So, in an effort to really earn it, I'm going to read all of the literature anthologies that I have. I have almost three times as many as I actually needed for my classes because I kept finding them for relatively cheap prices at Half Price Books. I am going to read all of them, but only one at a time and incrementally. Even before I transferred universities, I didn't like the speed at which material was covered. It all went by too quickly. For this project, I'm going to read only one selection a day - a paradigm that I've used for many books of letters and books of poetry. It seems to work well for me.
I'll be starting with the three anthologies that my advisor generously gave me when I transferred and then jumping back and forth among American, world, and English/British literature, saving until the end the anthologies that I actually used for classes. I may also be adding some new anthologies to the listing if I get some more.
My current collection of literature anthologies |
- The Norton Introduction to Literature, 5th edition
- The Heath Anthology of American Literature, Volume One, 2nd edition
- The Norton Anthology of World Literature, Volume C, 2nd edition
- The Norton Anthology of English Literature, Volume C, 8th edition
- The Norton Anthology of American Literature, Volume D, 6th edition
- The Norton Anthology of World Literature, Volume B, 2nd edition
- The Norton Anthology of English Literature, Volume F, 8th edition
- The Norton Anthology of American Literature, Volume A, 7th edition
- The Norton Anthology of American Literature, Volume B, 7th edition
- The Norton Anthology of American Literature, Volume C, 7th edition
- The Norton Introduction to Literature, 10th edition
- The Norton Anthology of World Literature, Volume 1, shorter 2nd edition
- The Norton Anthology of World Literature, Volume 2, shorter 2nd edition
- The Longman Anthology of British Literature, Volume B, second compact edition
- The Norton Anthology of American Literature, Volume A, 8th edition
- The Norton Anthology of American Literature, Volume B, 8th edition
I'm sure that I'll encounter some material more than once, but spreading out the various types of literature (American, world, and English/British) will allow some time between reading them, so a second time through might be more enlightening.
I do realize that there's more to earning an English degree than just reading all of the required materials. I'm glad to have gotten rid of paper writing, so I won't be doing that again. However, I will write a few posts now and then, but only if I actually have sometime to say about the literature. An-other thing I didn't like about university was trying to force myself to have an opinion about a work just so that I could write a paper about it or discuss it.
Like this project's title suggests, this might take about twenty years, but I'm fine with that, as long as it continues to be interesting and illuminating.
Like this project's title suggests, this might take about twenty years, but I'm fine with that, as long as it continues to be interesting and illuminating.