Harper Lee's To kill a mockingbird : new essays

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Where to find it

Law Library — 1st Floor Collection (1st floor)

Call Number
PS3562.E353 T63375 2010 c. 2
Status
Available

Law Library — Special Collections (1st floor)

Call Number
PS3562.E353 T63375 2010
Status
In-Library Use Only

Summary

In 1960, To Kill a Mockingbird was published to critical acclaim. To commemorate To Kill a Mockingbird's 50th anniversary, Michael J. Meyer has assembled a collection of new essays that celebrate this enduring work of American literature. These essays approach the novel from educational, legal, social, and thematic perspectives.



Harper Lee's only novel won the Pulitzer Prize and was transformed into a beloved film starring Gregory Peck as Atticus Finch. An American classic that frequently appears in middle school and high school curriculums, the novel has been subjected to criticism for its subject matter and language. Still relevant and meaningful, To Kill a Mockingbird has nonetheless been under-appreciated by many critics. There are few books that address Lee's novel's contribution to the American canon and still fewer that offer insights that can be used by teachers and by students.



These essays suggest that author Harper Lee deserves more credit for skillfully shaping a masterpiece that not only addresses the problems of the 1930s but also helps its readers see the problems and prejudices the world faces today. Intended for high school and undergraduate usage, as well as for teachers planning to use To Kill a Mockingbird in their classrooms, this collection will be a valuable resource for all teachers of American literature.

Contents

What teachers (don't) say : a grounded theory approach to online discussions of To Kill a Mockingbird / James B. Kelley -- Multimedia Mockingbird : teaching Harper Lee's novel using technology / Derek Blair and Cecilia Donohue -- A soundtrack approach to teaching To Kill a Mockingbird / Christian Z. Goering and Cindy M. Williams -- Courthouse ring : Atticus Finch and the limits of southern liberalism / Malcolm Gladwell -- To Kill a Mockingbird : fifty years of influence on the legal profession / Ann Engar -- Bending the law : the search for justice and moral purpose / Jeffrey B. Wood -- Unlikely duos : paired characters in To Kill a Mockingbird / Robert C. Evans -- On reading To Kill a Mockingbird : fifty years later / Angela Shaw-Thornburg -- Spooks, masks, haints, and things that go bump in the night : fear and Halloween imagery in To Kill a Mockingbird / Michael J. Meyer -- "Rigid and time-honored code" : sport and identity in To Kill a Mockingbird / Carl F. Miller -- Symbolic justice : reading symbolism in Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird / Jochem Riesthuis -- Walking in another's skin : failure of empathy in To Kill a Mockingbird / Katie Rose Guest Pryal -- "Enable us to look back" : performance and disability in To Kill a Mockingbird / Lisa Detweiler Miller -- "Just one kind of folks" : the normalizing power of disability in To Kill a Mockingbird / Hugh McElaney -- To Kill a Mockingbird perceptions of "the other" / Alec Gilmore.

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