World Literature I: Beginnings to 1650
(6 reviews)
Laura Getty, North Georgia College & State University
Kyounghye Kwon, University of North Georgia
Copyright Year: 2015
ISBN 13: 9781940771328
Publisher: University of North Georgia Press
Language: English
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Reviewed by Suzanne Bessenger, Associate Professor, Randolph College on 12/3/19
The text provides a selection of texts appropriate to a survey of Asian religions course. read more
Comprehensiveness rating: 4 see less
The text provides a selection of texts appropriate to a survey of Asian religions course.
Content Accuracy rating: 4
Translations are accurate.
Relevance/Longevity rating: 3
The text's translations are antiquated, but not so much so that they would be unusable in an undergraduate classroom.
Clarity rating: 4
Again, the translations are antiquated, which makes them not as accessible as more recent translations. They remain usable, however. The introductions to each region from which the texts are drawn are short, but clear.
Consistency rating: 5
The formatting and quality of the book is consistent throughout.
Modularity rating: 3
Unfortunately, this book is only available as three PDFs. The reader thus needs to scroll down through each PDF to find the appropriate page. Hypertext links would improve the navigability of the text.
Organization/Structure/Flow rating: 5
The text is clearly organized by geographical region, with each book section beginning with short descriptions of historical eras and regions.
Interface rating: 5
The interface is a PDF document. Although this format makes for slow navigability, it has the virtue of being free of interface problems.
Grammatical Errors rating: 5
In my perusal of the text, I encountered no grammatical errors.
Cultural Relevance rating: 5
The text is a survey of world literature, and thus is inclusive of a variety of races, ethnicities, and cultures. In my perusal of the text, I encountered nothing insensitive.
Reviewed by Rebecca Sailor, Professor, Humanities, Aims Community College on 6/24/19
This book comprehensively covers ancient literature to 1600 with key works. read more
This book comprehensively covers ancient literature to 1600 with key works.
Content Accuracy rating: 5
This book draws from high quality translations. The authors combine translations and make improvements when needed.
Relevance/Longevity rating: 5
This book will maintain longevity for some time; these works will not fade in terms of importance.
This text combines the best free texts available to date. There are more accessible, fresh versions of many of these stories, but they are unlikely to be able to provided for free.
The book is consistent with a reliable structure: effective introductions and reading questions are present at each new section.
This book is effective in terms of modularity; there are clear sections provided in the table of contents, but it would be easy to create a class according to different modules such as geography, heroes/epics, etc. However, because the texts are provided in their entirety, they are quite long. This could make it difficult to create shorter thematic sections around topics.
This text is clearly organized around geographical locations, and there are excellent introductions to each chapter. Textual notes on the part of the authors help to provide context.
Interface rating: 3
The interface is not significantly flawed, but there is some room for improvement. For example, adding document links that hop from the table of contents (TOC) to the page where the selection begins (and links that hop from the end of a selection back to the TOC) would help the reader navigate more quickly when searching for something, since this .pdf quite lengthy. Additionally, adding subsections to the TOC would help the reader navigate more quickly. For example, if there are multiple books or translations in each work, having the TOC list those subsections/page numbers would be helpful.
This work is excellently edited.
Cultural Relevance rating: 4
This edition reflects ample diversity. However, there is an opportunity to add even more sources; for example, poetry of Sappho and the Book of the Dead might be nice additions.
I'm grateful that this book has been created and provided for students' and instructors' use. It is extremely convenient to have these sources combined for use in literature, humanities, and history courses. Thank you!
Reviewed by Jessica Tvordi, Associate Professor, Southern Utah University on 8/2/18
For a compact anthology, this title is comprehensive in in coverage of world literature—from Ancient Greece and Rome, to Asia and India, to medieval and Renaissance Europe, to Native American texts of the New World. Unfortunately, it does not... read more
Comprehensiveness rating: 3 see less
For a compact anthology, this title is comprehensive in in coverage of world literature—from Ancient Greece and Rome, to Asia and India, to medieval and Renaissance Europe, to Native American texts of the New World. Unfortunately, it does not include any women writers, which is beyond unfortunate given that they work acknowledges in its introduction the importance of some of these works in examining the roles of women. If I used any one of the texts three sections, I would need to supplement, especially for Part 3.
The content is accurate, error-free, and unbiased to the best of my knowledge (given the anthology's historical scope).
Relevance/Longevity rating: 4
The authors successfully situate the literary works within the broader culture, history, and geopolitics of the ancient world through the Renaissance in a way that is informative and unbiased. Thus, subsequent research on these areas would not render the work obsolete, and any changes to the framework for the anthology of texts would be minimal. The lack of women writers, however, may make this text seem outdated to some potential adopters.
Clarity rating: 5
The introductory sections are written clearly, and will be easily accessible to undergraduate students. The text is low in jargon, and the tone seems geared toward sophomore or less experienced students—maybe even non-majors.
The text is internally consistent in terms of terminology and framework across the three parts.
Modularity rating: 5
I think the text is successful in this regard, keeping in my that this is not a textbook conveying information but rather an anthology of literary works. For that reason, there are large blocks of text without subheadings, but there's really no way to avoid that.
The organization makes sense and is consistence across the the parts or volumes of the text.
The text has no interface issues—it is easy to navigate and created no confusion for the reader.
The text contains no grammatical errors.
Cultural Relevance rating: 3
The text is culturally relevant with regards to nation and ethnicity, but excludes women writers, which will make this book less competitive than the conventionally published anthologies which have been addressing this issue for decades.
I found the student engagement questions included in each part very helpful and relevant. The writers are very attuned to the needs/limitations of undergraduate readers of classic literature, and this is something I would like to see in more anthologies. I also appreciate that the text is set up to be used thematically and comparatively—again, the writers have offered something that the instructor usually has to work out herself.
Reviewed by Rachael Hammond, Lecturer, Shenandoah University on 5/21/18
Creating a text such as this one could be daunting. The text is already separated into three pdf’s, so including more texts could become unwieldy at some point. Including more introductory notes on form might be helpful. Those already... read more
Comprehensiveness rating: 5 see less
Creating a text such as this one could be daunting. The text is already separated into three pdf’s, so including more texts could become unwieldy at some point.
Including more introductory notes on form might be helpful. Those already provided are strongly composed and quite helpful. For instance, the introduction to Homer provides great background information on the consistent appreciation for Homer’s writing talents. However, the note, if longer, could address the beauty of the original poems, especially since the translations of The Iliad and The Odyssey are in a prose-like form. At the same time, thought, the poetic translation of The Aeneid, which is included, does provide counterpoint lessons not only on approaches to epic storytelling but also on approaches to translation work itself.
Also, perhaps including more Dante and even just a few samples of Boethius and Petrarch could enliven the European portion of the second book, particularly inasmuch as they could further exemplify the shift from medieval European to the Renaissance European cultural mindsets. The pictures accompanying the Canterbury Tales are great; including some introductory notes on illuminated manuscripts and the craft of writing could enliven that portion of the text while also positioning a great comparison with how that craft developed and evolved in other key cultures featured in the text.
The third book ably crosses the Atlantic, with the inclusion of various Native American pieces. They deliver wonderful examples for demonstrating both a contrast of cultural perspectives as well as a commentary on the universal human experience. Including some Francis Bacon in the third book could prove a meaningful addition, as well, especially given the rise of the essay.
Otherwise, including samples of South America and Africa could further strengthen the text’s comprehensives while also offering professors opportunities for still more comparisons of mythologies. –But again, as the books are already lengthy, decisions about what to include must certainly be difficult.
Translations comprise the bulk of the textbook. The translators include both recent quality translations as well as those long-revered (such as Samuel Butler). Editorial acumen seems exhaustive and precise.
Both the texts themselves and the introductory sections are relevant, particularly for a world literature or an ancient literature course. The editors’ notes are clear and gently illuminate the timeless relevance of the text’s contents. The works included in this book are timeless classics that comment on universal literary themes. In addition, the works provide great grounding for students who need to develop their ability to recognize Classical allusions in other literary works.
The translations and unit introductions are clear. The text also includes some helpful tools to help students in better understanding the works of literature and the cultures of the authors and original readers/listeners. For instance, the introduction to The Aeneid includes a helpful chart that helps students to understand the comparisons of the Greek versus the Roman forms of the ancient gods.
Consistency rating: 4
The three books demonstrate an effort to balance both the cultures and the genres represented in the given time period.
The text is clearly delineated in the table of contents, allowing professors to use the text either in a cultural approach, an historical approach, a thematic approach, and/or a form or genre approach.
Organization/Structure/Flow rating: 4
The introduction itself read, “A word to the instructor: The texts have been chosen with the idea that they can be compared and contrasted, using common themes.” The text does follow through on this claim, and it complements my plan for an ancient literature course that I am designing. The flow is logical, and the text is organized in a manner that allows professors to assign readings in any way that seems more appropriate for the given course.
Interface rating: 4
The interface is user friendly. The unit introductions generally include engaging images and photographs. They enliven the screen, which is especially helpful as this book is quite sizeable. (Some free online sources do not seem to include many or any images, so the inclusion here is a visual treat for the professor and could help to improve the readability for students who might other wise experience some screen fatigue.) Using the command-F or the control-F short cut, depending on your computer type, is a helpful tool for navigating large texts such as these.
Grammatical Errors rating: 4
The grammar use, overall, is both strong and graceful. The text’s tone is sometimes conversational; however, since some students might consider these works daunting, the conversational tone, combined with the occasional vivid images, might put such students at greater ease.
The text seems to navigate aspects of cultural difference with much ease. –Given the nature of this book’s content, that is important. In fact, some of the introductory notes provide suggestions for assignments and activities that will help students to consider cultural and historical differences, in an objective manner, while studying these texts. However, placing the two versions of the Bible before Gilgamesh could appear as a hierarchical decision to some readers who might date Gilgamesh earlier and thus place it earlier in the anthology.
The appendices include very helpful links to the original texts. I found the text helpful and plan include it in an undergraduate ancient literature course that I will be teaching in a few months. Overall, the text provides a comprehensive and thought-provoking anthology of many of the world's greatest texts.
Reviewed by Aimee Barrios, Instructor, Southeastern Louisiana University on 6/20/17
The text covers an impressive range of materials, but the omission of Middle Eastern and African literature, especially The Arabian Nights, is glaring. The index is effective, but the commentary and annotation are weak. More textual support... read more
The text covers an impressive range of materials, but the omission of Middle Eastern and African literature, especially The Arabian Nights, is glaring. The index is effective, but the commentary and annotation are weak. More textual support (guided discussion questions, etc.) would be helpful.
No errors in content were noted, and the text seems unbiased.
The content is very relevant. The author did a good job of choosing texts that are seminal and clearly influential. The thematic overview is also helpful.
The writing level is actually quite accessible which is helpful for non-majors who might be required to take a World Lit course. More context would be useful.
The text seems consistent in terminology, framework and formatting
Modularity rating: 4
The divisions in the text work well, but the excerpts are too long. For example, including two versions of the bible without annotation is not very useful. Breaking up long sections of text with comprehension questions would be helpful to reluctant readers.
The ordering was a little confusing at parts. For example, the Hebrew text is presented before Gilgamesh which is confusing since Gilgamesh predates it by so many years. Annotation between selections to transition and draw comparisons would be useful.
The text was easy to navigate; the visuals were helpful and easy to enlarge on a screen. I found it frustrating to navigate within long selections, however. A sidebar with hyperlinks would help a lot. Also, is it possible to embed video ciips in the text to break up the reading and reenforce comprehension?
There were no obvious grammatical errors in this text.
There were no selections by women writers and no African texts. A pre-colonial text, like the Epic of Son Sara, would provide a good perspective.
Reviewed by Albrecht Classen, Univ. Distinguished Prof., University of Arizona on 2/8/17
The scope of this textbook is huge, trying to cover the early history of literature in Europe, the Middle East, India, Japan, and China, extending from the ancient period to the end of the fifteenth century. The authors have made a selection that... read more
The scope of this textbook is huge, trying to cover the early history of literature in Europe, the Middle East, India, Japan, and China, extending from the ancient period to the end of the fifteenth century. The authors have made a selection that presents, indeed, some of the most important texts composed in those areas and periods. So we find the Old Testament, the epic of Gilgamesh, The Tale of Genji, and others. No one can be an expert and we constantly face huge challenges when we cross cultural borders. This textbook takes students to many different worlds, and at the end of the course they will probably be well informed about the truly major texts produced then and there. I wonder, however, whether those huge reading sections are the best in conveying to students the complexity and richness of the material. While scrolling through the book, I got rather irritated about the vastness of the material, considering that so many cultures and periods need to be considered. Does it make sense to ask students to read such long sections? I am afraid that they will not do that anyway, esp. not with an online textbook. We can applaud the authors to be so ambitious, but it would have been much more useful if there had been small pieces along with a thorough group of guiding questions. There are brief introductions, but they often do not say very much. Wherever I felt more like an expert, I was rather disappointed about the low quality of those remarks. But altogether, the selection is pretty comprehensive in what the editors intend. But many other texts could have been utilized, especially those written by women, which are not presented here. A discussion about this would have been helpful.
Since the intros. are fairly short and general, there is not much to be worried about. The students get basic facts, but mostly they are left wondering what the texts might be about and why they are supposed to read them. There are virtually no efforts to didacticize them.
The entire concept of world literature is a good one, but it comes with a lot of problems because the essential idea is to compare those texts with each other. But the cultural and historical background is so vastly different. I am afraid that students will get bored very quickly, esp. because they will not be able to recognize the significance of the texts. They are all certainly relevant, but how would the beginner know this? Basically, it might be much cheaper and easier to ask students to purchase individual textbooks or to read the texts online in other databases.
Overall, well done, very clear structure, clear introductions. However, it is very difficult to scroll through this book, there are no hyperlinks, one cannot jump from one text to the other, apart from doing a global search. Using this book on my laptop was very difficult and uncomfortable; easier on the PC. The authors write in a very clear, accessible English.
This is the kind of textbook that were produced over the last decades, and the intros. and other accompanying texts are clear and understandable. There is no particular jargon, so this is good for freshmen students.
Modularity rating: 2
Not at all; there are huge junks of text, and one cannot easily work through the sections to move on.
The structure is well done, geographical and chronological order are good.
Interface rating: 1
The interface is practically not existent. Why is this even an online book? Nothing of the powers of the hyperlink system is utilized. The images and maps are nice, but I feel frustrated that the image on the cover, the Ebstorf World Map, is not even identified. This goes back to the same issues; this is a textbook with no pedagogical strategies and hardly any didacticizing efforts, apart from a few very general questions.
I did not observe any grammatical errors.
Cultural Relevance rating: 2
The issue of cultural relevance is hardly mentioned, and the readers will not easily understand why this text selection has been made. The instructor will have to work very hard on his/her own to utilize those texts in the classroom and to build connections between the Western and the Eastern sections.
Table of Contents
Middle East, Near East, Greece
- Hebrew Bible, “Genesis” and “Exodus”
- The Epic of Gilgamesh
- The Iliad and The Odyssey
- Oedipus the king
- The Apology of Socrates
- The Analects
- The Art of War
- The Book of Songs
- The Mother of Mencius
- The Zhuangzi
- The Bhagavad Gita
- The Mahabharata
- The Ramayana
- Metamorphoses
Bibliography Appendix
Ancillary Material
- Ancillary materials are available by contacting the author or publisher .
About the Book
This peer-reviewed World Literature I anthology includes introductory text and images before each series of readings. Sections of the text are divided bytimeperiod in three parts: the Ancient World, Middle Ages, and Renaissance, and then divided into chapters by location.
About the Contributors
Laura Getty is an English professor at North Georgia College & State University in Dahlonega, GA.
Kyounghye Kwon is an assistant professor in the English department at the University of North Georgia. She received her doctoral degree in English and her certificate in Theatre and Performance from The Ohio State University. Her teaching and research areas include world literature, postcolonial studies, Asian/Asian American studies, gender studies, and performance studies. Her current research focuses on how Korean traditional puppet theatre preserves, alters, and adapts Korea's pre-colonial/indigenous memory in its performance repertoires for contemporary audiences, with particular attention to indigenous memory, gender, and the changing nature of the audience. She is co-editor of Compact Anthology of World Literature (UNGP, 2015), an open access textbook funded by a Complete College Georgia Grant. Her articles and reviews have appeared in Asian Theatre Journal, Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism, Theatre Survey, Theatre Journal, Pinter Et Cetera, and Text & Presentation.
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A Review Of World Literature: Theories And Models
This paper intends to project, a brief critical overview of the existing theories and trends in the study of world literature. It begins with the emphasis on the origin and gradual evolution of the term world literature and its journey to become a discipline in the literary studies. The paper is broadly divided into two segments. The initial part would deal with the theories generated by the experts followed by the counter-arguments, challenges, and limitations associated with world literature. I would also attempt to demonstrate the plurality in defining world literature, and the last segment of the paper would interrogate the concept of world literature through an Indian literary perspective.
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Longxi Zhang
World literature is on the rise in the increasingly globalized world today, and it offers an opportunity for all literary traditions, particularly non-Western and even “minor” European traditions, to introduce their canonical works to a global readership beyond their original linguistic and cultural milieu. World literature is not just works circulating in the world, but the coming together of all the best or canonical works of the world’s different literatures. Given the imbalance of power in economic, political, even military terms, what is now well-known as world literature is still limited to major Western literary traditions, but by translating canonical works in non-Western literatures into a lingua franca like English, and following up with criticism and scholarship, we shall be able to establish a set of canonical works that is truly world literature.
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This paper examines the ways in which Arabic literature has been introduced into world literature anthologies. Taking The Longman Anthology of World Literature as a case study, the paper questions the politics of the inclusions and exclusions of Arabic literature in the anthology. Pertinent to the discussion is to ponder the nature of Ara-bic literature that " makes it " into the anthology. In addition, the paper will demonstrate how the anthology in fact obscures, rather than illuminates, major historical trajecto-ries of Arabic literature. The complexity of Arabic literature, its highly self-reflexive texts, and its internal developments throughout history beg for a different approach that, I argue, this world literature anthology is lacking. Equally significant, The Longman recycles several common orientalist clichés about Arabic literature, the most important of which is that there is no Arabic literature worthy of inclusion in the three volumes of the anthology spanning the thirteenth-nineteenth centuries. As for the pieces that are included, the paper will reflect on the size and space they are offered, arguing that these are not arbitrary choices, but rather indicative of how a non-Western literary tradition is appropriated into a world literature anthology. Keywords World Literature – Arabic literature – anthologies – periodization – western canon
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This article examines the place of world literature today. Starting with the current political context in Britain, the first part outlines a brief history of Weltliteratur via Goethe, Marx and Engels, and contemporary literary critics such as Pascale Casanova and Emily Apter. Using Samuel Beckett’s views and letters on nationalism and translation, the second part problematizes the centre and periphery model upon which most of these theories are based. The final part introduces Tagore’s contrasting view of visva-sahitya, which, as evidenced through Beckett’s position as a writer and translator of impotence, presents an alternative mode of perceiving world literature.
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LET REVIEW WORLD LITERATURE I. MULTIPLE CHOICE. A sequence of events in a story that force a character to make increasingly difficult decisions, driving the story toward a climactic event and resolution. a. parts b. place c. plot d. poem. This establishes characters and setting. a. exposition b. rising action c. climax d. denouement
978-1-108-47137-4 — The Cambridge Companion to World Literature Edited by Ben Etherington , Jarad Zimbler Frontmatter ... Times Literary Supplement, New Left Review, Critical Inquiry, and the London Review of Books. He is the author most recently of the rst of a two-volume study,
World literature does not just simply happen, then. Or, to use the formulation of Vilashini Cooppan, "World literature is not an ontology but an epistemology, not a known but a knowing" ("Ethics of World Literature" 38). As scholars and teachers of world literature, we need to interrogate not only the ways of knowing but also the ways in
Literature Reviews What this handout is about This handout will explain what a literature review is and offer insights into the form and construction of a literature review in the humanities, social sciences, and sciences. Introduction OK. You've got to write a literature review. You dust off a novel and a book of poetry, settle
A world literature class may be the first place that some students have encountered European works, let alone non-Western texts. The emphasis in this anthology, therefore, is on non-Western and European works, with only the British authors who were the most influential to European and non-Western authors (such as Shakespeare, whose works have influenced authors around the world to the present ...
About the Book. This peer-reviewed World Literature I anthology includes introductory text and images before each series of readings. Sections of the text are divided bytimeperiod in three parts: the Ancient World, Middle Ages, and Renaissance, and then divided into chapters by location.
ABSTRACT. Coined by Christoph Martin Wieland and promoted by Johann Wolfgang Goethe, Weltliteratur/'world literature' has gained extraordinary traction in comparative literature, post-colonial studies, and Goethe studies.This article provides an overview of the emergence of Weltliteratur in Goethe's critical activities, offering a comparison to its mutation into the contemporary critical ...
A Review Of World Literature: Theories And Models. This paper intends to project, a brief critical overview of the existing theories and trends in the study of world literature. It begins with the emphasis on the origin and gradual evolution of the term world literature and its journey to become a discipline in the literary studies.
2. MOTIVATE YOUR RESEARCH in addition to providing useful information about your topic, your literature review must tell a story about how your project relates to existing literature. popular literature review narratives include: ¡ plugging a gap / filling a hole within an incomplete literature ¡ building a bridge between two "siloed" literatures, putting literatures "in conversation"
Abstract. This paper is an extensive review of the origin and evolution of world literature. It begins with the discussion on the evolving theories and the counter arguments on world literature followed by a brief critical overview of the existing theories and trends in the study of world literature. Based on the above discussions, an attempt ...
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The analytical review presents data from the world literature, which discusses the relevance of vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia associated with human papillomavirus (uVIN). The incidence of uVIN ...
World literature. Publication date 1998 Topics Literature -- Study and teaching ... Pdf_module_version 0.0.23 Ppi 386 Scandate 20110716005639 ... Year 1998 . Show More. Full catalog record MARCXML. plus-circle Add Review. comment. Reviews Reviewer: Agent Sapphire - - March 9, 2024 Subject: slsp . 0030514096 . 283 Views
WORLD LITERATURE REVIEWER important play. It won Miller a Tony Award, and it was his first major collaboration with the director Elia Kazan, who also won a Tony. Miller's next play, Death of a Salesman, became one of the most famous American plays of its period. It is the tragedy of Willy Loman, a man destroyed by false values that are in large part the values of his society.
Although the literature demonstrated no unanimous preferences for learning styles (1, 2, 5), that PD programs should be student-centered and blend a variety of approaches was a recurrent theme throughout the literature. Four articles recommended a blend of in-person and distance learning (3, 11, 12, 19).
LET REVIEWER - GENERAL EDUCATION ENGLISH (World Literature) Direction: Select the letter of the best answer. 1. Francisco Balagtas is mainly recognized for his novel entitled _____. a. Prinsipe Rodante b. Ibong Adarna c. El Filibusterismo d. Florante at Laura. Answer: d. Florante at Laura. 2. Rizal's pen name other than Dimasalang. a. Laong ...
can research further. An open access literature textbook cannot be a history book at the same time, but history is the great companion of literature: The more history students know, the easier it is for them to interpret literature. These works can help students understand the present, as well. In an electronic age, with this text available to
World literature by Macmillan/McGraw-Hill. Publication date 1992 Topics Literature ... Be the first one to write a review. 251 Previews . 9 Favorites. DOWNLOAD OPTIONS No suitable files to display here. EPUB and PDF access not available for this item. IN COLLECTIONS Texts to Borrow ...
In his novel Annihilation, author Jeff Vandermeer provides a science-fiction narrative on nature as an unstoppable and uncontrollable environment where plants, animals, humans, and the land exist as a collective and connected entity of interactions. The novel utilizes Lovecraftian horror elements of an uncontrollable nature, human contamination, and an unknowable future controlled by nonhuman ...