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We, Too, Sing America: A Reader for Writers Chitra Divakaruni

We, Too, Sing America: A Reader for Writers By Chitra Divakaruni

We, Too, Sing America: A Reader for Writers by Chitra Divakaruni


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Summary

Divided into ten thematic sections, this work illuminates the ways in which lives connect in spite of the differences that derive from ethnicity, community, age, class, or gender. Exposing students to lifestyles, values, concerns, and problems different from their own, it encourages them to make meaningful contributions to class discussions.

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We, Too, Sing America: A Reader for Writers Summary

We, Too, Sing America: A Reader for Writers by Chitra Divakaruni

Divided into ten thematic sections, this freshman reader illuminates the ways in which lives connect in spite of the differences that derive from ethnicity, community, age, class, or gender. Contemporary and deeply involving for all students, these sections move from simple to more sophisticated concepts, for example from the issues surrounding family to language to identity. Each reading was carefully selected to expose students to lifestyles, values, concerns, and problems different from their own, while encouraging them to make meaningful contributions to class discussions and in their written assignments.

Table of Contents

Introduction: To the Reader: Some Notes on Effective Reading and WritingUNIT ONE: YOUTH AND AGEAlfred Kazin: The KitchenAnthony Brandt: Children of DivorceEllen Tashie Frisina: `See Spot Run': Teaching My Grandmother to ReadLawson Fusao Inada: Grandmother (poem)Louise Bernikow: Never Too Old: The Art of Getting BetterKatherine Barrett: Old Before Her TimeBrenda Anne Le Blanc: Circle of Children (student essay)UNIT TWO: FAMILYJulia Alvarez: Hold the MayonnaiseSusan Chira: The Good Mother: Searching for an IdeaMichael Dorris: The Train CakeShelley Moore: Father and ChildTom Morganthau: The Orphanage: Is It Time to Bring It Back?Lindsy Van Gelder: Marriage as a Restricted ClubTrang Vo: Vietnamese Families: The Gap and the Bridge (student essay)UNIT THREE: MEN AND WOMENAshley Montagu: American Men Don't CryShirley Chisholm: I'd Rather Be Black than FemaleJoy Harjo: Three Generations of Native American Women's Birth ExperienceAdair Lara: Cheap MenSteve Tesich: Focusing on FriendsCharnjeet Bhogal: Boys and Girls, Indian Style (student essay)UNIT FOUR: LIFESTYLESLore Segal: Modern CourtesyAndrew Lam: They Shut My Grandmother's Room DoorEugene Morris: Kwanzaa: Holiday of `Principles to Live By'Jeannine Stein: Shaved Heads and Pop TartsPaula Gunn Allen: Womanwork (poem)Barry Lopez: My HorseLeticia Reyes: Mi Pueblo (student essay)UNIT FIVE: EDUCATIONElizabeth Wong: The Struggle to Be an All-American GirlCarl Rowan: The Unforgettable Miss BessieDavid Raymond: On Being Seventeen, Bright, and Unable to ReadLeonid Fridman: America Needs Its NerdsMalcolm X: My Prison StudiesTom Morganthau with Marcus Mabry, Laura Genao, and Frank Washington: Race on Campus: Failing the Test?Billy McClelland: Japanese and American Preschools: What's the Difference? (student essay)UNIT SIX: AT WORKRick Heredia: Earth Ambassador Aiding Indian YouthEric Bigley: Give Us Jobs, Not AdmirationManning Marable: Racism and Corporate AmericaSteve Olson: Year of the Blue Collar GuyMartin Espada: Who Burns for the Perfection of Paper (poem)Annette Fuentes: Equality, Yes--Militarism, NoRoz Batt: Fishy Business (student essay)UNIT SEVEN: AT PLAYArthur Ashe: Send Your Children to the LibrariesTime: Comes the RevolutionKate Rounds: Why Men Fear Women's TeamsCurry Kirkpartrick: The Best Player of Her TimeJeff Greenfield: The Black and White Truth about BasketballGary Soto: Black Hair (poem)Dan Frank: Violent Idols: Negative Effects of Professional Athletes on Children (student essay)UNIT EIGHT: LANGUAGEAmy Tan: My Mother's EnglishCharles Berlitz: The Etymology of the International InsultRose del Castillo Guilbault: Americanization is Tough on `Macho'Joyce Maynard: His Talk, Her TalkEllen Goodman: Breaking the Hungry Teen CodeJames Willwerth: It Hurts Like CrazyJuan Chavez: Do You Understand? (student essay)UNIT NINE: IDENTITYWilliam Raspberry: The Handicap of DefinitionMargaret Gibson: Cultural Barriers and the Press to AmericanizeJack Shaheen: The Media's Image of ArabsRichard Rodriguez: Does America Still Exist?Brian Courtney: Freedom from ChoiceAurorar Levins Morales: Child of the Americas (poem)Bill Vourthis: A Taste of Greece (student essay)UNIT TEN: DEALING WITH DIFFERENCELangston Hughes: I, Too, Sing America (poem)Lewis P. Johnston: For My Indian DaughterJohn Naisbitt and Patricia Aburdene: The Culture of CuisineChang-Lin Tien: America's ScapegoatsJeanne Marie Laskas: Fire, Hope and CharityJose Burciaga: My Ecumenical FatherNoga Eshban Laderman: It's a Long Way from Jersusalem to San Francisco (student essay)

Additional information

CIN0070170843G
9780070170841
0070170843
We, Too, Sing America: A Reader for Writers by Chitra Divakaruni
Used - Good
Paperback
McGraw-Hill Education - Europe
19970916
408
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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