Literature Curricula

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Revision as of 21:01, 25 September 2025 by Michael Thomas Jones (talk | contribs) (Created page with "This page is intended to provide resources for secondary and undergraduate level studies in literature. While nothing can substitute for close reading, the most efficient way to make students generally confident and adept at textual interpretation is by providing context -- that is, as broad a survey of world literature and history as possible so that they can notice parallels and themes spanning all times and places, while also foregrounding idiosyncrasies. That's not t...")
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This page is intended to provide resources for secondary and undergraduate level studies in literature. While nothing can substitute for close reading, the most efficient way to make students generally confident and adept at textual interpretation is by providing context -- that is, as broad a survey of world literature and history as possible so that they can notice parallels and themes spanning all times and places, while also foregrounding idiosyncrasies. That's not to suggest that all literary scenes, schools, and eras are interchangeable in importance. It really is most important to begin with reading the Greeks and Romans and Church Fathers.


In draft:

ancient egypt & egyptologists

mesopotamian canon

chinese classics

greek canon

romans

persian canon

pagan myth

church fathers

islamic jurists and golden age philosophers

Arab-Byzantine Wars

Reconquista

buddhist philosophers

germanic texts

medieval rabbis

medieval romances, medieval poetry, allegories,

hagiographies

schoolmen

medieval chronicles

Courtly love, troubadours

Crusader literature

renaissance humanists and reformers

counter reformation literature

western hermeticism

new world explorers

the ottoman canon

English renaissance, metaphysical poets

reformed orthodox, remonstrants

dutch golden age authors

Anglo-Dutch-Spanish War Era

spanish golden age

1700s satirists

1700s Anglo-French Global Wars

Lumieres, enlightenment philosophers, 1700s french literature

explorer naturalists

Napoleonic era literature, Revolutionary era

Romanticism, Gothic

19th century academics, historiography, the German university

19th century socialists, anarchists, and marxists

Colonial literature

Mission literature

the victorians, literature of the industrial revolution

Victorian Explorer Anthropologist (esoteric imperial racism)

Scramble for Africa

New England authors, transcendentalists

French symbolists

literary realists

Post Napoleonic Literature

Post Civil War Era Literature

Russian canon

The Great Game: empires' perspectives and from the locals' perspectives

Siberia, Alaska, and Arctic Extremes

theosophists

Utopians

New York New Religions

Third Republic Literature

fin de siecle and the edwardians, decadents

Missionaries and Anglo-American Empire, Old China Hands

American expansions

Jewish diaspora, Zionists, and their influence

austrian literature near the end

modernists, paris scene

surrealists

socialist and labor movements reaching climax in depression and world wars

Wartime and Interwar German Literature, Nazi and Non-Nazi Literature

Southern agrarians, Southern American canon

modern Japanese canon

founding psychologists

early sociologists

early science fiction

Early Soviets - russian cosmists, radicals

Postcolonial literature and theorists

continental theorists

glamor photographers

Cold War literature, American controlled Europe,

Later Soviets

esoteric central european art scenes, film, animation 1900-1990

underground comix

Midcentury Anthropologists

beats, hippie canon

60s Sci-Fi

transhumanist canon

magical realists, exoticist bobocore

art pop for christian schools

indie cinema

short films