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Thread: Engerlish bookies

  1. #1
    toothpaste kisses Resha's Avatar
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    Default Engerlish bookies

    rawr. So surely everybody who does English Lit or the equivalent will be studying texts and analysing them and writing lots and lots of esssays (joy!!!). And I want to know which ones, and what you think of them! Or if you don't do them anymore...but what you did ONCE UPON A TIME.

    This year we're doing Thomas Hardy's "The Mayor of Casterbridge", which is brilliant. We're also doing Harold Pinter's "The Homecoming", "King Lear" by the shaking spear and "Top Girls", by Caryl Churchill (because feminist literature is always a massive win).

    Now your turn!
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    This year's Shakespeare study is "Hamlet", I finished it ahead of time and I quite liked it. After that is a Timothy Leary book (either "The Wars" or "Fifth Business"), then finally "The Great Gatsby", in addition to two independent study books of our choice (I've picked "Requiem For A Dream" and Chuck Palahniuk's "Choke").

    Mmm. Minty.

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    toothpaste kisses Resha's Avatar
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    You guys get to study two books of your choice? That's pretty sweet. I'd love to do that. And "The Great Gatsby" would be such a fantastic book to study...there's so much in it
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    Yeah I'm looking forward to "The Great Gatsby", been meaning to read it for the longest time.

    I'm surprised that you don't get independent study novels, I've been getting them since Grade 8.

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    I had to do To Kill A Mockingbird for GCSEs.

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    Huh? Flower?! What the hell?! Administrator Psychotic's Avatar
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    I did Jane Eyre and I'm the King of the Castle for GCSE.

    Yeah. Yeah I know, right.

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    Mold Anus Old Manus's Avatar
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    At GCSE I did Of Mice and Men and Blood Brothers, as well as a load of Shakespeare. Once again the education system managed to make something which was probably pretty interesting the most boring experience ever. I absolutely despised English Lit, it's a wonder how I managed a C.


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    Mr. Encyclopedia Kirobaito's Avatar
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    I am not taking English Literature until next semester, but this semester for my Great Texts class, we are reading Boethius's Consolation of Philosophy, Averroes's Decisive Treatise and Epistle Dedicatory, some lais from Marie de France, some readings from Thomas Aquinas, Dante's Divine Comedy, Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde, More's Utopia, and Spenser's The Faerie Queene.

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    Back of the net Recognized Member Heath's Avatar
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    Over the IB, I did the following:

    Kafka - The Metamorphosis
    Camus - The Outsider
    Sophocles - Antigone
    Shakespeare - The Merchant of Venice
    Austen - Pride and Prejudice
    Heaney - Selected poetry
    Blake - Songs of Innocence and of Experience
    Shakespeare - King Lear
    Ibsen - A Doll's House
    Marlowe - Dr. Faustus
    Miller - Death of a Salesman
    Beckett - Waiting for Godot
    Fitzgerald - The Great Gatsby
    Gilman - The Yellow Wallpaper
    Chopin - The Awakening
    Hardy - Tess of the D'Urbervilles

    Yellow Wallpaper and Awakening got changed for the second year because they didn't fulfill the criteria though I'd read them over the summer anyway. Got replaced by some short stories by Guy de Maupassant and In Patagonia (Chatwin), the latter of which I've still yet to read. I also read Brave New World (Huxley), The Handmaid's Tale (Atwood) and A Clockwork Orange (Burgess) for my extended essay on the subject of dystopia (to add to Nineteen Eighty-Four, Fahrenheit 451 and The Man in the High Castle which I already had under my belt).

    GCSE involved To Kill A Mockingbird (Lee) and An Inspector Calls (Priestley) for the English literature exam.
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    toothpaste kisses Resha's Avatar
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    H-how...how many do you guys have to read? smurf. I love reading but I'd die with all that. And it's all heavy stuff like Camus and wtf.

    But that's so brilliant. What did you think of "Waiting for Godot"? Ain't it brilliant?
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    ballsballsballs of steel Jimsour's Avatar
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    Its been years since my GCSEs. I think we done "Lamb" but I forget the author, was a pretty easy book and not one I'd have seen as as syllabus book for an English qualification.

    Genuinely enjoyed the book though, read it in two days on my own before they even read it in the class.
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    All I remember is Educating Rita, To Kill a Mockingbird and A Midsummer Night's Dream. I liked them quite a bit too, it never would've occured to me to read them outside of lessons, but, and this is probably nostalgia talking, I want to read them again...

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    Back of the net Recognized Member Heath's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Resha View Post
    H-how...how many do you guys have to read? smurf. I love reading but I'd die with all that. And it's all heavy stuff like Camus and wtf.

    But that's so brilliant. What did you think of "Waiting for Godot"? Ain't it brilliant? :D
    That's over two years remember. The Outsider isn't really that heavy or at least I didn't find it that way. I found it to be quite an enjoyable book to read really.

    Waiting for Godot is absolutely fantastic. As well as reading the book we watched a film of it that was quite good too. It's so silly and slapstick in places and it really just stands really out from every other play I've read.
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    Recognized Member Chemical's Avatar
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    so far all the essays we'll be writing these year are personal and reflexive.

    Boldly go.

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    Paganini is a bastard. Rengori's Avatar
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    I hate having to write analytical essays about reading material. Hell, I hate writing essays. It's just so boring and restrictive. The essays are never broad, they're always extremely narrow and they're always stuff like your feelings. At which point I usually just bull my way though it.
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