Backpack Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, Drama, and Writing, 6th Edition Solution Manual
Preview Extract
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INSTRUCTORโS MANUAL
TO ACCOMPANY
BACKPACK
LITERATURE
SIXTH EDITION
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INSTRUCTORโS MANUAL
TO ACCOMPANY
BACKPACK
LITERATURE
An Introduction to Fiction,
Poetry, Drama, and Writing
SIXTH EDITION
X. J. Kennedy
Dorothy M. Kennedy
Dana Gioia
University of Southern California
Dan Stone
with Michael Palma
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Copyright ยฉ 2020, 2016, 2013 by X. J. Kennedy, Dorothy M. Kennedy, Dana Gioia,
and Dan Stone
All Rights Reserved. This publication is protected by copyright, and permission
should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited reproduction, storage in
a retrieval system, or transmission in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical,
photocopying, recording, or otherwise. For information regarding permissions, request
forms and the appropriate contacts within the Pearson Education Global Rights &
Permissions Department, please visit www.pearsoned.com/permissions/.
ISBN-13: 978-0-13-477247-9
ISBN-10: 0-13-477247-4
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CONTENTS
Preface
viii
FICTION
Stories Arranged by Type and Element 3
Stories Arranged by Subject and Theme 7
Stories Students Like Most 13
1 Reading a Story 15
TYPES OF SHORT FICTION
PLOT 18
THE SHORT STORY 18
15
2 Point of View 23
3 Character 37
4 Setting 49
5 Tone and Style 59
IRONY
63
6 Theme 67
7 Symbol 77
8 Gallery of International Voices 92
9 Stories for Further Reading 104
POETRY
Poems Arranged by Subject and Theme
133
Poems for Further Reading, Arranged by Elements
Poems Students Like Most
147
151
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v
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vi
Contents
10 Reading a Poem
153
LYRIC POETRY 153
NARRATIVE POETRY 155
DRAMATIC POETRY 157
11 Listening to a Voice
159
TONE 159
THE SPEAKER IN THE POEM
IRONY 166
12 Words
162
169
LITERAL MEANING: WHAT A POEM SAYS FIRST
THE VALUE OF A DICTIONARY 171
WORD CHOICE AND WORD ORDER 172
13 Saying and Suggesting
178
DENOTATION AND CONNOTATION
14 Imagery
169
178
183
ABOUT HAIKU
15 Figures of Speech
186
190
WHY SPEAK FIGURATIVELY? 190
METAPHOR AND SIMILE 190
OTHER FIGURES OF SPEECH 194
16 Sound
198
SOUND AS MEANING 198
ALLITERATION AND ASSONANCE 199
RIME 200
HOW TO READ A POEM ALOUD 202
17 Rhythm
204
STRESSES AND PAUSES
METER 206
18 Closed Form
204
208
THE SONNET 210
THE EPIGRAM 214
OTHER FORMS 214
19 Open Form
218
FREE VERSE
218
Copyright ยฉ 2020, 2016, 2013 by X. J. Kennedy, Dorothy M. Kennedy, Dana Gioia, and Dan Stone
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Contents
20 Symbol
21 Myth
226
236
ARCHETYPE 237
PERSONAL MYTH 240
MYTH AND POPULAR CULTURE
22 What Is Poetry?
242
246
23 Poems for Further Reading
247
DRAMA
24 Reading a Play
293
25 Tragedy and Comedy
298
TRAGEDY 298
COMEDY 299
26 The Theater of Sophocles
304
27 The Theater of Shakespeare
28 The Modern Theater
312
321
29 Plays for Further Reading
332
WRITING
30 Writing About Literature
343
31 Writing a Research Paper
345
Appendix 1: Teaching Creative Writing
347
WRITING A POEM (SOME NOTES BY XJK)
Appendix 2: Notes on Teaching Poetry by XJK
Index of Authors with Titles
347
350
352
Copyright ยฉ 2020, 2016, 2013 by X. J. Kennedy, Dorothy M. Kennedy, Dana Gioia, and Dan Stone
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PREFACE
Weโve always found, before teaching a knotty piece of literature, that no preparation
is more helpful than to sit down and discuss it with a colleague or two. If this manual supplies you with such a colleague at inconvenient hours, such as 2:00 A.M., when
thereโs no one in the faculty coffee room, it will be doing its job.
This manual tries to provide exactly that sort of collegial conversationโspirited
but specific, informal but informed. We offer you a sheaf of diverse notes to supplyโ
if you want themโclassroom strategies, critical comments, biographical information,
historical context, and a few homemade opinions. These last may be wrong, but we
set them down to give you something clear-cut with which to agree or disagree.
Candor, we think, helps to enliven any conversation.
The manual includes:
โข Commentary on every story, poem, and play presented in the text, except for
a few brief poems quoted in the text as illustrations;
โข Additional classroom questions and discussion strategies;
โข Thematic Indices at the beginning of the โFictionโ and โPoetryโ sections.
PLAN OF THE BOOK
There is a plan to Literature, but the book does not oblige you to follow it. Chapters
may be taken up in any sequence; some instructors like to intersperse poetry and
plays with stories. Some may wish to teach Chapter 21 on โMythโ immediately
before teaching Oedipus the King. Many find that โImageryโ is a useful chapter with
which to begin teaching poetry. Instructors who prefer to organize the course by
theme will want to consult the detailed thematic indices.
If, because you skip around in the book, students encounter a term unknown
to them, let them look it up in the Index of Terms. They will be directed to the
page where it first occurs and where it will be defined and illustrated.
In the poetry chapters, the sections titled โFor Review and Further Studyโ do not
review the whole book up to that moment; they review only the main points of the
chapter. Most of these sections contain some poems that are a little more difficult
than those in the body of that chapter.
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Preface
ix
TEXTS AND EDITORIAL POLICY
Spelling has been modernized and rendered American, unless to do so would change
the sound of a word. Untitled poems are identified by their first lines, except for
those that have titles assigned by custom. The poems of Emily Dickinson are presented as edited by Thomas H. Johnson.
It would have been simpler to gloss no word a student could find in a desk dictionary, on the grounds that rummaging through dictionaries is good moral discipline;
but it seemed best not to require the student to exchange text for dictionary as many
as thirty times in reading a story, poem, or play. Glosses have been provided, therefore, for whatever seemed likely to get in the way of pleasure and understanding.
The spelling rime is used instead of rhyme on the theory that rime is easier to tell
apart from rhythm.
WITH A LITTLE HELP FROM OUR FRIENDS
If we have described this manual as a 24-hour teacherโs lounge, we are pleased to
report how many interesting colleagues have stopped in to chat. We receive a steady
stream of letters on Literature from instructors throughout North America and
abroad. Sometimes they disagree with our comments; more often they add new
information or perspective. Frequently they pass on stories about what works or does
not work in their classrooms. Much of this information is simply too good not to
share. We have, therefore, supplemented our own comments with hundreds of comments from instructors (always properly credited to their authors).
THANKS
Heartfelt thanks to Michael Palma, who contributed many excellent entries on the
new selections added to this edition. His deep knowledge of literature and crisp sense
of style keeps the manual fresh, informed, and accessible. Ongoing thanks go to Erika
Koss of Northeastern University, who contributed a number of entries to the previous
edition, to Susan Balรฉe and Neil Aitken, who contributed to the chapter on writing
a research paper; and to April Lindner, who served as associate editor for the writing
section revisions of an earlier edition.
Ongoing thanks to Robert McPhillips, Cheryl Clements, Lee Gurga, Nan LaBoe,
Richard Mezo, Jeff Newberry, Beverly Schneller, Janet Schwarzkopf, Theresa Welford,
and William Zander for help with this book.
Many instructors, most of whose names appear in this manual, generously wrote us
with their suggestions and teaching experiences. Other instructors are noted in the
introductory remarks to the textbook itself. We thank them all for their pragmatic and
informed help. We are grateful to Dianne Hall for her formidable effort and good will in
managing the design and production of the manual and to Michael Hall for carefully
proofreading the book. Finally, we would like to thank Mary Gioia, whose remarkable
planning and editorial skills kept this manual in running order despite its erratic drivers.
XJK, DG, and DS
Copyright ยฉ 2020, 2016, 2013 by X. J. Kennedy, Dorothy M. Kennedy, Dana Gioia, and Dan Stone
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FICTION
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STORIES ARRANGED BY
TYPE AND ELEMENT
If you prefer to teach a different story to illustrate an element of fictionโto discuss
style, say, with the aid of โCathedralโ or โA Good Man Is Hard to Findโ instead of the
examples in the chapter on styleโyou will find the substitution easy to make. Many
choices are at your disposal in Chapter 9, โStories for Further Reading,โ and other stories in the book lend themselves to varied purposes. The following list has a few likely
substitutions. If you teach other elements of fiction (e.g., humor, fantasy) or specific
genres, you will find some nominations here.
FABLE, PARABLE, AND TALE
STORIES INCLUDED IN CHAPTER
OTHER SUGGESTED STORIES
Death Has an Appointment in
The Parable of the Prodigal Son
Samarra
The Tell-Tale Heart
Godfather Death
Independence
The Fox and the Grapes
The Camel and His Friends
STORY INCLUDED IN CHAPTER
A&P
PLOT
OTHER SUGGESTED STORIES
Barn Burning
The Gift of the Magi
The Lottery
A Rose for Emily
A Sound of Thunder
The Shunammite
The Story of an Hour
This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix,
Arizona
POINT OF VIEW
First Person Narrator as Central Character
STORY INCLUDED IN CHAPTER
OTHER SUGGESTED STORIES
The Tell-Tale Heart
Araby (mature narrator recalling
boyhood view)
Barbie-Q
Cathedral
Greasy Lake
Copyright ยฉ 2020, 2016, 2013 by X. J. Kennedy, Dorothy M. Kennedy, Dana Gioia, and Dan Stone
3
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FICTION
POINT OF VIEW (Cont.)
A Pair of Tickets
Recitatif
The Shunammite
The Yellow Wallpaper
First Person Narrator Not the Protagonist
STORY INCLUDED IN CHAPTER
OTHER SUGGESTED STORY
A Rose for Emily
The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas
Third Person, All-knowing Narrator
STORIES INCLUDED IN CHAPTER
OTHER SUGGESTED STORIES
A Good Man Is Hard to Find
The Gift of the Magi
A Worn Path
A Good Man Is Hard to Find
The Handsomest Drowned Man in
the World
The Storm
The Things They Carried
This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix,
Arizona
Where Are You Going, Where Have
You Been? (par. 1โ13)
Third Person, Limited Omniscience
(Narrator Seeing into One Major Character)
SUGGESTED STORIES
Barn Burning
The Gospel According to Mark
Miss Brill
The Story of an Hour
Objective or โFly-on-the-Wallโ Point of View
SUGGESTED STORIES
The Chrysanthemums
A Clean, Well-Lighted Place
Multiple Points of View
SUGGESTED STORY
A Haunted House
CHARACTER
STORIES INCLUDED IN CHAPTER
OTHER SUGGESTED STORIES
Bullet in the Brain
Barn Burning (Sarty Snopes: dynamic
Cathedral
character, one who develops within
Recitatif
the story)
Where Are You Going? Where
The Chrysanthemums
Have You Been?
Everyday Use
A Good Man Is Hard to Find
The Things They Carried
A Worn Path
Copyright ยฉ 2020, 2016, 2013 by X. J. Kennedy, Dorothy M. Kennedy, Dana Gioia, and Dan Stone
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Stories Arranged by Type and Element
SETTING
STORIES INCLUDED IN CHAPTER
OTHER SUGGESTED STORIES
The Gospel According to Mark
A&P
A Pair of Tickets
Araby
The Storm
The Chrysanthemums
To Build a Fire
A Clean, Well-Lighted Place
A Good Man Is Hard to Find
Greasy Lake
A Haunted House
A Rose for Emily
Sweat
The Things They Carried
This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix,
Arizona
The Yellow Wallpaper
Young Goodman Brown
TONE AND STYLE
STORIES INCLUDED IN CHAPTER
OTHER SUGGESTED STORIES
Barn Burning
Barbie-Q
A Clean, Well-Lighted Place
Cathedral
Girl
A Good Man Is Hard to Find
Greasy Lake
A Haunted House
The Handsomest Drowned Man
in the World
A Rose for Emily
The Tell-Tale Heart
The Things They Carried
Where Are You Going, Where Have
You Been?
A Worn Path
Young Goodman Brown
STORIES INCLUDED IN CHAPTER
The Gift of the Magi
Happy Endings
IRONY
OTHER SUGGESTED STORIES
Death Has an Appointment in Samarra
Dead Menโs Path
The Gospel According to Mark
Happy Endings
The Lottery
A Rose for Emily
Saboteur
The Storm
The Story of an Hour
To Build a Fire
Copyright ยฉ 2020, 2016, 2013 by X. J. Kennedy, Dorothy M. Kennedy, Dana Gioia, and Dan Stone
5
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6
FICTION
STORIES INCLUDED IN CHAPTER
The Chrysanthemums
The Lottery
The Ones Who Walk Away
from Omelas
The Yellow Wallpaper
SYMBOL
OTHER SUGGESTED STORIES
Araby
Cathedral
A Clean, Well-Lighted Place
Greasy Lake (the lake itself)
A Haunted House
The Handsomest Drowned Man
in the World
A Rose for Emily
Sweat
The Tell-Tale Heart
A Worn Path
Young Goodman Brown
Copyright ยฉ 2020, 2016, 2013 by X. J. Kennedy, Dorothy M. Kennedy, Dana Gioia, and Dan Stone
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STORIES ARRANGED BY
SUBJECT AND THEME
In case you prefer to teach fiction according to its subjects and general themes, we
have provided a list of stories that may be taken up together. Some instructors
who arrange a course thematically like to begin with Chapter 6, Theme, and its
four stories.
ART, LANGUAGE, AND IMAGINATION
Cathedral
Everyday Use
The Gospel According to Mark
The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World
The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas
Saints
A Sound of Thunder
The Yellow Wallpaper
CHILDHOOD
Araby
Barbie-Q
Girl
Recitatif
COMEDY AND SATIRE
A&P
Happy Endings
Harrison Bergeron
How I Met My Husband
How to Talk to Girls at Parties
Independence
This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix, Arizona
COMING OF AGE, INITIATION STORIES
Araby
Barn Burning
Greasy Lake
How I Met My Husband
Recitatif
Saints
The Shunammite
Copyright ยฉ 2020, 2016, 2013 by X. J. Kennedy, Dorothy M. Kennedy, Dana Gioia, and Dan Stone
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FICTION
This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix, Arizona
Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?
DEATH
Bullet in the Brain
Death Has an Appointment in Samarra
Dead Menโs Path
Godfather Death
A Good Man Is Hard to Find
The Gospel According to Mark
The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World
A Rose for Emily
Sweat
This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix, Arizona
To Build a Fire
DEFIANCE OF FATE
Death Has an Appointment in Samarra
Godfather Death
A Worn Path
DISABILITIES
Cathedral
DIVINE REVELATION
The Gospel According to Mark
EPIPHANIES AND ILLUMINATIONS
Araby
Greasy Lake
A Haunted House
The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World
The Lawsuit
Miss Brill
A Pair of Tickets
The Parable of the Prodigal Son
Saints
The Story of an Hour
FACING ONEโS OWN DEATH
A Good Man Is Hard to Find
The Gospel According to Mark
To Build a Fire
FAMILIES
Barn Burning
Everyday Use
A Good Man Is Hard to Find
A Pair of Tickets
The Parable of the Prodigal Son
Copyright ยฉ 2020, 2016, 2013 by X. J. Kennedy, Dorothy M. Kennedy, Dana Gioia, and Dan Stone
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Stories Arranged by Subject and Theme
Saints
The Shunammite
The Storm
This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix, Arizona
A Worn Path
FATHER-CHILD RELATIONSHIPS
Barn Burning
A Pair of Tickets
The Parable of the Prodigal Son
The Storm
This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix, Arizona
FRIENDSHIP AND CAMARADERIE
A&P
Araby
Barbie-Q
Cathedral
Greasy Lake
Recitatif
Saints
The Things They Carried
This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix, Arizona
GENERATION GAPS
A&P
Araby
Girl
Greasy Lake
Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?
HOLDING A JOB, WORK
A&P
A Clean, Well-Lighted Place
Sweat
HUMANITY AGAINST THE ELEMENTS
To Build a Fire
A Worn Path
ILLUSION AND REALITY
Araby
The Chrysanthemums
Dead Menโs Path
The Gospel According to Mark
Greasy Lake
Saints
The Tell-Tale Heart
The Yellow Wallpaper
Copyright ยฉ 2020, 2016, 2013 by X. J. Kennedy, Dorothy M. Kennedy, Dana Gioia, and Dan Stone
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10
FICTION
A Worn Path
Young Goodman Brown
IMMIGRANTS AND EXILES
Barbie-Q
A Pair of Tickets
Saints
INDIVIDUAL VERSUS SOCIETY
A&P
Barn Burning
Dead Menโs Path
Harrison Bergeron
Independence
The Lottery
The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas
A Rose for Emily
Saboteur
Saints
A Worn Path
Young Goodman Brown
INGENIOUS DECEPTIONS
Saints
The Tell-Tale Heart
Young Goodman Brown
LONELINESS
The Chrysanthemums
A Clean, Well-Lighted Place
Miss Brill
Saints
The Shunammite
LOVE AND DESIRE
A&P
Araby
The Chrysanthemums
The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World
Happy Endings
A Haunted House
How to Talk to Girls at Parties
The Shunammite
The Storm
The Story of an Hour
MACHISMO AND SEXISM
A&P
Greasy Lake
Copyright ยฉ 2020, 2016, 2013 by X. J. Kennedy, Dorothy M. Kennedy, Dana Gioia, and Dan Stone
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Stories Arranged by Subject and Theme
The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World
The Shunammite
Sweat
MAGIC AND THE OCCULT
Death Has an Appointment in Samarra
Godfather Death
A Haunted House
Young Goodman Brown
MARRIAGES (THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE UGLY)
Cathedral
The Gift of the Magi
Happy Endings
A Haunted House
The Shunammite
The Storm
The Story of an Hour
Sweat
The Yellow Wallpaper
MOTHER-CHILD RELATIONSHIPS
Everyday Use
Girl
A Pair of Tickets
Recitatif
Saints
MULTICULTURAL PERSPECTIVES
Dead Menโs Path
Everyday Use
Independence
A Pair of Tickets
Saboteur
The Shunammite
Sweat
This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix, Arizona
MURDER
A Good Man Is Hard to Find
The Gospel According to Mark
A Rose for Emily
The Tell-Tale Heart
Sweat
NATURE
The Storm
A Sound of Thunder
To Build a Fire
Copyright ยฉ 2020, 2016, 2013 by X. J. Kennedy, Dorothy M. Kennedy, Dana Gioia, and Dan Stone
11
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12
FICTION
PRIDE BEFORE A FALL
Barn Burning
Dead Menโs Path
RACE, CLASS, AND CULTURE
Barbie-Q
Barn Burning
Dead Menโs Path
Everyday Use
The Gift of the Magi
Independence
A Pair of Tickets
Recitatif
The Shunammite
Sweat
This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix, Arizona
A Worn Path
SIBLINGS
Everyday Use
A Pair of Tickets
The Parable of the Prodigal Son
VICTIMS AND VICTIMIZERS
A Good Man Is Hard to Find
The Lawsuit
Saboteur
The Shunammite
Sweat
The Tell-Tale Heart
Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?
The Yellow Wallpaper
WAR
The Things They Carried
THE WISH TO LEAVE EVERYTHING AND RUN AWAY
The Chrysanthemums
The Parable of the Prodigal Son
Saints
WOMENโS ASPIRATIONS
The Chrysanthemums
The Shunammite
The Yellow Wallpaper
Copyright ยฉ 2020, 2016, 2013 by X. J. Kennedy, Dorothy M. Kennedy, Dana Gioia, and Dan Stone
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STORIES STUDENTS
LIKE MOST
At the end of earlier editions of Literature, we included a short student questionnaire.
This form solicited each studentโs opinion about his or her reactions to the book. The
editors read and saved each completed questionnaire they received. These candid
student responses often help improve the anthology from edition to edition.
These student responses are interesting in their own right, but they also add
perspective on what really happens in the classroom. The stories students prefer
often differ sharply from those that instructors rate most highly. Instructors can
learn a great deal by remembering how younger readers find certain selections both
exciting and illuminating that may seem overly familiar to seasoned teachers.
Here are the top stories from previous editions chosen by a large sample of students over the years.
FAVORITE STORIES (Student Choices in Rank Order)
1. William Faulkner, โA Rose for Emilyโ
2. Shirley Jackson, โThe Lotteryโ
3. Edgar Allan Poe, โThe Tell-Tale Heartโ
4. T. Coraghessan Boyle, โGreasy Lakeโ
5. Charlotte Perkins Gilman, โThe Yellow Wallpaperโ
6. Jack London, โTo Build a Fireโ
7. John Updike, โA & Pโ
8. Flannery OโConnor, โA Good Man Is Hard to Findโ
Copyright ยฉ 2020, 2016, 2013 by X. J. Kennedy, Dorothy M. Kennedy, Dana Gioia, and Dan Stone
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FICTION
A story even shorter than the one about the last person in the world and her doorbell appeared in a letter to the editor of the Times Literary Supplement for January 16,
1981. โUnluckily,โ writes Hugh R. Williams, โI cannot remember the source.โ He
offers it as the briefest ghost tale ever discovered:
Before going to bed one night, a man put his wig on the bedpost. In the morning
it had turned white.
Suggestion for an assignment in writing a story: Write another supernatural tale
that ends with the revelation of something inexplicable. It need not be so brief, but
keep it within two paragraphs.
14
Copyright ยฉ 2020, 2016, 2013 by X. J. Kennedy, Dorothy M. Kennedy, Dana Gioia, and Dan Stone
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1
READING A STORY
For a second illustration of a great detail in a story, a detail that sounds observed
instead of invented (besides Defoeโs โtwo shoes, not matesโ), you might cite a classic
hunk of hokum: H. Rider Haggardโs novel of farfetched adventure, She (1887).
Describing how the Amahagger tribesmen dance wildly by the light of unusual
torchesโembalmed corpses of the citizens of ancient Kor, left over in quantityโthe
narrator, Holly, remarks, โSo soon as a mummy was consumed to the ankles, which
happened in about twenty minutes, the feet were kicked away, and another put in its
place.โ (Pass down another mummy, this one is guttering!) Notice the exact specification โin about twenty minutesโ and the unforgettable discarding of the unburned
feet, like a candle stub. Such detail, we think, bespeaks a tall-tale-teller of genius.
(For this citation, we thank T. J. Binyonโs review of The Private Diaries of Sir Henry
Rider Haggard in the Times Literary Supplement, 8 Aug. 1980.)
When you introduce students to the tale as a literary form, you might point out
that even in this age of electronic entertainment, a few tales still circulate from
mouth to ear. Ask them whether they have heard any good tales lately.
TYPES OF SHORT FICTION
Sufi Legend, DEATH HAS AN APPOINTMENT IN SAMARRA, page 6
This classic fable has much in common with the Grimm tale โGodfather Deathโโ
not only the appearance of Death as a character, but also the moral or lesson that
Death cannot be defied. Somerset Maugham included this fable in his play Sheppey
(1933), but it is probably best known as the epigraph to John OโHaraโs novel Appointment in Samarra (New York: Random, 1934).
Students may be asked to recall other fables they know. To jog their memories,
famous expressions we owe to Aesop (โsour grapes,โ โthe lionโs share,โ โdog in the
manger,โ and others) may suggest the fables that gave them rise. At least, the fable of
the hare and the tortoise should be familiar to any watcher of old Bugs Bunny cartoons.
Aesop, THE FOX AND THE GRAPES, page 7
Aesopโs fablesโmany of which, like โThe Fox and the Grapes,โ involve animals
endowed with human traits of character and consciousnessโare still so familiar to
many students that they may be tempted to treat them condescendingly as โkidsโ
Copyright ยฉ 2020, 2016, 2013 by X. J. Kennedy, Dorothy M. Kennedy, Dana Gioia, and Dan Stone
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