Part 1, "Materials," assesses editions and provides a guide to the wealth of resources available to instructors, including reference works, critical studies, and background readings, in print and on the Web. The essays in part 2, "Approaches," discuss nineteenth-century British culture and Victorian social texts; present ways to teach specific scenes, patterns, and problems in the novel; describe intertextual approaches; and detail specific courses taught in different settings and at a variety of educational levels.
Approaches to Teaching Dickens's Bleak House (Approaches to Teaching World Literature)
📄 Viewing lite version
Full site ›
Book Details
PublisherModern Language Association
ISBN / ASIN1603290141
ISBN-139781603290142
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank1,648,202
CategoryEducation
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description ▲
A central text both in Dickens's career and in the history of the novel itself, Bleak House provides students and teachers occasion to discuss Victorian social concerns involving law, crime, family, education, and money and to learn about every stratum of English society, from the aristocracy to the homeless. But the sheer size of the novel and its narrative intricacy pose pedagogical obstacles. The essays in this volume offer instructors an array of practical strategies for use in the classroom: some describe courses organized exclusively around Bleak House; others offer ideas for teaching a single scene or topic in the novel.
More Books in Education
Collaborative Practice: School and Human Service Partn…
View
Marching Students: Chicana and Chicano Activism in Edu…
View
Collaborative Learning Techniques: A Handbook for Coll…
View
Designing and Teaching Undergraduate Capstone Courses
View
A Laboratory for Public Scholarship and Democracy (J-B…
View
GED Science For Dummies
View
Gifted and Talented Test Prep 1: Geared For NNAT and O…
View
Number Sense Routines: Building Numerical Literacy Eve…
View