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American Literature: Colonial to 1900

More information about the MA Qualifying Exam can be found in the Guidelines.

Bradford

Of Plymouth Plantation

Bradstreet

"Another (As Loving Hind)"

Taylor

"Upon Wedlock and Death of Children"

Rowlandson

Narrative of the Captivity

Danforth

Errand into the Wilderness

Mather

Magnalia, Book II

Edwards

"A Divine and Supernatural Light"

Franklin

Autobiography

Tyler

The Contrast

Brown

Edgar Huntly

Cooper

The Last of the Mohicans

Hawthorne

The Scarlet Letter

Melville

Billy Budd

Thoreau

"Of Civil Disobedience"

Emerson

Nature

Whitman

"Crossing Brooklyn Ferry"

Poe

"The Fall of the House of Usher"

Twain

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

Howells

The Rise of Silas Lapham

James

The Portrait of a Lady

Crane

The Red Badge of Courage

Norris

McTeague

Chopin

The Awakening

Dickinson

#287

Wharton

The House of Mirth



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English Department
College of Arts & Sciences
Oklahoma State University
205 Morrill Hall
Stillwater, OK 74078
Phone: 405-744-9474
For Information about English Programs: english.information@okstate.edu
Webmaster: engweb@okstate.edu

Statement of
"Organic Knowledge"
for Literature and Film

A student with "organic knowledge" of the reading lists will

1. understand the way individual texts reflect the material and intellectual conditions of the time of their production; this means that the student can perceive an author's work in reference to history, including literary or film history, and to contemporary social and philosophical issues;

2. consider the way texts exemplify the major concerns and formal features that critics have associated with literary or film periods, movements, and genres; further, the student will be aware of the ways that texts change, depart from, or undermine the conventions of movements or periods to which they belong;

3. in summary, be able, on request, to forge links between author or filmmakers, their individual works, and various intellectual, social, and aesthetic traditions, when applicable.