Tangentially related to my PhD research, but mostly out of my own curiosity, and given what a solid generational range we seem to have on this board, I'm curious to hear what books (novels, mainly, but plays and, what the hell, poems too, I guess) people were taught in high school? As memory serves, it went something like this for me:
Grade 9: Never Cry WolfGrade 10: Twelfth Night, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's NestGrade 11: Macbeth, The Great GatsbyGrade 12: Hamlet, Brave New WorldGrade 13/OAC (fifth year that Ontario used to have for those going on to university): The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz, Slaughterhouse-Five, Obasan
A lot of those are (were?) high school standards, and a couple are definitely Canada-specific. Shakespeare aside, high school curriculum in the 90s was pretty clearly boomer-approved/influenced. A recent discussion that I was having with one of my profs who has a high school aged daughter revealed that this has changed somewhat--they were now doing things like Ishmael Beah's A Long Way Gone and Jonathan Safran Foer's Everything is Illuminated, which I'm assuming have taken the place of some of the more boomer-y texts (by which I mean that I doubt that Shakespeare, or Gatsby, are going anywhere).
So, what did y'all read?
― iCloudius (cryptosicko), Sunday, 29 October 2017 18:41 (seven years ago)
(also, my apologies if a similar thread already exists--hard to get very specific search results with keywords like "high school" and "English")
― iCloudius (cryptosicko), Sunday, 29 October 2017 18:44 (seven years ago)
ShaneOf Mice and MenTale of Two CitiesScarlet LetterJulius CaesarBilly Budd
― calstars, Sunday, 29 October 2017 18:49 (seven years ago)
Oh yeah, and fucking flowers for Algernon...
― calstars, Sunday, 29 October 2017 18:50 (seven years ago)
Flowers for Algernon is a bullet I am always grateful for having dodged.
― iCloudius (cryptosicko), Sunday, 29 October 2017 18:55 (seven years ago)
I don't remember exactly which year each of these was in. I was in the last class which took OAC in Ontario.
Lord of the FliesTo Kill a MockingbirdThe Stone AngelFifth BusinessBrave New World1984The Great Gatsby
Shakespeare:Twelfth NightRomeo and JulietJulius CaesarMacbethHamlet
I also remember doing a long paper on books of our choice in OAC English, where I read Camus's The Stranger, Sartre's Nausea, and Kafka's The Trial.
― jmm, Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:00 (seven years ago)
I recall none of the books I was assigned to read in high school. I am able to recall a few of the books I read on my own: Grapes of Wrath, Crime and Punishment, Hunger (Hamsun).
― A is for (Aimless), Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:02 (seven years ago)
One I forgot: Animal Farm
I did my OAC independent research project on A Prayer for Owen Meany and Deliverance.
― iCloudius (cryptosicko), Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:03 (seven years ago)
Gr 9-12 were all Gifted classes, if that makes a difference
Grade 9: The Taming of the Shrew, To Kill a Mockingbird, a whack of short stories and poems ("Harrison Bergeron" stands out in my mind and an Alice Munro one about high school girls - "Red Dress"? "Red Shoes"??), a unit on Greek mythology (I did a presentation on Hades and Persephone)Grade 10: Animal Farm, A Tale of Two Cities, Romeo and Juliet, a unit on English Romantic poetry, a bunch of short stories and essays (Orwell's "Shooting the Elephant" and "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty" stand out in my mind)Grade 11: Macbeth, Canterbury Tales (excerpts at least), Who Has Seen the Wind? (we sort of covered this; I don't think I read the whole thing), short stories including Lawrence's "The Rocking Horse Winner"Grade 12: Fifth Business, King Lear, Wuthering Heights, another unit on the English Romantics (I did a presentation where I compared Keats's "La Belle Dame Sans Merci" to Sonic Youth's "Shadow of a Doubt"), some essays including McLuhan (iirc) and a humorous thing by Woody AllenOAC/Grade 13: Hamlet, A Man for All Seasons, The Great Gatsby
Grade 11 Writer's Craft: way too much poetry to remember; standouts include William Carlos Williams's "This Is Just to Say", a bunch of e.e. cummings (including "somewhere i have never travelled gladly beyond"), some concrete poetry, "La Belle Dame Sans Merci" again;
Independent studies: Gr 9: Steinbeck - In Dubious BattleGr 11: Atwood - The Handmaid's TaleWriter's Craft: Caron - Go-Boy!OAC: dystopian novels: Rand - Anthem, Bradbury - Fahrenheit 451, Zamyatin - We
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:15 (seven years ago)
What are they reading these days? Graphic novels and shit?
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:16 (seven years ago)
I was in high school from 92-97 btw.
This is reminding me of how amazingly supportive my OAC English teacher was. She was fantastic and made me want to work hard on that paper.
― jmm, Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:17 (seven years ago)
My Gr 12 ISU was about the Lubicon Lake Cree. We just had to discuss some kind of contemporary issue instead of focusing on a book.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:19 (seven years ago)
many of the things already mentioned plus john gunther's 'death be not proud', which was tedious
― mookieproof, Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:23 (seven years ago)
Oh yeah, I did The Grapes of Wrath for some earlier independent project.
My grade 11 poetry project was on Peter Gabriel, lol.
― jmm, Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:23 (seven years ago)
Grade 9 was still part of Junior High where I grew up (Alberta), but is included anyways. And in High School, for each grade we read a novel, a Shakespeare play, and some other play. And then there was also some short stories and poetry as well, but I don't really remember those as well.:
Grade 9: The Wild Children and A Midsummer Night's DreamGrade 10: The Chrysalids, Romeo and Juliet, A Doll's HouseGrade 11: Brave New World, Macbeth, The Glass MenagerieGrade 12: Wuthering Heights, Death of a Salesman, HamletAnd to fill up a few classes in Grade 11/12, I also remember us watching the films of The Joy Luck Club and Fried Green Tomatoes, because those books were also on the recommended reading lists for those grades.
Also I just found Alberta list of authorized novels for Grade 4-12, which appears to have not changed since 2005, and I graduated in 2003:https://open.alberta.ca/publications/0778537994
― MarkoP, Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:24 (seven years ago)
Death of a Salesman is another one I forgot about.
Thanks a bunch for the link Marko! It hadn't occurred to me to seek out things like this (though I'm more at the just-out-of-curiosity stage of this; not sure whether any of this is going to make it into the dissertation).
― iCloudius (cryptosicko), Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:27 (seven years ago)
Right, The Chrysalids, I did a project on that too.
― jmm, Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:28 (seven years ago)
I guess you lucky non-British fuckers never had to read any Thomas Hardy (who I would probably appreciate more nowadays tbh).
― めんどくさかった (Matt #2), Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:31 (seven years ago)
I actually discovered that list a few years ago when I was unable to remember what my Grade 9 novel study was, and when I simply asked other people, they gave me answers of books that were familiar, but I knew I n ever studied them. I don't think The Wild Children is a particularly well known book, but was probably chosen due to it relating to Grade 9 Social Studies, in which we learned about the Soviet Union. Wouldn't be surpised if there's similar lists out there for other places.
Also finding it odd that quite a few people in this thread seem to be Canadian.
― MarkoP, Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:34 (seven years ago)
Of Mice and MenEmmaDeath of a SalesmanHamlet
are the ones I remember
― Number None, Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:37 (seven years ago)
The Catcher in the Rye is another I forgot about. That was an assigned reading in probably grade 10.
It is weird to realize how mid-20th-century the curriculum was.
― jmm, Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:40 (seven years ago)
I have a terrible memory for these things, but I do remember:Macbeth A midsummer nights dreamThe mayor of CasterbridgeA view from a bridgeHuckleberry FinnThere was an anthology of poetry and I remember a seamus Heaney poem about the troubles which appeared as an exam question which is probably responsible for me getting a decent grade in gcse english lit.
― American Fear of Pranksterism (Ed), Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:41 (seven years ago)
Also finding it odd that quite a few people in this thread seem to be Canadian.It is weird to realize how mid-20th-century the curriculum was.
Neither of these things seem weird to me, given our ages and the OP.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:44 (seven years ago)
I just hadn't thought about it. We didn't read any Romantics or Victorians, as far as I can recall. Very little pre-WW2 fiction, and nothing later than about 1970.
― jmm, Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:50 (seven years ago)
Another Canadian reporting in:
The Catcher in the RyeThe Great GatsbyThe Outsiders
Can't quite recall the others. I went to a French-language high school, though (in Montreal).
― pomenitul, Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:51 (seven years ago)
9th through 11th grade are mostly blank except for:9th - Ethan Frome, Romeo & Juliet
10th - An Enemy of The People, Julius Caesar
11th AP American Lit - Their Eyes Were Watching God, The Scarlet Letter, Gatsby, can’t remember this year’s Shakespeare project
12th AP World - Crime & Punishment, The Metamorphosis, The Stranger, Dante, Milton, a Greek play (maybe Oedipus?), Things Fall Apart, got to choose our own Shakespeare and I went with Much Ado
― louise ck (milo z), Sunday, 29 October 2017 19:57 (seven years ago)
until 12th grade, just a few things each year: among them Huck Finn, Macbeth, Old Man & The Sea, Lord of the Flies,
in 12th grade: Gulliver's Travels, Hamlet, Crime and Punishment, the book of Job (KJV), Wuthering Heights, The Sound and the Fury, Othello, King Lear, The Return of the Native, Invisible Man, Death of a Salesman, A Streetcar Named Desire, Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man, The Great Gatsby, The Stranger, The Sun Also Rises, As I Lay Dying
(a lot of Southern American lit b/c I was in the American South. rather little in translation.)
& probably more. we read about one novel per week it seemed. we also read a lot of poetry, from some kind of anthology. we read A LOT. I loved it, went to university thinking I'd double in math & English, but my uni English class was way less interesting & I soon realized that philo was what I was really looking for.
― droit au butt (Euler), Sunday, 29 October 2017 20:04 (seven years ago)
my daughter finished her high school literature curriculum last year here in France & (shockingly) read mostly French literature: Céline, Baudelaire, Zola, Balzac, Dumas, Flaubert, lots of Hugo, Camus, Sartre, Molière, Racine, Voltaire, de Laclos. nothing by women iirc which she detested
like me she'll go to uni thinking to study both letters & something scientific, probably (like me) computer science & math
― droit au butt (Euler), Sunday, 29 October 2017 20:11 (seven years ago)
That’s a great list
― calstars, Sunday, 29 October 2017 20:12 (seven years ago)
I had teachers telling me that I should read philosophy because I was reading existentialists. I didn't until 1st year in university when we read Phaedrus, which got me hooked.
― jmm, Sunday, 29 October 2017 20:15 (seven years ago)
The ones I remember:
A Separate PeaceHamletLight in August1984The Great GatsbyTo Kill a MockingbirdGrapes of WrathLord of the FliesThe OdysseyThe Merchant of VeniceThe Mayor of CasterbridgeThe House of the Seven GablesEast of Edenan abridged War and Peace :P
Also, some great short stories come to mind: Sonny’s Blues, That Evening Sun, A&P, For Esme with Love and Squalor.
― Cherish, Sunday, 29 October 2017 20:20 (seven years ago)
Romeo and JulietGoodnight Mr TomHamletHow Many Miles to Babylon?
I'm sure there were more, but that's all I remember. The idea of one novel per week (or something approximate) would have given me nightmares.
― Duane Barry, Sunday, 29 October 2017 20:23 (seven years ago)
Grew up in England. All I remember us reading were To Kill a Mockingbird and Romeo and Juliet. We watched the movie of Lord of the Flies.
I'm surprised at the long lists here.
― new noise, Sunday, 29 October 2017 20:24 (seven years ago)
Grew up in Ohio USAthese are the ones I remember:
A Separate PeaceRomeo and JulietThe CrucibleThe Great GatsbyThe Scarlet LetterJulius CaesarWhere Are You Going, Where Have You Been (Joyce Carol Oates short story that got made into a movie starring Laura Dern iirc?)Rape Fantasies (short story we had to read in senior comp for reasons unfathomable to me at the time but now I get it)
I'm 100% sure there were others but I don't remember them because it was a very long time ago
I remember in Spanish class we read a play called Yerma as well as some other classics, selections from Don Quixote etc
― weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Sunday, 29 October 2017 21:26 (seven years ago)
11 ??12 Cider With Rosie13 Z For Zachariah, The Chrysalids14-15 Hamlet, An Inspector Calls, Of Mice & Men
― Colonel Poo, Sunday, 29 October 2017 21:41 (seven years ago)
All I can remember is K. M. Peyton's Flambards, it's almost like they were committed to an anti-reading campaign at my school. I stole The Trial from my school library and got bored 1/4 way through it, and reverted to Stephen King. I stole some Nietzsche from W H Smiths and found him a boring prick as well.
― calzino, Sunday, 29 October 2017 21:56 (seven years ago)
Great thread! Went to HS in the late aughts & early teens on the East Coast. I know I left a few out that I can't remember, the last novel we read in 9th grade is killing me, on the tip of my tongue. Anyway:
9th GradePersepolisMacbethA Raisin in the SunSilas Marner
10th GradeThe Catcher in the RyeThe Great GatsbyOthelloThe Things They CarriedOur TownTheir Eyes Were Watching God
11th GradeCelia, A SlaveMaggie: A Girl of the StreetsThe Scarlet LetterWalden & Civil Disobedience The Turn of the ScrewHenry VIIIThe MetamorphosisBeing TherePride and PrejudiceWuthering HeightsHard TimesHoward's End
12th GradeHamletThe Problems of PhilosophyNo ExitBlack BoyInvisible Man
― flappy bird, Sunday, 29 October 2017 22:02 (seven years ago)
this is just novels obviously, not counting textbooks or short stories
oh yeah What is the What was our summer reading between 11th & 12th grade.
― flappy bird, Sunday, 29 October 2017 22:03 (seven years ago)
+ My Ántonia in 11th grade. that was one of my favorites
― flappy bird, Sunday, 29 October 2017 22:04 (seven years ago)
I swapped schools at A-Levels and did English Lit at university, which meant I somehow studied Mayor of Casterbridge *three* times.
I like Hardy but that is Too Much Hardy.
― Chuck_Tatum, Sunday, 29 October 2017 22:06 (seven years ago)
summer...reading...?
― jmm, Sunday, 29 October 2017 22:08 (seven years ago)
Crime and PunishmentA Separate PeaceSilas MarnerHowards EndRomeo and JulietThe Crucible
― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 29 October 2017 22:12 (seven years ago)
the great gatsbythe pearlhuckleberry finngreat expectations hard times
― Well bissogled trotters (Michael B), Sunday, 29 October 2017 22:15 (seven years ago)
8th: To Kill a Mockingbird, Midsummer Night's Dream, House on Mango Street
9th Oedipus Rex, Manchild in the Promised Land, Thousand Years of Solitude, Autobiography of Malcolm X, Othello, Native Son, and short stories by Faulkner, Chandler, Toni Cade Bambara, Maya Angelou and Zora Neale Hurston. We also read an AMAZING book written by an African author I cannot remember, about witchcraft/curses and a pair of villages who were trying to bring each other to ruin with revenge killings. <– Basically the best 9th grade reading list ever, with an incredible teacher who p. much changed the entire trajectory of my entire life
10th Oedipus Rex (again), Midsummer Night's Dream, Great Gatsby, Macbeth, 1984
11th Huck Finn, Invisible Man, Scarlet Letter, As You Like It, Hamlet
12th Encounters with the Archdruid, Oedipus Rex (again again), Oedipus at Colonus, Antigone, The Odyssey, A Good Man is Hard to Find, A Thousand Acres, King Lear, Heart of Darkness, <– basically the antithesis of my awesome freshman year. Horrid teacher with a blond mustache like a pushbroom, real-life friend of acknowledged racist David Mamet, who hated me after I asked him (on the first day, when looking at the syllabus) 'do we read anything by black authors?' and he answered 'Conrad and Kipling both deal with minorities.'
― remy bean, Sunday, 29 October 2017 22:22 (seven years ago)
I think the only novel we read in high school was Lord of the Flies. We did Hobson's Choice, Billy Liar, and plenty of Shakespeare too. I don't think they could have made us read 4 novels a year if they tried.
― ogmor, Sunday, 29 October 2017 23:31 (seven years ago)
If one of our guileless English teachers would have shown us all the Hobson's Choice movie, it might have encouraged at least a few of us not to become heroin addicts, alcoholics and serial killers:p
― calzino, Sunday, 29 October 2017 23:37 (seven years ago)
9th i only have the vaguest memory of even having 9th grade english, this may have been 8th1984romeo and juliet
10tha separate peacea midsummer night's dreammy antoniahuckleberry finnthe crucible
11thlord of the fliesbeowulfgreat expectationsmacbeth
12ththe great gatsbya raisin in the sunothello???
― assawoman bay (harbl), Sunday, 29 October 2017 23:57 (seven years ago)
we had somehow gotten a recommended extra reading list that i wish i still had. i read a lot of stuff on it and liked it so much better than the class books.
― assawoman bay (harbl), Sunday, 29 October 2017 23:58 (seven years ago)
tons of stuff. I feel like we always had 4 over the summer and then 4-6 more during the year. most covered here already. notable absences from my hs reading: lord of the flies, great gatsby, 1984.
― El Tomboto, Monday, 30 October 2017 00:01 (seven years ago)
we also did the odyssey and oedipus rex at some point
they really go out of their way to keep books that kids don't like in my opinion. i liked huckleberry finn, macbeth, and great gatsby. pretty much everything else was like, reading sucks (in a beavis and butthead voice). i had a bad attitude. beowulf was literally incomprehensible to me. same issues with few books by non-white authors. i read native son on my own time and it's still my favorite book. my school was 90+% white. i would have liked to read something by a russian or french person. hatred of reading was part of why i did math in college. i would have made different choices!
― assawoman bay (harbl), Monday, 30 October 2017 00:09 (seven years ago)
Ah, I see. You only read mid-20th c stuff, other than Shakespeare. That does seem odd. Yeah, they were big on giving us 19th century Brits. You went to Canterbury, iirc? My fiancee went to Gloucester and seemed to get a lot more American books. Ours had more of a slant to Brit and Canadian stuff.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Monday, 30 October 2017 01:37 (seven years ago)
Also, flappy, wtf kind of high school was that where you were assigned 12 books in a single course of Grade 11 English, summer reading, and The Problems of Philosophy in Grade 12?
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Monday, 30 October 2017 01:38 (seven years ago)
that's not far from the AP English program at my high school
― El Tomboto, Monday, 30 October 2017 01:39 (seven years ago)
we didn't get to directly grapple with bertrand russell by 12th grade though
― El Tomboto, Monday, 30 October 2017 01:46 (seven years ago)
wow I can only remember a few. I know we did Hamlet, Macbeth, romeo and juliet, and midsummer night's dream; portrait of an artist as a young man; anna karenina...but it beats me what else we read.
― akm, Monday, 30 October 2017 01:53 (seven years ago)
oh yeah great expectations.
I don't think we read a single hemingway book; nor did we read any books by writers of color, apparently, now that I think of it.
"my antonia"
holy shit I hated reading that in college. it isn't even very long but it felt like it took forever. I can't imagine suffering through it in high school.
― akm, Monday, 30 October 2017 01:58 (seven years ago)
a prayer for owen meany in 10th grade
i really liked the reader they gave us and used to read all kinds of stuff just because it looked interesting. i remember "repent, harlequin! said the ticktockman" was in there even though it wasn't discussed in class.
19th century american lit can be pretty painful. hawthorne is good i guess though.
― bob lefse (rushomancy), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:02 (seven years ago)
not really, no
― akm, Monday, 30 October 2017 02:03 (seven years ago)
There was something deeply wrong with my high school, so my "honors" English classes more notably involved reading books like Jurassic Park, The Hot Zone, The Andromeda Strain, and a novelization of the film The Elephant Man.
― Melissa W, Monday, 30 October 2017 02:06 (seven years ago)
lol what @ the last one
― El Tomboto, Monday, 30 October 2017 02:07 (seven years ago)
Wow at this last postXpost!
― Bazooka Jobim (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:07 (seven years ago)
Lots of you have mentioned the books I've read. I'll stan for the high school AP teacher who assigned heaps of poetry: Pope, Shelley, Keats, Hardy, Yeats, Larkin, Hecht. Speaking of Hardy, we read Tess, which inspired a lifelong affection.
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:13 (seven years ago)
I had a summer honors classics course I was invited to attend where I read the Greek tragedians, the only time in my life when I was exposed to them; it should tell you something about American education at the private and public level.
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:14 (seven years ago)
Lots of you have mentioned the books I've read. I'll stan for the high school AP teacher who assigned heaps of poetry: Pope, Shelley, Keats, Hardy, Yeats, Larkin, Hecht. Speaking of Hardy, we read /Tess/, which inspired a lifelong affection.
― Bazooka Jobim (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:15 (seven years ago)
ha -- how so?
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:25 (seven years ago)
Tbf, I kind of feel like the music programme at almost every high school is basically the equivalent of this.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:27 (seven years ago)
A few from across the grades that I can dredge up from memory…
Crime and PunishmentThe Scarlet LetterThe MetamorphosisThe Old Man and the SeaThe OutsidersTess of the D'Ubervilles
There were definitely a lot more, however I seem to have blocked/smoked away large chunks of memory from AP English and before.
― I want to change my display name (dan m), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:29 (seven years ago)
_There was something deeply wrong with my high school, so my "honors" English classes more notably involved reading books like Jurassic Park, The Hot Zone, The Andromeda Strain, and a novelization of the film The Elephant Man._Tbf, I kind of feel like the music programme at almost every high school is basically the equivalent of this.
― Bazooka Jobim (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:32 (seven years ago)
xp Went through the thread and other people's posts jogged my memory to include these:
Lord of the FliesTo Kill a MockingbirdThe Catcher in the Rye
― I want to change my display name (dan m), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:33 (seven years ago)
Definitely some Steinbeck in there too.
― I want to change my display name (dan m), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:34 (seven years ago)
And yeah, can’t really think of a book that hasn’t been named yet. Feel like we may have read some Joyce, Dubliners probably, which I didn’t see up thread.
― Bazooka Jobim (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:36 (seven years ago)
I was in hs from 1988-92, so I don't remember ALL of them, but here's what I do
Animal FarmLord of the FliesHuck FinnFlowers for AlgernonFahrenheit 451The Illustrated ManThe CrucibleRandom Vonnegut shorts
― Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:37 (seven years ago)
Portrait of the Artist was an option in AP English, most people chose Crime & Punishment instead iirc xp
― I want to change my display name (dan m), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:38 (seven years ago)
Okay think I got one:Intruder in the Dust, William Faulkner
― Bazooka Jobim (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:39 (seven years ago)
Did MIchael Crichton fun Melissa's high school?
― akm, Monday, 30 October 2017 02:41 (seven years ago)
fund. goddamnt
Are you talking about Music Appreciation? If so, I have strong memories of that, some stories that need dusting off
I don't think dedicated Music Appreciation courses have been a thing in hs for a long time where I'm from. Iirc, the repertoire of music class/concert band mostly consisted of medleys of themes from popular movies and musicals, as opposed to any exposure to anything from the fusty Western canon.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:43 (seven years ago)
I had the same teacher for 10th and 11th grade, and he'd been teaching for years, and taught for a while after I graduated, but I'd been tipped that he would sometimes get teary talking about Mark Twain.
He did.
But now I think of all the thousands of times he had to talk about Twain and I realize that was just some community theater acting bullshit for our benefit.
― Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:43 (seven years ago)
Grew up in Ohio USA
― Bazooka Jobim (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:49 (seven years ago)
Oh yeah. And some Melville stories and novellas, especially “Benito Cereno.”
― Bazooka Jobim (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:52 (seven years ago)
And, of course “Bartelby, the Scrivener.” Some classes read “Billy Budd.” For Hawthorne, besides The Scarlet Letter, we also read “Young Goodman Brown,” and maybe “Rappaccini’s Daughter,” if not “Dr. Heidegger’s Experiment.”
― Bazooka Jobim (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 30 October 2017 02:58 (seven years ago)
Some other short stories:“Tennessee’s Partner,” by Bret Harte“The Open Boat,” by Stephen Crane
― Bazooka Jobim (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 30 October 2017 03:10 (seven years ago)
To the Lighthouse was the most surprising novel assigned -- and for my future pursuits the most rewarding.
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 30 October 2017 03:11 (seven years ago)
Only poetry I can remember reading then is Gerald Manley Hopkins and Emily Dickinson.
― Bazooka Jobim (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 30 October 2017 03:17 (seven years ago)
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Sunday, October 29, 2017 9:38 PM (yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
after 10th grade i took 2 english courses every semester. in 12th grade i took Philosophy & Lit and a Quaker/general religion lit & practice class, both of which were English classes technically. we didn't read many novels in that second class although maybe Siddhartha. also i read The Metamorphosis in that Philosophy class, not in 11th grade. which tbh at that point felt a little ridiculous, especially after Bertrand Russell. i feel like everyone reads The Metamorphosis when they read Animal Farm & Fahrenheit 451 in middle school
― flappy bird, Monday, 30 October 2017 05:14 (seven years ago)
i'm forgetting probably 4-5 books in that list though
― flappy bird, Monday, 30 October 2017 05:16 (seven years ago)
The only ones I remember that haven’t been previously mentioned:Ethan FromeThe Brothers Karamazov
― mh, Monday, 30 October 2017 05:38 (seven years ago)
From what I remember, in Canada 94-99:
The PigmanAnd then there were noneAnimal FarmThe OutsidersThe Iliad The Taming of the ShrewThe Great GatsbyMacbeth The Razor's Edge
― while my dirk gently weeps (symsymsym), Monday, 30 October 2017 06:10 (seven years ago)
i skipped out of most of high school english so i never even got to read anything. i remember everyone reading the great gatsby, which i envied them for. (it never occurred to me to read it myself until college, when i decided i should read the western canon as catch-up for an english major that i abandoned kind of the way euler did his.)
in junior high my classes read julius caesar, hamlet, and romeo & juliet. one of them might have involved reading great expectations, although i think it must have been abridged or bastardized somehow. there was some poetry.
― j., Monday, 30 October 2017 06:32 (seven years ago)
― akm, Sunday, October 29, 2017 9:58 PM (yesterday)
yes it was very bad
― assawoman bay (harbl), Monday, 30 October 2017 11:03 (seven years ago)
y'all changed your mind about Cather, I hope
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 30 October 2017 11:33 (seven years ago)
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r)
unsurprisingly this is now the bulk of the repertoire of orchestras.
― bob lefse (rushomancy), Monday, 30 October 2017 12:31 (seven years ago)
Among short stories I def remember "The Yellow Wallpaper" by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
― ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Monday, 30 October 2017 13:09 (seven years ago)
It was heavily weighted toward Shakespeare and Dickens. Among the Dickens was Nicholas Nickleby which we read and also watched, in the form of the miniseries starring Roger Rees that was out at the time.
We got a smattering of English/Irish poetry.
Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery"
Winesburg, Ohio, which has been mentioned
Beowulf
― Josefa, Monday, 30 October 2017 15:18 (seven years ago)
Ha, just remembered, probably the wildest thing we read was Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead.
― Josefa, Monday, 30 October 2017 15:22 (seven years ago)
Further memory digging… we also read The Importance of Being Earnest. We certainly got a lot of drama, in retrospect (one of my Eng teachers was an actor, so…)
― Josefa, Monday, 30 October 2017 15:31 (seven years ago)
I think we saw the film of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, along with Branagh's Hamlet. Hamlet was by far my favourite text in any English class.
― jmm, Monday, 30 October 2017 15:44 (seven years ago)
We watched the 1990 Mel Gibson Hamlet, mostly because it was shorter.
― MarkoP, Monday, 30 October 2017 15:59 (seven years ago)
Other films I remember:
Romeo and Juliet (Baz Luhrmann)Twelfth Night (Trevor Nunn)Julius Caesar (Mankiewicz)Shakespeare in Love (I think this was actually a field trip to the multiplex)Death of a Salesman with Dustin HoffmanTo Kill a Mockingbird
― jmm, Monday, 30 October 2017 16:08 (seven years ago)
during some downtime in my junior or senior year we watched a version of The Tempest, but I'm trying to figure out which one -- maybe the Jarman one?!
― mh, Monday, 30 October 2017 16:10 (seven years ago)
I'm still trying to figure out what version of Macbeth we watched. I'm pretty sure it wasn't the Polanski version, but the clips I'm seeing of other versions aren't ringing a bell either. It was in color, filmed like a movie as opposed to a play, seemed "older" (like before 1980, maybe even before 1970), and I believe Lady Macbeth had reddish/orangish hair.
― MarkoP, Monday, 30 October 2017 16:10 (seven years ago)
It wasn't the 1998 NBC version of the Tempest starring Peter Fonda that took place during the Civil War, was it?
― MarkoP, Monday, 30 October 2017 16:20 (seven years ago)
definitely not, considering we watched it before that would have aired
― mh, Monday, 30 October 2017 16:22 (seven years ago)
I'm not old, but I'm not that young
― mh, Monday, 30 October 2017 16:23 (seven years ago)
Ahh. Was confusing you with jmm, who said they watched Shakespeare in Love in a multiplex, which would have been around the same time.
― MarkoP, Monday, 30 October 2017 16:24 (seven years ago)
my english teachers would have probably responded to that idea with "are you kidding me?"
they weren't super serious, but they wouldn't have gone for that
― mh, Monday, 30 October 2017 16:31 (seven years ago)
I am trying to remember which ones were in English class, which ones were in the college fiction class I took that was taught out of the high school, and which ones I read for fun. This is a partial list of things I think were assigned reading of one stripe or another:
The AwakeningTheir Eyes Were Watching GodSulaSiddharthaDeath In VeniceGoing After CacciatoCatch-22Johnny Got His GunRomeo and JulietOedipus RexMedeaThe Adventures of Huckleberry FinnAs I Lay DyingHeart of DarknessThe JungleA Farewell To ArmsLove MedicineThings Fall ApartCry! The Beloved CountryAnimal FarmThe StrangerThe Yellow WallpaperNative Son
I am pretty sure I read Flatland, Animal Farm, 1984, and Brave New World for fun in junior high.
― Marcus Hiles Remains Steadfast About Planting Trees.jpg (DJP), Monday, 30 October 2017 16:34 (seven years ago)
Oh, I def read "Flowers For Algernon" for fun... possibly before junior high. I know I read The Lottery, All Summer In A Day, and The Veldt for fun.
― Marcus Hiles Remains Steadfast About Planting Trees.jpg (DJP), Monday, 30 October 2017 16:35 (seven years ago)
These are all from 11th & 12th grade AP English:
Lord of the FliesJulius CaesarRomeo & JulietLast of the MohicansThe CrucibleThe Scarlet LetterAll Quiet on the Western FrontHuckleberry FinnThe PearlThe Old Man and the SeaDeath of a SalesmanGreat Expectations
Many of these I listed because my memory was jogged by others itt mentioning them rather than because I remembered actually reading them (but come on, this was 25 years ago fer chrissakes). The only one that really stands out in my memory is Lord of the Flies because that shit was terrifying. I had a really great and inspiring AP English teacher, but her reading assignments did not exactly do much to fuel my love of literature.
― Winky Carrothers (Old Lunch), Monday, 30 October 2017 16:42 (seven years ago)
Oh, I also read Lord of the Flies for fun in junior high.
I see now why my adult reading is all trashy science fiction; I had thoroughly scratched my "serious reader" itch by the time I was 14.
― Marcus Hiles Remains Steadfast About Planting Trees.jpg (DJP), Monday, 30 October 2017 16:43 (seven years ago)
films i remember watching in school (forgetting many):
El NorteWomen on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown Being ThereHoward's End (1992)Pride and Prejudice (1995)The Fog of WarOh! What a Lovely WarKoyaanisqatsiArsenic & Old LaceSingin' in the RainThe Basketball Diaries Night and FogDead Poets' SocietyThe Sound of MusicPopeye
― flappy bird, Monday, 30 October 2017 17:01 (seven years ago)
was Graham Greene still a thing? He was big in Catholic high schools. Somehow we never read a thing.
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 30 October 2017 17:07 (seven years ago)
definitely read some Greene short stories but no novels. also just remembered one of the first things we read in 9th grade English was John Updike "A&P."
― flappy bird, Monday, 30 October 2017 17:10 (seven years ago)
It has been eons but from what I can remember:
Romeo and JulietHamletThe Taming of the ShrewLe Morte d'ArthurTristan and IseultAntigoneSiddharthaThe Great GatsbyTo Kill a MockingbirdThe Myth of SisyphusOf Mice and MenHuckleberry FinnFahrenheit 451The CrucibleJulius CaeserThe Grapes of WrathDeath of a Salesman
We also read selected short stories, mostly parables or didactic in nature. The ones I recall are Young Goodman Brown, The Gift of the Magi, The Tell-Tale Heart, and The Raven.
I assume we are not counting essays, because I was also assigned essays by transcendentalists and philosophers (not entire books).
On my last year, there was a new English teacher who had mostly taught a Graphic Design class, which I took for two years with him, and he assigned a lot of "modern" or "cutting edge" writers. The irony is I don't remember any of them.
― the sound of space, Monday, 30 October 2017 17:21 (seven years ago)
9th grade:animal farmthe chocolate warflowers for algernon
10th grade:the old man and the seacatcher in the ryedeath of a salesmanof mice and menhuckleberry finn
11th grade:beowulfmacbethparadise lost
12th grade:white noisethe sweet hereafterintruder in the dustone flew over the cuckoo's nestheart of darknesswuthering heightsthe sound and the fury
1984 was in there somewhere but i can't remember when. i missing a bunch of others too
― marcos, Monday, 30 October 2017 17:24 (seven years ago)
11th grade english lit is especially murky. 12th grade was just ridiculous he'd assign a book a week and many of them i just couldn't finish in time
― marcos, Monday, 30 October 2017 17:25 (seven years ago)
Kind of jealous of all the books/movies many of you got. Really puts my unusual HS experience in relief.
I was in AP English (and Science) for all of one semester in 9th grade. I had a bit of a meltdown that year and flunked out of both after having had high grades up to (and eventually after) then. Moving between the Science levels wasn't so bad, but there was a reeeeeaaalllll big drop-off between AP and 'normal' English at my podunk suburban HS. My 10th (and maybe 11th?) grade English teacher was one of those well-meaning types who perhaps belonged in Education, but probably not as a teacher. It was a massively disorganized set of classes. Seemed like we rarely ever got to finish a book before moving on to something else. And then in 12th grade, we had a sightly similar situation--a much better teacher, but she had a developmentally disabled son who got massively sick during the school year, and she ended up on leave for six weeks or so dealing with that, which effed the curriculum to we the seniors delight (that class basically became an early morning study hall).
When we did read, it was usually something that's already been brought up (The Odyssey; bunch of Shakespeare; A Separate Peace; Frankenstein; Animal Farm; Silas Marner; Great Expectations; A Raisin In The Sun)
In 12th grade we were assigned Ender's Game. That year we also read Lysistrata in Humanities, which was a lot of fun.
― to fly across the city and find Aerosmith's car (C. Grisso/McCain), Monday, 30 October 2017 17:38 (seven years ago)
Didn't know Silas Marner was so common
― flappy bird, Monday, 30 October 2017 17:47 (seven years ago)
This thread has reminded me of a couple more -10th - A Separate Peace12th - Lord of the Flies
― louise ck (milo z), Monday, 30 October 2017 17:48 (seven years ago)
No Faulkner and no Hemingway (aside from ‘Hills Like White Elephants’) seems bizarre in retrospect.
― louise ck (milo z), Monday, 30 October 2017 17:52 (seven years ago)
Silas Marner is probably the easiest Eliot to assign. Mill on the Floss could make a good high school book, though maybe slightly too long.
― jmm, Monday, 30 October 2017 17:53 (seven years ago)
middle school (5th - 8th grade):
The Phantom TollboothKing Arthur (don't remember which version)To Kill a MockingbirdThe Adventures of Huckleberry FinnThe Adventures of Tom SawyerRomeo and JulietThe Giver (by far my favorite)Lord of the FliesRoll of Thunder, Hear My CryThe Good EarthA Separate PieceThings Fall Apart
forgetting a few...
― flappy bird, Monday, 30 October 2017 17:59 (seven years ago)
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, October 30, 2017 7:33 AM (six hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Me too. I love My Antonia, but I don't know that I would have in high school.
You all rock for contributing to this thread, by the way, and please keep doing so. I am very jealous of some of your HS English classes!
― iCloudius (cryptosicko), Monday, 30 October 2017 18:13 (seven years ago)
I remember My Ántonia being pretty dry & boring in parts but absolutely worth the effort
― flappy bird, Monday, 30 October 2017 18:22 (seven years ago)
Cather seems the most effortless of 20th cent canonical American novels but I can imagine in high school thinking she's parched.
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 30 October 2017 18:25 (seven years ago)
I am very jealous of some of your HS English classes!
― iCloudius (cryptosicko), Monday, October 30, 2017 1:13 PM (twelve minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Seriously. I sadly thought of literature as little more than respectably-staid until I took some decent lit classes in college. But I guess that also describes pretty much every boring HS subject that was recontextualized by college or independent exploration.
― Winky Carrothers (Old Lunch), Monday, 30 October 2017 18:32 (seven years ago)
Funny, I was just considering reading a bunch of Cather - have wanted to investigate for a while, recently picked up a hideous-looking "study edition" of my ántonia dirt cheap
― The Suite Life of Jack and Wendy (wins), Monday, 30 October 2017 18:36 (seven years ago)
in no particular order because my memory is awful (and including poetry and plays):
The OutsidersTo Kill a MockingbirdOf Mice and MenRomeo and JulietMacbethSelections of the poetry of Edwin MorganArcadia, Rosencrantz and Gildenstern are Dead, Every good boy deserve's favour by Stoppard.The Fifth Child by Doris Lessing. i read this when we got assigned it but everyone else hated it so much, including the teacher, that we ended up doing a different text that term instead. it isn't a very good book, it's a bit like "we need to talk about kevin". Selections of the poetry of Sylvia Plath.Emma and Mansfield Park.
That's all I can seem to remember.
― -_- (jim in vancouver), Monday, 30 October 2017 18:39 (seven years ago)
Here are the ones I remember off the top of my head (books, myths, plays
9th:The OdysseyHard TimesA Farewell to ArmsA Midsummer Night's DreamCatcher in the ryeOf Mice and Men
10th:MacbethTo Kill a MockingbirdAntigone(Couple other ones that I can't remember)
11th:Scarlet LetterHuck FinnGreat GatsbySlaughterhouse Five (chose to do this one for a research paper)
12th:PoetryFrankensteinJekyll and Hyde
― bodak horseman (voodoo chili), Monday, 30 October 2017 18:40 (seven years ago)
oh wait I just remembered summer reading going into 9th grade was Gilgamesh, which I'm surprised hasn't popped up much (or at all?) on these lists
― flappy bird, Monday, 30 October 2017 18:41 (seven years ago)
My jealousy knows no bounds.
― pomenitul, Monday, 30 October 2017 18:47 (seven years ago)
Jesus you all read a lot of books. Despite the fact that I was reading about a novel per day checked out from the HS library, my recollection of assigned reading is virtually nil. I murkily recall
Of Mice and MenJulius Caesar (notable mostly for the line "Come on my right hand," which made the whole class laugh and I had no idea why)"The Lottery" at some pointMaaaaybe To Kill A Mockingbird?It's also possible that my classmates read Silas Marner and I ignored it
Mostly because it was incredibly tedious reading one chapter together in class, sometimes aloud, and then discussing it along predictable lines.
― Conic section rebellion 44 (in orbit), Monday, 30 October 2017 18:51 (seven years ago)
I used to hijack class discussions on books I hadn't yet read by waiting for someone to identify a theme I could then connect to current events and turning conversation to whatever modern societal ill was mirrored in the excerpt we were discussing.
― Marcus Hiles Remains Steadfast About Planting Trees.jpg (DJP), Monday, 30 October 2017 18:56 (seven years ago)
I think the smaht kid English classes I was in were going through a book every week or two freshman through senior years, although that pace diminished when we hit the aforemention Brothers Karamazov and Great Expectations. Spent a considerable amount of time on the Iliad and the Odyssey freshman year.
― mh, Monday, 30 October 2017 19:00 (seven years ago)
good pro move, DJP
93-97
9th: Wiesel's Night, Romeo & Juliet, various short stories (Tell-Tale Heart, Harrison Bergeron, A&P)10th: A Midsummer Night's Dream, The Odyssey11th: course on utopia (Clockwork Orange, 1984, Animal Farm, Brave New World, Summerhill, Ecotopia, Anthem)12th: AP English (Hamlet, A Prayer for Owen Meany, Native Son, Notes from Underground, The Cherry Orchard, a couple of Ibsen plays, various short stories); I remember this was sort of improvised because the instructor took over at the last minuteAmerican Lit (The Great Gatsby, The Scarlet Letter, The Grapes of Wrath, The Yellow Wallpaper, O Pioneers!)there was also a course on the Holocaust with Primo Levi, Tadeusz Borowsky, and others
We chose some of our own readings in a few courses (in 10th grade I read On the Road and Gogol stories)
― eatandoph (Neue Jesse Schule), Monday, 30 October 2017 19:01 (seven years ago)
Night and Of Mice and Men were grade 10, iirc.
― to fly across the city and find Aerosmith's car (C. Grisso/McCain), Monday, 30 October 2017 19:15 (seven years ago)
Too many to list. Honors Brit Lit in 11th grade alone was ...
6 Shakespeares: Hamlet, Macbeth, Othello, Twelfth Night, The Merchant of Venice ... and I'm blanking on the sixthTess of the d'UrbervillesGreat ExpectationsWuthering HeightsJane Eyrean assortment of poems, of which the one that I remember most strongly was William Blake's "The Tyger" and some Wordsworth
― Anne of the Thousand Gays (Eric H.), Monday, 30 October 2017 19:21 (seven years ago)
I had a similar Shakespeare experience as the poster above: We were reading Taming of the Shrew aloud and I was daydreaming until it was my turn and my first line was "Sir, give him head."
― dinnerboat, Monday, 30 October 2017 19:24 (seven years ago)
*similar to* — obviously less daydreaming would have been beneficial
I'm old so I can't really remember. I was in honors English all through HS as it was my thing at the time. It was an all-girls Catholic HS. What I do remember was getting yelled at by a nun when she saw me pull "On the Road" out of my bag. She told me it was a bad book and that I shouldn't be reading it.
― Benson and the Jets (ENBB), Monday, 30 October 2017 19:34 (seven years ago)
It's bugging me so much that I can't remember that I've just messaged a HS friend to help.
― Benson and the Jets (ENBB), Monday, 30 October 2017 19:35 (seven years ago)
Oh we definitely read Gilgamesh in 9th grade and also Night.
― Benson and the Jets (ENBB), Monday, 30 October 2017 19:36 (seven years ago)
We had to do some independent reading project my sophomore year where we read at least a thousand pages of one author's work and I did a report on Kerouac
― mh, Monday, 30 October 2017 19:36 (seven years ago)
Sr. Pat would not have approved.
middle school (5th - 8th grade):The Phantom TollboothKing Arthur (don't remember which version)To Kill a MockingbirdThe Adventures of Huckleberry FinnThe Adventures of Tom SawyerRomeo and JulietThe Giver (by far my favorite)Lord of the FliesRoll of Thunder, Hear My CryThe Good EarthA Separate PieceThings Fall Apartforgetting a few...― flappy bird, Monday, October 30, 2017 1:59 PM (one hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― flappy bird, Monday, October 30, 2017 1:59 PM (one hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Oh I think we read most of these in middle school + Pygmalion, The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man in the Moon Marigolds, and the Chocolate War which had a scene about jerking off and that was a pretty awkward discussion. Oh and Flowers for Algernon!
― Benson and the Jets (ENBB), Monday, 30 October 2017 19:40 (seven years ago)
"my antonia"holy shit I hated reading that in college. it isn't even very long but it felt like it took forever. I can't imagine suffering through it in high school.― akm, Sunday, October 29, 2017 9:58 PM (yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― akm, Sunday, October 29, 2017 9:58 PM (yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Oh yes, this was in there too somewhere. Think I suppressed that one.
― Benson and the Jets (ENBB), Monday, 30 October 2017 19:43 (seven years ago)
Summer reading going into 9th grade was Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier and The Hound of the Baskervilles.
― Benson and the Jets (ENBB), Monday, 30 October 2017 19:46 (seven years ago)
What's high school, age wise
― Gary Synaesthesia (darraghmac), Monday, 30 October 2017 19:51 (seven years ago)
14 - 18 or thereabouts
― mh, Monday, 30 October 2017 19:52 (seven years ago)
Oh, sorry so, but I was probably drunk
― Gary Synaesthesia (darraghmac), Monday, 30 October 2017 19:53 (seven years ago)
I think I drank maybe twice throughout all high school, wasted years
― mh, Monday, 30 October 2017 19:53 (seven years ago)
13-17 for me but I was always literally the youngest in my class (12/28 birthday)
― Benson and the Jets (ENBB), Monday, 30 October 2017 19:56 (seven years ago)
Yeah, reading through reminded me of a couple more. Must have suppressed these. I was not drunk.
The Heart of Darkness The Stranger
― Cherish, Monday, 30 October 2017 23:48 (seven years ago)
I'm really struggling to recall any assigned reading in HS apart from year 12 (final year) advanced English. I know that year for specifically on the exams, we studied:Shakespeare Measure for Measure, Othello and MacBethPoetry: Gwen Harwood, Robert LowellPride and Prejudice (didnt even read this, passed my exam anyway somehow lol)
In earlier years I know we did obvious stuff like Mockingbird, of Mice and Men, Z for Zacharia was another early one I recall, but I read for fun so much its all a big blur now. I mean I was reading stuff like "She" by H rider Haggard when I was 12 because some family friend gave it to me as a present (why, ffs).
― Stoop Crone (Trayce), Monday, 30 October 2017 23:51 (seven years ago)
A few more that I don’t think I’ve seen yet just drifted up to the surface:Henry James, Washington Square and “The Real Thing”James Thurber, “The Catbird Seat”Ernest Hemingway, “The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber”
― Bazooka Jobim (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 00:40 (seven years ago)
why the fuck did a dense, etiolated thing like "The Real Thing" make every anthology
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 00:47 (seven years ago)
Good question
― Bazooka Jobim (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 01:02 (seven years ago)
9th grade: to build a fire, smells like teen spirit, whatever we chose for our self-directed pre-high-school summer reading which in my case included the hot zone, norman mailer's the prisoner of sex, and half a dozen reviews of the movie adaptation of angela's ashes. did fine on that assignment but flunked the class anyway
10th grade: demoted to standard-track english; we analyzed the body language in friends. all my smart kid buddies were doing the odyssey i think
11th: back in honors b/c of the insights i exhibited into friends. frankenstein, heart of darkness, the woman warrior by maxine hong kingston.
12th: remember nothing from this at all except that you could get a late essay accepted if you wrote a second essay explaining the lateness of the first essay, so i put most of my effort into those. school sucks
― difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 31 October 2017 01:05 (seven years ago)
i don't recall that we covered any poetry at all
― mookieproof, Tuesday, 31 October 2017 01:08 (seven years ago)
We must have read a bit more than I said upthread since it was on the AP.Did anyone else read Henry IV, Pt. 1? Didn’t notice
― Bazooka Jobim (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 01:11 (seven years ago)
i had to write a paper about edna st vincent millay and it was painfuli hated every minute of that experience
― weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 01:14 (seven years ago)
year 9, our class was supposed to read To Killa Mockingbirdbut they decided we would be the guinea pigs in a pilot program to read a local author insteadso WE read Displaced Person by Lee Harding about a teenage boy who felt ignored & one day discovered that he had ~disappeared~ into a limbo realmit was the WORST thingwe all hated iteven our teacher hated itwe wrote stories about the dumb guy living in limbo with all the socks & coins & bobby pins that went missing down the back of the couch ughthe worst
― Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 01:29 (seven years ago)
I recall asking my year 12 3U english teech why we couldnt do Plath (lol shut up) and he went all angry and said he hated her.
Found out a bit later that he was actually a trained maths teacher and knew fuck all about English/Lit.
― Stoop Crone (Trayce), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 02:19 (seven years ago)
My friend came through with one I’d forgotten - The Awakening - and I remembered The Yellow Wallpaper.
― Benson and the Jets (ENBB), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 03:17 (seven years ago)
they say 'maths' in england bc they have so many of them. thousands of unknowable maths. and they say 'sport' bc they just have quidditch— merritt k (@merrittk) October 23, 2017
― mookieproof, Tuesday, 31 October 2017 03:26 (seven years ago)
Macbeth (twice)HamletHating Alison Ashley (Australian YA book)The HobbitOf Mice and MenThe Kraken WakesZ for ZachariahLord of the FliesTo Kill a MockingbirdThat Eye the Sky
― Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 06:13 (seven years ago)
9th grade: Romeo and Juliet, Julius Caesar, Great Expectations, the Odyssey, Animal Farm, Pygmalion, the Lottery, lots more myth stuff and short stories I can’t remember
10th grade: Doctor Faustus, Siddharta, The Stranger, Brave New World, No Exit, Catcher In The Rye, 1984, Notes From Underground, Jane Eyre, Salinger short stories, Portrait of the Artist As A Young Man, maaaaaybe the Merchant of Venice and definitely some Chekhov.
11th grade: The Scarlet Letter, The Great Gatsby and Fitzgerald shorts inc Bernice Bobs Her Hair, Hiawatha, The Grapes of Wrath, Yellow Wallpaper (this was American Lit year, can’t remember much/awful teacher).
12th grade AP: Mrs Dalloway and To the Lighthouse, Nausea, Death in Venice, Wuthering Heights, Medea, sonnets of Shakespeare, one independent book meaning: fighting with teacher about Dorian Gray being a major work for a month, Memoirs of a Dutiful Daughter (LOL it’s as if AP English teacher went ‘where are the women’ and quite right too).
― kim jong deal (suzy), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 07:35 (seven years ago)
same for 11th grade. forgot about Bernice Bobs Her Hair, hated that one. hated that whole year! Natty Bumppo sucks. I don't know why they make kids read this shit, it is so boring and illuminated exactly nothing worthwhile about the American experience for me.
also read Animal Farm in 9th gr
― weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 13:04 (seven years ago)
that was harsh, i think i just hated all of 11th gr tbh
― weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 13:05 (seven years ago)
oh man "Bernice Bobs Her Hair," which I also read in high school, was one of the few that seemed to reflect the experiences of actual high schoolers.
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 13:08 (seven years ago)
because my 8th grade teacher hated me she didn't recommend me for honors english in HS, so I was in with kids who could barely read. The class was taught by the golf teacher (why was there a golf team in souther colorado? I don't know) who was completely checked out. We read 2 plays the ENTIRE year, one of them being Life with Father, which I'm positive was picked only because it was in the ancient textbook they gave him. Kids tried to stammer their way through it for months out loud. It was toture. He gave me special dispensation to leave the class and go sit in the library most of the time. I left Colorado after that and when I got to California was properly tracked into the non remedial classes.
― akm, Tuesday, 31 October 2017 14:05 (seven years ago)
high school was 1972-76 (sigh) so I only remember a few: Huck Finn in 9th grade, 10th grade a total blank, 11th grade Sound and Sense: An Introduction to Poetry, where I fell in love w/Shakespeare's sonnets, 12th grade a great anthology of short stories and novellas, can't remember title, included One Day In The Life Of Ivan Denisovich and Bellow's Carpe Diem.
― Amazing Random (m coleman), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 14:11 (seven years ago)
oh just remembered reading Antigone by Sophocles in between prelims and finals of a swimming meet during 10th grade
― Amazing Random (m coleman), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 14:15 (seven years ago)
oh we did Antigone, too
― Marcus Hiles Remains Steadfast About Planting Trees.jpg (DJP), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 14:31 (seven years ago)
Is there a more depressing book than Ethan Frome to foist upon kids, is what I want to know
― mh, Tuesday, 31 October 2017 14:39 (seven years ago)
Finnegans Wake & the Twits probably.
― thomasintrouble, Tuesday, 31 October 2017 15:11 (seven years ago)
Year 7 - Danny the Champion of the World, Fire in the Stone, Sun on the StubbleYear 8 - Playing Beattie Bow, Bridge to Terabithia Year 9 -Julius Caesar, Romeo & Juliet, The Outsiders, Of Mice & Men Year 10 - The Chosen? Great Expectations?senior year 11-12 (I took English literature but we also had standard English too i think?)Jane Eyre, Great Gatsby, Sylvia Plath poetry, Macbeth, Elli, The Crucible, Taming of the Shrew, Tess of the D’Urbervillespretty sure we did That Eye The Sky at some point, but dunno when
― Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 15:49 (seven years ago)
9th grade I remember a lot of non-Western literature - Nectar in a Sieve, Things Fall Apart, The Sound of Waves. We also didn't have a real teacher for two months or so and I mostly remember the sub showing us Barefoot Gen.
― JoeStork, Tuesday, 31 October 2017 16:23 (seven years ago)
The class was taught by the golf teacher (why was there a golf team in souther colorado? I don't know) who was completely checked out.
lol we hate school so much, what a shitty country
― j., Tuesday, 31 October 2017 16:34 (seven years ago)
Oh yeah my high school was terrible. It was also the only school you could go to if you lived in my town. There's no school choice in the country.
I don't know why they make kids read this shit, it is so boring and illuminated exactly nothing worthwhile about the American experience for me.
― weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Tuesday, October 31, 2017 1:04 PM (three hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
So dire.
― Conic section rebellion 44 (in orbit), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 16:43 (seven years ago)
I think my favorite high school lit anecdote came during college:
Of the essays we had to write on books we read on our own, we had one list that included Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man, which was excellent. For those who haven't read it, the narrator is never named, but toward the beginning when he introduces himself he says "You can call me Jack the Bear." I found out one of my classmates had written his entire report referring to the narrator, every time, as "Jack the Bear."
I wish I'd done that!
― mh, Tuesday, 31 October 2017 16:52 (seven years ago)
We had American lit in 10th grade, wherein we read Huck Finn but maybe no other novels. But we read a LOT of Southern short stories, Faulkner and Welty and O’Connor, like dozens by those three, and it was great! the American south is generally a terrible place but for lit it’s >>> the north
― droit au butt (Euler), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 18:11 (seven years ago)
in the north we learned about freedom
― j., Tuesday, 31 October 2017 18:21 (seven years ago)
yeah, the Jonathan Franzen book
― flappy bird, Tuesday, 31 October 2017 18:38 (seven years ago)
Required reading at ALL east coast high schools
glad I got out of school before the Franzen era
― mh, Tuesday, 31 October 2017 18:39 (seven years ago)
lol i was jk BUT I do remember Freedom being prominently displayed in the school library when it came out at the start of my senior year
― flappy bird, Tuesday, 31 October 2017 18:58 (seven years ago)
Gerald Manley HopkinsGerard Manley Hopkins. Aargh. This typo has been eating at me. Should blame it on autocorrect, but what happened was, believe it or not, I remembered it correctly but then decided to fact-check myself and misread what I googled (or did I?). Between the thought and the expression.
― Bazooka Jobim (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 4 November 2017 17:12 (seven years ago)