concerning the father's
experiences during the Holocaust. The section you are reading
highlights the conflict between the father and his wife before
they have children and the way they dealt with the beginnings of
their oppression.
You can listen to an interview with Spiegelman and learn more about the making of Maus
at PBS.org's POV website.
World Citizenry and the Changing American Dream
Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862) was born in Concord,
Massachusetts. Thoreau was also a transcendentalist. Ralph
Waldo Emerson was his good friend and mentor, and
Thoreau actually lived on Emerson's property for two years while
he wrote Walden, his most famous work. Thoreau was an
abolitionist, and he also believed in civil disobedience was a way
to effect change. These beliefs influenced his other famous
work, "Civil Disobedience," also called "Resistance to Civil
Government," in which Thoreau contends that it is man's duty to
resist unjust laws and that government should be controlled by
the people rather than controlling its citizens. This text influenced later leaders such
as Ghandi and Martin Luther King, Jr.
World Citizenry and the Changing American Dream
Sandra Cisneros (b. 1954) was born in Chicago and is the
daughter of a Mexican father and a Mexican American mother.
As a child, spent time living both in Chicago and in Mexico.
Her work focuses on Chicana feminism, which brings to light the
oppressive nature of both ethnic and gender bias. Chicana
feminism stresses that Chicanas face dual racism because of
both their ethnicity and their gender.
As you read the excerpt from “Woman Hollering Creek,” look for ways that Cleofilas faces
ethnic and gender bias. How does she eventually view herself?
World Citizenry and the Changing American Dream
William Cullen Bryant (1794-1878) was a Romantic poet who is
best remembered for the poem you are reading this week,
“Thanatopsis” (which means “a view of death” in Greek), when he
was just 17 years old. He was the editor of the famous New York
Evening Post for more than 50 years, and he used his position to
advocate for abolition, the rights of workers to unionize, and the
rights of religious minorities and immigrants.
World Citizenry and the Changing American Dream
Langston Hughes (1901-1967) is associated with the Harlem
Renaissance. He is best known for his poetry, although he also
wrote fiction and drama. His works show a strong association
with jazz, and his poems resonate with lyricism.
In “I, Too” and “Mother to Son,” which you are reading this
week, look for ways in which Hughes shows both the African
American struggle for equality and inclusion and the love of
music and language.
By the 1930s, he had become a political activist, and he was drawn to the ideas of racial
justice professed by the Communist Party. He was later called to testify before Senator
McCarthy's committee on subversive activity.
Instead of focusing on form in his poetry, he sought to "capture the oral and improvisatory
traditions of black culture in written form" (Levine et al., 2023, Vol. 2 p. 1068). His poems
boil over with emotionalism, anger, and confusion but are coupled with a curtailed optimism
and hope that the African American struggle may soon end.

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  • 2. World Citizenry and the Changing American Dream Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1840) is best remembered for his macabre short stories and poems. He’s often considered the inventor of the modern short-story form and the inventor of the modern detective story. Additionally, Poe wrote many poems, including “The Raven” and “Annabel Lee,” and he published literary criticism. You will read in the biography in your textbook about Poe’s complex and troubled life. His father abandoned his family, his mother died when Poe was young, and Poe was taken in by the Allan family. His relationship with the Allans soured, and Poe eventually struggled with debt and alcoholism. Poe’s characters are often dark and demonstrate a gothic quality. His works also tend to show the dark side of the American Dream; materialism and competition often give way to loneliness and isolation. As you read “The Black Cat” this week, look for ways that the protagonist demonstrates these qualities.
  • 3. World Citizenry and the Changing American Dream Robert Frost (1874-1963) is considered one of America’s greatest poets. His poems are associated with the middle class and known for their use of everyday language that make them accessible to readers. Although he is commonly associated with the “folksy” side of New England life, his work often touches on universal themes. As you read “Mending Wall” this week, think about what the narrator of the poem is saying about fences and how that might relate to the intersection of cultures. Does the narrator believe that the fence is necessary? What does his neighbor believe, and what might the fence represent symbolically? Why do “Good fences make good neighbors,” and why should that thinking be challenged (Frost, 2023/1914, Vol. 2 p. 674)? The narrator of the poem points out that the men are repairing the fence out of a sense of tradition. The speaker of the poem says that the neighbor “will not go behind his father’s saying” (Frost, 2023/1914, Vol. 2 p. 674). The speaker is challenging the traditional way of thinking. Why?
  • 4. World Citizenry and the Changing American Dream Art Spiegelman (b. 1948) is a New-York-based American cartoonist, editor, and comics advocate. He is best known for his graphic novel Maus, which firmly established the relevance of this genre. Maus describes an interview between a father and son, Art and Vladek Spiegelman, concerning the father's experiences during the Holocaust. The section you are reading highlights the conflict between the father and his wife before they have children and the way they dealt with the beginnings of their oppression. You can listen to an interview with Spiegelman and learn more about the making of Maus at PBS.org's POV website.
  • 5. World Citizenry and the Changing American Dream Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862) was born in Concord, Massachusetts. Thoreau was also a transcendentalist. Ralph Waldo Emerson was his good friend and mentor, and Thoreau actually lived on Emerson's property for two years while he wrote Walden, his most famous work. Thoreau was an abolitionist, and he also believed in civil disobedience was a way to effect change. These beliefs influenced his other famous work, "Civil Disobedience," also called "Resistance to Civil Government," in which Thoreau contends that it is man's duty to resist unjust laws and that government should be controlled by the people rather than controlling its citizens. This text influenced later leaders such as Ghandi and Martin Luther King, Jr.
  • 6. World Citizenry and the Changing American Dream Sandra Cisneros (b. 1954) was born in Chicago and is the daughter of a Mexican father and a Mexican American mother. As a child, spent time living both in Chicago and in Mexico. Her work focuses on Chicana feminism, which brings to light the oppressive nature of both ethnic and gender bias. Chicana feminism stresses that Chicanas face dual racism because of both their ethnicity and their gender. As you read the excerpt from “Woman Hollering Creek,” look for ways that Cleofilas faces ethnic and gender bias. How does she eventually view herself?
  • 7. World Citizenry and the Changing American Dream William Cullen Bryant (1794-1878) was a Romantic poet who is best remembered for the poem you are reading this week, “Thanatopsis” (which means “a view of death” in Greek), when he was just 17 years old. He was the editor of the famous New York Evening Post for more than 50 years, and he used his position to advocate for abolition, the rights of workers to unionize, and the rights of religious minorities and immigrants.
  • 8. World Citizenry and the Changing American Dream Langston Hughes (1901-1967) is associated with the Harlem Renaissance. He is best known for his poetry, although he also wrote fiction and drama. His works show a strong association with jazz, and his poems resonate with lyricism. In “I, Too” and “Mother to Son,” which you are reading this week, look for ways in which Hughes shows both the African American struggle for equality and inclusion and the love of music and language. By the 1930s, he had become a political activist, and he was drawn to the ideas of racial justice professed by the Communist Party. He was later called to testify before Senator McCarthy's committee on subversive activity. Instead of focusing on form in his poetry, he sought to "capture the oral and improvisatory traditions of black culture in written form" (Levine et al., 2023, Vol. 2 p. 1068). His poems boil over with emotionalism, anger, and confusion but are coupled with a curtailed optimism and hope that the African American struggle may soon end.