Approaches to Teaching Swift's Gulliver's Travels

Jonathan Swift's Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World—more commonly known as Gulliver's Travels—is rightly considered one of literature's great satires. Many students, however, regard the book as children's literature and Swift himself as a misanthrope. Teachers face the additional challenge that inexperienced readers will be overwhelmed by the book's unfamiliar political and historical landscape. The essays in this volume of the Approaches to Teaching World Literature series help instructors deal with the enormous amount of background material incorporated into Gulliver's Travels, the book's seeming lack of structural and thematic unity, the author's often ambivalent attitude toward his "hero" and the peoples and creatures Gulliver encounters during his voyages, and the essence of Swift's satire. The first of the two parts of this volume, "Materials," reviews classroom editions of Gulliver's Travels, required and recommended student readings, audiovisual materials, and background and biographical works for instructors. The second part, "Approaches," offers strategies, by twenty teachers, for presenting Swift's work in a variety of settings. Fourteen essays suggest different methodologies for introducing the text to students—such as considering whether Gulliver's Travels is a novel and using Swift's letters to reveal the "real" author. The final six essays propose specific assignments for students, from performing dramatic readings to writing satires.

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Approaches to Teaching Swift's Gulliver's Travels

Jonathan Swift's Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World—more commonly known as Gulliver's Travels—is rightly considered one of literature's great satires. Many students, however, regard the book as children's literature and Swift himself as a misanthrope. Teachers face the additional challenge that inexperienced readers will be overwhelmed by the book's unfamiliar political and historical landscape. The essays in this volume of the Approaches to Teaching World Literature series help instructors deal with the enormous amount of background material incorporated into Gulliver's Travels, the book's seeming lack of structural and thematic unity, the author's often ambivalent attitude toward his "hero" and the peoples and creatures Gulliver encounters during his voyages, and the essence of Swift's satire. The first of the two parts of this volume, "Materials," reviews classroom editions of Gulliver's Travels, required and recommended student readings, audiovisual materials, and background and biographical works for instructors. The second part, "Approaches," offers strategies, by twenty teachers, for presenting Swift's work in a variety of settings. Fourteen essays suggest different methodologies for introducing the text to students—such as considering whether Gulliver's Travels is a novel and using Swift's letters to reveal the "real" author. The final six essays propose specific assignments for students, from performing dramatic readings to writing satires.

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Approaches to Teaching Swift's Gulliver's Travels

Approaches to Teaching Swift's Gulliver's Travels

by Edward J. Rielly (Editor)
Approaches to Teaching Swift's Gulliver's Travels

Approaches to Teaching Swift's Gulliver's Travels

by Edward J. Rielly (Editor)

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Overview

Jonathan Swift's Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World—more commonly known as Gulliver's Travels—is rightly considered one of literature's great satires. Many students, however, regard the book as children's literature and Swift himself as a misanthrope. Teachers face the additional challenge that inexperienced readers will be overwhelmed by the book's unfamiliar political and historical landscape. The essays in this volume of the Approaches to Teaching World Literature series help instructors deal with the enormous amount of background material incorporated into Gulliver's Travels, the book's seeming lack of structural and thematic unity, the author's often ambivalent attitude toward his "hero" and the peoples and creatures Gulliver encounters during his voyages, and the essence of Swift's satire. The first of the two parts of this volume, "Materials," reviews classroom editions of Gulliver's Travels, required and recommended student readings, audiovisual materials, and background and biographical works for instructors. The second part, "Approaches," offers strategies, by twenty teachers, for presenting Swift's work in a variety of settings. Fourteen essays suggest different methodologies for introducing the text to students—such as considering whether Gulliver's Travels is a novel and using Swift's letters to reveal the "real" author. The final six essays propose specific assignments for students, from performing dramatic readings to writing satires.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780873525121
Publisher: Modern Language Association of America
Publication date: 12/28/1988
Series: Approaches to Teaching World Literature Series , #18
Pages: 148
Product dimensions: 6.04(w) x 9.06(h) x 0.38(d)
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