WHAT WOULD BE A GOOD TEXT or SET OF TEXTS TO END ON?Assorted Categories/Groupings of the Anthologies
Most anthologies start with a set of “epic” or “folk” texts, but they are rarely the same texts. How do we feel about this genre for a new anthology? Should they be separated or included in the general chronological flow of first recorded appearance?
Stories of the Beginning of the World [N1]
The Iroquois Creation Story
The Navajo Creation Story
Irvin Morris: Hajííneí
(The Emergence)
Native American Oral Narrative [H]
Talk Concerning the First Beginning (Zuni)
Changing Woman and the Hero Twins after the Emergence of the People (Navajo)
Wohpe and the Gift of the Pipe (Lakota)
The Origin of Stories (Seneca)
Iroquois or Confederacy of the Five Nations (Iroquois)
Iktomi and the Dancing Ducks (Christine Dunham, Oglala Sioux)
Raven and Marriage (Tlingit)
The Bungling Host (Hitchiti)
Creation of the Whites (Yuchi)
Native American Oral Poetry [H]
Zuni Poetry
----------- Sayatasha's Night Chant
Aztec Poetry
----------- The Singer's Art
----------- Two Songs
----------- Like Flowers Continually Perishing (Ayocuan)
Inuit Poetry
----------- Song (Copper Eskimo)
----------- Moved (Uvavnuk, Iglulik Eskimo)
----------- Improvised Greeting (Takomaq, Iglulik Eskimo)
----------- Widow's Song (Quernertoq, Copper Eskimo)
----------- My Breath (Orpingalik, Netsilik Eskimo)
A Selection of Poems
Deer Hunting Song (Virsak Vai-i, O'odham)
Song (Aleut)
Song of Repulse to a Vain Lover (To'ak, Makah)
A Dream Song (Annie Long Tom, Clayoquot)
Woman's Divorce Dance Song (Jane Green)
Formula to Secure Love (Cherokee)
Formula to Cause Death (A'yunini the Swimmer, Cherokee)
Song of War (Blackfeet)
War Song (Crow)
Song of War (Odjib'we, Anishinabe)
War Song (Young Doctor, Makah)
Song of Famine (Holy-Face Bear, Dakota)
Song of War (Two Shields, Lakota)
Song of War (Victoria, Tohona O'odham)
Native American Trickster Tales [N1]
Winnebago
Felix White Sr.’s Introduction to Wakjankaga (transcribed and translated by Kathleen Danker and Felix White)
From The Winnebago Trickster Cycle (edited by Paul Radin)
Sioux Ikto Conquers Iya, the Eater (transcribed and edited by Ella C. Deloria)
Navajo Coyote, Skunk, and the Prairie Dogs (performed by Hugh Yellowman; recorded and translated by Barre Toelken)
America in the European Imagination [H]
Thomas More
from Utopia
Michel de Montaigne
from Of Cannibals
Theodor Galle, after a drawing by Jan van der Straet [Stradanus]
America, c. 1575
John Donne
Elegie XIX, To his Mistris Going to Bed
Francis Bacon
from New Atlantis
Cultural Encounters – A Critical Survey [H]
Frederick Jackson Turner (1861-1932)
from The Significance of the Frontier in American History [also in N1]
Andrew Wiget
from Reading Against the Grain: Origin Stories and American Literacy History
Annette Kolodny
from Letting Go Our Grand Obsessions: Notes Toward a New Literary History of the American Frontiers
Mary Louise Pratt
from Imperial Eyes: Travel Writing and Transculturation
Paul Gilroy
from The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness
Paula M. L. Moya and Ramon Saldivar
from Fictions of the Trans-American Imaginary
*First Encounters: Early European Accounts of Native America [N1]
*Hernán Cortés
Description of Tenochtitlan
*Samuel De Champlain
The Iroquois
*Robert Juet
From The Third Voyage of Master Henry Hudson
*John Heckewelder
Delaware Legend of Hudson’s Arrival
*William Bradford and Edward Winslow
Cape Cod Forays
*John Underhill
The Attack on Pequot Fort
Native Americans: Contact and Conflict [N1]
Pontiac: Speech at Detroit
Samson Occom: From A Short Narrative of My Life [also in H]
Thomas Jefferson: Chief Logan’s Speech, From Notes on the State of Virginia
Red Jacket: Reply to the Missionary Joseph Cram
Tecumseh: Speech to the Osages
Native Americans: Removal and Resistance [N1]
Black Hawk: From Life of Black Hawk
Petalesharo: Speech of the Pawnee Chief
Speech of the Pawnee Loup Chief
Elias Boudinot: From the Cherokee Phoenix
Memorial of the Cherokee Citizens, November 5, 1829
Ralph Waldo Emerson: Letter to President Martin Van Buren
Patriot and Loyalist Songs and Ballads [H]
"Patriot" Voices
The Liberty Song
Alphabet
The King's own Regulars, And their Triumphs over the Irregulars
The Irishman's Epistle to the Officers and Troops at Boston
The Yankee's Return from Camp
Nathan Hale
Sir Harry's Invitation
Volunteer Boys
"Loyalist" Voices
When Good Queen Elizabeth Governed the Realm
Song, for a Fishing Party near Burlington, on the Delaware, in 1776
Burrowing Yankees
A Birthday Song, for the King's Birthday, June 4, 1777
A Song
An Appeal
The Vernacular Tradition [N2]
SPIRITUALS
City Called Heaven
I Know Moon-Rise
Ezekiel Saw de Wheel
I’m a-Rollin’
Go Down, Moses [also in H]
Been in the Storm So Long
Swing Low, Sweet Chariot
Steal Away to Jesus [also in H]
Didn’t My Lord Deliver Daniel? [also in H]
God’s a-Gonna Trouble the Water
Walk Together Children
Soon I Will Be Done
Come Sunday
Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child
GOSPEL
This Little Light of Mine
Down by the Riverside
Freedom in the Air
Take My Hand, Precious Lord
Peace Be Still
Stand by Me
THE BLUES
Good Morning, Blues
Hellhound on My Trail
C. C. Rider
Backwater Blues
Down-Hearted Blues
Prove It on Me Blues
Trouble in Mind
How Long Blues
Rock Me Baby
Yellow Dog Blues
St. Louis Blues
Beale Street Blues
The Hesitating Blues
Goin’ to Chicago Blues
Fine and Mellow
Hoochie Coochie
Sunnyland
My Handy Man
SECULAR RHYMES AND SONGS, BALLADS, WORK SONGS, AND SONGS OF SOCIAL CHANGE
SECULAR RHYMES AND SONGS
[We raise de wheat]
Me and My Captain
Promises of Freedom
No More Auction Block
Jack and Dinah Want Freedom
Run, Nigger, Run
Another Man Done Gone
You May Go But This Will Bring You Back
BALLADS
John Henry
Frankie and Johnny
Railroad Bill
The Signifying Monkey
Stackolee
Sinking of the Titanic
Shine and the Titanic
WORK SONGS
Pick a Bale of Cotton
Go Down, Old Hannah
Can’t You Line It?
SONGS OF SOCIAL CHANGE
Oh, Freedom
Ain’t Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me ’Round
Abel Meeropol: Strange Fruit
We Shall Overcome
Langston Hughes: The Backlash Blues
Nina Simone: Four Women
JAZZ
Duke Ellington: It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing)
Andy Razaf: (What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue
King Pleasure: Parker’s Mood
RHYTHM AND BLUES
Sam Cooke: A Change Is Gonna Come
Smokey Robinson: The Tracks of My Tears
Martha Reeves and the Vandellas: Dancin’ in the Street
Otis Redding and Aretha Franklin: Respect
Curtis Mayfield: We’re a Winner
Marvin Gaye: What’s Goin’ On?
Stevie Wonder: Living for the City
HIP HOP
Gil Scott-Heron: The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five: The Message
The Sugarhill’s Gang, Rapper’s Delight
Public Enemy: Don’t Believe the Hype
Queen Latifah: The Evil That Men Do
Biggy Smalls—The Notorious B.I.G.: Things Done Changed
Nas: N.Y. State of Mind
Eric B. & Rakim: I Ain’t No Joke
Outkast, Elevators or Rosa Parks
SERMONS
God
James Weldon Johnson: Listen Lord, A Prayer
C. L. Franklin: The Eagle Stirreth Her Nest
Howard Thurman: O God, I Need Thee
G. I. Townsel: The Way Out Is to Pray Out
Martin Luther King Jr.
I Have a Dream
I’ve Been to the Mountaintop
Malcolm X: The Ballot or the Bullet
James Alexander Forbes Jr.: O God of Love, Power and Justice
Bert Williams: Elder Eatmore’s Sermon on Generosity
FOLKTALES
All God’s Chillen Had Wings
Big Talk
Deer Hunting Story
How to Write a Letter
“‘Member Youse a Nigger”
“Ah’ll Beatcher Makin’ Money”
Why the Sister in Black Works Hardest
“De Reason Niggers Is Working So Hard”
The Ventriloquist
You Talk Too Much, Anyhow
A Flying Fool
Brer Rabbit Tricks Brer Fox Again
The Wonderful Tar-Baby Story
How Mr. Rabbit Was Too Sharp for Mr. Fox
The Awful Fate of Mr. Wolf
What the Rabbit Learned
Songs of the Slaves[H]
----------- Lay Dis Body Down
----------- Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Had
----------- Deep River
----------- Roll, Jordan, Roll
----------- Michael, Row the Boat Ashore
----------- There's a Meeting Here To-Night
----------- Many Thousand Go
Songs of White Communities [H]
----------- John Brown's Body
----------- The Battle Hymn of the Republic (Julia Ward Howe)
----------- Pat Works on the Railway
----------- Sweet Betsy from Pike
----------- Bury Me Not On the Lone Prairie
----------- Shenandoah
----------- Clementine
----------- Acres of Clams
----------- Cindy
----------- Paper of Pins
----------- Come Home, Father (Henry Clay Work)
----------- Life Is a Toil
African American Folktales [H]
Animal Tales
----------- When Brer Deer and Brer Terrapin Runned a Race
----------- Why Mr. Dog Runs Brer Rabbit
----------- How Sandy Got His Meat
----------- Who Ate Up the Butter?
----------- Fox and Rabbit in the Well
----------- The Signifying Monkey
Memories of Slavery
----------- Malitis
----------- The Flying Africans
Conjure Stories
----------- Two Tales from Eatonville, Florida
John and Old Marster
----------- Master Disguised
----------- The Diviner
----------- Massa and the Bear
----------- Baby in the Crib
----------- John Steals a Pig and a Sheep
----------- Talking Bones
----------- Old Boss Wants into Heaven
Tales from the Hispanic Southwest [N1, H]
La comadre Sebastiana/ Doña Sebastiana [N1]
Los tres hermanos/ The Three Brothers [N1]
El obispo/ The New Bishop [N1]
El indito de las cien vacas/ The Indian and the Hundred Cows [N1]
La Llorona, Malinche, and Guadalupe [N1]
La Llorona, La Malinche, and the Unfaithful Maria
The Devil Woman
Lorenzo de Zavala (1788-1836) [N1, H]
Viage a los Estados-Unidos del Norte America (Journey to the United States)
*Critical Controversy: Race and the Ending of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn [N1]
*Leo Marx: From Mr. Eliot, Mr. Trilling, and Huckleberry Finn
*Julius Lester: From Morality and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
*Justin Kaplan: From Born to Trouble: One Hundred Years of Huckleberry Finn
*David L. Smith: From Huck, Jim, and American Racial Discourse
*Jane Smiley: From Say It Ain’t So Huck: Second Thoughts on Mark Twain’s Literary Masterpiece
*Toni Morrison: From Introduction to Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
*Shelley Fisher Fishkin: From Lighting Out for the Territory: Reflections on Mark Twain and American Culture
World War I and Its Aftermath [N1]
Alan Seeger: I Have a Rendezvous with Death . . .
Ernest Hemingway: Letter of August 18, 1918, to His Parents
E. E. Cummings: From The Enormous Room
Jessie Redmon Fauset: From There Is Confusion [also in N2]
John Allan Wyeth, Jr.: Fromereville
Gertrude Stein: From The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas
Debates over “Americanization” [N1]
Frederick Jackson Turner: From The Significance of the Frontier in American History [also in H]
*Theodore Roosevelt: From The Winning of the West
*Albert Beveridge: From The March of the Flag
José Martí: From Our America [also in H]
Helen Hunt Jackson: From A Century of Dishonor
Jane Addams: From Twenty Years at Hull-House
From Chapter V. First Days at Hull House
Chapter XI. Immigrants and Their Children
*Mourning Dove (1888–1936)
CogeweaThe Ladies Race
Modernist Manifestos
F. T. Marinetti: From Manifesto of Futurism
Mina Loy: Feminist Manifesto
Ezra Pound: From A Retrospect [also in H]
Willa Cather: From The Novel Démeublé
William Carlos Williams: From Spring and All [also in H]
Langston Hughes: From The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain [also in N2 & H]
Postmodern Manifestos [N1]
Ronald Sukenick: Innovative Fiction/Innovative Criteria
William H. Gass: The Medium of Fiction
Hunter S. Thompson: From Fear and
Loathing in Las Vegas
Charles Olson: From Projective Verse
Frank O’Hara: From Personism: A Manifesto
Elizabeth Bishop: From Letter to Robert
Lowell, March 21, 1972
A. R. Ammons: From A Poem Is a Walk
Audre Lorde: From Poetry Is Not a Luxury [also in N2]
Ishmael Reed, “Neo-Hoodoo Manifesto”
Creative Nonfiction [N1]
*Edward Abbey: From Desert Solitaire
*Barry Lopez: From Desert Notes
*Dorothy Allison: From Stubborn Girls and
Mean Stories
*John Crawford: From The Last True Story I’ll
Ever Tell
*Joan Didion: From The Year of Magical
Thinking
*Edwidge Danticat: From Brother, I’m Dying
Jamaica Kincaid, A Small Place
Corridos [H]
Kiansis I/Kansas I
Gregorio Cortez
Jacinto Treviño
Hijo Desobediente/The Disobedient Son
Recordando al Presidente/Remembering the President
Corrido de César Chávez/Ballad of César Chávez
Los Tigres del Norte, various corridos (must choose)
Carved on the Walls: Poetry by Early Chinese Immigrants
from The Voyage
----------- 5 [Four days before the Qiqiao Festival]
----------- 8 [Instead of remaining a citizen of China, I willingly became an ox]
from The Detainment
----------- 20 [Imprisonment at Youli, when will it end?]
----------- 30 [After leaping into prison, I cannot come out]
----------- 31 [There are tens of thousands of poems composed on these walls]
from The Weak Shall Conquer
----------- 35 [Leaving behind my writing brush and removing my sword, I came]
----------- 38 [Being idle in the wooden building, I opened a window]
----------- 42 [The dragon out of water is humiliated by ants]
from About Westerners
----------- 51 [I hastened here for the sake of my stomach and landed promptly]
----------- 55 [Shocking news, truly sad, reached my ears]
from Deportees, Transients
----------- 57 [On a long voyage I travelled across the sea]
----------- 64 Crude Poem Inspired by the Landscape
----------- 69 [Detained in this wooden house for several tens of days]
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