The Politically Incorrect Guide to English and American LiteratureSimon and Schuster, 2006/11/13 - 278 ページ What PC English professors don't want you to learn from . . . - Beowulf: If we don't admire heroes, there's something wrong with us - Chaucer: Chivalry has contributed enormously to women's happiness - Shakespeare: Some choices are inherently destructive (it's just built into the nature of things) - Milton: Our intellectual freedoms are Christian, not anti-Christian, in origin - Jane Austen: Most men would be improved if they were more patriarchal than they actually are - Dickens: Reformers can do more harm than the injustices they set out to reform - T. S. Eliot: Tradition is necessary to culture - Flannery O'Connor: Even modern American liberals aren't immune to original sin |
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... wrote Macbeth to domesticate women. Too many of the folks who teach English in college are out of touch with reality and bored with their subject. Enroll in an English class at an American university, and you might find yourself ...
... wrote Macbeth to domesticate women. Too many of the folks who teach English in college are out of touch with reality and bored with their subject. Enroll in an English class at an American university, and you might find yourself ...
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... wrote about is common to societies as distant from each other in time and space as the Bronze-Age Greek heroes of Homer's Iliad and the warlike Indians the French and English encountered in North America. In these cultures, which we may ...
... wrote about is common to societies as distant from each other in time and space as the Bronze-Age Greek heroes of Homer's Iliad and the warlike Indians the French and English encountered in North America. In these cultures, which we may ...
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American literature Anglo-Saxon artists Battle of Maldon beauty Beowulf Canterbury Tales century characters Chaucer’s Christian civilization Coleridge comedies courtly love criticism culture dead white males death Donne Donne’s Dryden eeeeee eighteenth-century Eliot England English and American English literature Evelyn Waugh example Faulkner Faustus female feminist Flannery O’Connor gender God’s Handmaid’s Tale happiness heart Henry hero human nature husband Jane Austen Jane Austen’s novels John Johnson kind king Lady language literary lives man’s Marlowe Marlowe’s marriage Marxism medieval Milton modern moral Old English patriarchal PC English professors Piers Plowman poem poetry political Pope postmodernist religion religious Renaissance sexual Shakespeare Shakespeare’s Sonnets Shelley sonnet story T. S. Eliot teach there’s things traditional tragedy truth University viewed Western what’s who’s wife Wilde William William Faulkner woman women words Wordsworth writing wrote young