Books: Anthologies Pt. 2

Well, you’re here, so I guess you actually want to know more about these anthologies. They really are great starting points in familiarizing yourself with genres of literature.

In this post I’m covering three anthologies:
The Heath Anthology of American Literature, Vol. A Colonial Period to 1800
The Heath Anthology of American Literature, Vol. B Early Nineteenth Century: 1800-1865
Anthology of American Literature
(which covers late nineteenth through twentieth centuries)

I will be honest, the Heath anthologies listed above are my least favorite because they are associated with my least favorite undergrad course. However, some of the content is really good. In particular, I enjoyed the section on Native American Oral Literature in Volume A. The section covers oral narratives from the Zuni, Navajo, Lakota, Seneca, Iroquois, Tlingit, Hitchiti, and Yuchi tribes as well as Zuni, Aztec, and Inuit oral poetry.

The first portion of Volume A, COLONIAL PERIOD:TO 1800 is organized mainly by geographical region, listing authors then their works. The second part, EIGHTEENTH CENTURY, is organized by topic. Some authors have one or two included writings while others, like Thomas Morton, William Bradford, and Hannah Webster Foster, have ten or more.

The included sections are:
COLONIAL PERIOD: TO 1800
Native American Oral Literatures
Native American Oral Narrative
Native American Oral Poetry
Cluster: American in the European Imagination
New Spain
Cluster: Cultural Encounters—A Critical Survey
New France
Chesapeake
New England
A Sheaf of Seventeenth Century Anglo-American Poetry
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
Settlement and Religion
Cluster: On Nature and Nature’s God
A Sheaf of Eighteenth-Century Anglo-American Poetry
Voices of Revolution and Nationalism
Cluster: On the Discourse of Liberty
Contested Visions, American Voices

The literature in Volume A consists of many different forms of writing—including songs, letters, journal entries, book chapters, poems, Psalms, and book prologues, just to name a few. The topics of individual pieces vary as greatly as the authors themselves, and there is something for everyone. It’s a great way to get acquainted with literature of the past.

Volume B is set up very similarly to Volume A, and covers the early nineteenth century from 1800 to 1865.

EARLY NINETEENTH CENTURY, 1800-1865
Native America
Spanish America
The Cultures of New England
Race, Slavery, and the Invention of the “South”
Literature and the “Woman Question”
The Development of Narrative
Cluster: Humor of the Old Southwest
The Emergence of American Poetic Voices (Emily Dickinson is the most extensively covered author in this section; Walt Whitman is second.)

Again, this volume consists of a variety of literary content—letters, poems, stories, essays, presidential addresses (Lincoln), and even entire books (like Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter).

There are great perspectives hidden within the pages of both volumes A and B of The Heath Anthology of American Literature, and despite my initial experience with being introduced to this literature, I find value in the works represented.

 

Now the Anthology of American LIterature (I know, the names are all so similar) is about the size of the two Heath volumes combined and covers literature from the late nineteenth century as well as the twentieth century. There are large sections of works by Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson in this anthology as well.

There are three sections that contain the literary works themselves:
The Literature of the Late Nineteenth Century
Reading the Historical Context
Reading the Critical Context
The Literature of the Late Nineteenth Century
The Literature of the Twentieth Century (1900-1945)
Reading the Historical Context
Reading the Critical Context
The Literature of the Twentieth Century
The Literature of the Twentieth Century (1945-Present [“present” being circa 2007 when this edition was published])
Reading the Historical Context
The Literature of the Twentieth Century

Following the sections that contain literary works are:
Reference Works, Bibliographies
Criticism, Literary and Cultural History
Acknowledgments
Index to Authors, Titles, and First Lines

Some of the authors included under the “Nineteenth Century” heading are Albion Tourgée, William Dean Howells, Emily Dickinson, Mark Twain, Bret Harte, George Washington Cable, Charles Waddell Chesnutt, Henry James,  and Theodore Dreiser.

Some authors included under the “1900-1945” heading are Henry Adams, T.S. Eliot, O. Henry (William Sydney Porter), Gertrude Simmons Bonnin, Carl Sandburg, Willa Cather, Gertrude Stein, Robert Frost, Sherwood Anderson, E.E. Cummings, and Marianne Moore.

And under “1945 to Present” there’s Martin Luther King, Jr. with his “I Have a Dream” speech, Tim O’Brien, Eudora Welty, Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison, Tennessee Williams, Elizabeth Bishop, Adrienne Rich, James Baldwin, Tillie Olsen, Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones), Kurt Vonnegut, Toni Morrison, Billy Collins, and Sherman Alexie.

 

Together, these three anthologies cover literature from the seventeenth century to the twentieth century. Each of them contain works that are interesting as well as some that are a little dull to be honest. However, because tastes in literature differ as much as people on the planet, you’re bound to find something that intrigues you.

In my next post I will discuss two of Norton’s anthologies. The first is The Norton Anthology of English Literature, and the second is The Norton Anthology of Literature by Women. After that we’ll get into some multicultural anthologies, a little Shakespeare, and two issues of a small student publication. In total, there will be about seven parts to Books: Anthologies, and then we can dive into my collection of individual titles.

Hang out with me, take a break, come back, send me a message.

As always,

Happy Reading!

Christine

 

Oh! Before I forget, I will try to put up some of my personal stuff soon. 🙂

 

Books: Intro to Anthologies

If you’ve looked at the list of books I’ve read, you’ll see that I have quite a few anthologies. By [dictionary.com] definition, an anthology is:

a book or other collection of selected writings by various authors, usually in the same literary form, of the same period, or on the same subject

or

a collection of selected writings by one author

All of the anthologies were obtained as required reading for my undergrad courses as a  Lit. major. I have not read every single piece in any of them, but one of my goals is to accomplish just that. With the growing list of other titles I want to read, getting through the anthologies is near the bottom of my list of priorities. However, because I’m obsessively attached to them, they will remain a permanent part of my “keeping collection”, unlike other books that I will sell/donate as I review them.

The anthologies I will be talking about fall under the “various authors” definition, and include:

Bedford Introduction to Literature 7th Ed.
The Story and Its Writer: An Introduction to Short Fiction, 7th E d.

Anthology of American Literature Vol. 2,  9th Ed.
Heath Anthology of American Literature Colonial-1800; Vol. A, 5th Ed.
Heath Anthology of American Literature 1800-1865; Vol. B, 5th Ed.

Norton Anthology of English Literature, Vol. 1, 8th Ed.
Norton Anthology of Literature by Women, 2nd Ed.

Norton Anthology of African American Literature, 2nd Ed.
Best African American Fiction: 2009

The Routledge Reader in Caribbean Literature
Norton Anthology of Latino Literature

The Norton Shakespeare, based on Oxford, 2nd Ed.
The Globe Illustrated Shakespeare , Annotated

The Cypress Dome Issue 17, 2006 [UCF student publication]
The Cypress Dome Issue 21, 2010 [UCF student publication]

Each of these anthologies cover an extensive range of authors and titles, and it would be an injustice for me to 1) cover them minimally in a single post, or 2) cover them completely in a single post. If you’ll stick with me, we can cover them in a few posts so you get a feel for each. I will cover them in the order in which they are listed above, not alphabetically by author as they are listed here.

If you have questions about any of these, send me a message.

In my next post I will cover The Bedford Introduction to Literature as well as The Story and Its Writer: An Introduction to Short Fiction.

Happy Reading!

Christine