![]() ![]() ![]() NOTE: the website is down, so you can use this version in the mean time:.Read Chapter 1 (“Literature and History”) from Terry Eagleton’s Marxism and Literary Criticism (Choose FULL TEXT, and annotate from there.) OER NOTE: This is a free internet archive.This was NOT FREE your tuition dollars are used to pay these fees. Read on Moodle: Stanley Fish’s “Is There a Text in This Class?” OER NOTE: This was purchased for our class by the Interlibrary Loan department here at PSU.If this album were real, I would totally own it. ![]() Read Louise Rosenblatt’s “The Poem as Event.” OER NOTE: This is a free website.Lamson pays $272,490.00 per year for access to databases alone, and another $250,740.00 for print journals and electronic subscriptions which are not included in the databases. This article is NOT FREE, but you have already paid for it, so we are going to use it. Your tuition dollars foot the bill for access to this article. OER NOTE: This article was accessed for you through JSTOR, which is a database that your university library purchases access to. Read Wimsatt and Beardsley’s “The Affective Fallacy” on Moodle (don’t download it– just read it as it opens in your browser so you can use Hypthosesis the app doesn’t work that well with pdf’s on Moodle, so I apologize that it won’t be great as you annotate).Assignment: fill in your Twitter handle and Hypothesis username on our spreadsheet:.OER NOTE: This article is available online for free. Read Wimsatt and Beardsley’s “The Intentional Fallacy” (be sure to bring your e-reader to class). ![]()
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