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Arthur M. Eastman (1918–1997)

Author of The Norton Reader: An Anthology of Expository Prose

12 Works 869 Members 4 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Arthur M. Eastman

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Eastman, Arthur Morse
Birthdate
1918-09-08
Date of death
1997-07-21
Gender
male
Education
Oberlin College (BA|1940)
Yale University (MA|1942; PhD|1947)
Occupations
professor of English
Organizations
University of Michigan
Carnegie Mellon University
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Awards and honors
Guggenheim Fellow (1957-58)
Short biography
Married first to Becky, then to Ann; had four children, Barbara, Richard, John and Martha.
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Roslyn, New York, USA
Places of residence
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Blacksburg, Virginia, USA
Place of death
Green Valley, Arizona, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
Obtained in a cache of free books, prepared to donate to my local hospital's patient library.

Then read two essays:
John Holt's "How Teachers Make Children Hate Reading"
Erich Fromm's "The Nature of Symbolic Language"

Worth keeping for those alone, and once LT's Contained In relationship function is fully supported, should find other essays worth multiple readings.
Contains works by Aeschylus (Agamemnon), Euripides (Medea), Sophocles (Oedipus Rex), Aristophanes (Lysistrata), Anonymous (The Second Shepards' Play), Shakespeare (Othello), Ben Jonson (Volpone, or the Fox), Moliere (Tartuffe), William Wycherley (The Country Life), Jean Racine (Phaedra) and others.
An impressive anthology of dramas. Now I need to read it....
I clearly misread the title to mean that this was a book of essays. To me an essay is a self-contained piece of non-fiction prose with a beginning, middle and end, intended to be the author's complete statement (at least for the time being) on the subject.

The works in this anthology (the 3rd edition, at least) are mostly excerpts from longer works. Clearly examples of expository writing, but not what I was looking for. Even as excerpts I found problems with them. The larger work to which show more they belong is only listed in an acknowledgement page in the front. The pages that were excerpted are not listed so you don't know what part of the book you are reading from.

Since I am interested in the form of the essay, this collection was useless for my purposes.
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Associated Authors

Luigi Pirandello Contributor
Winston Ntshona Contributor
Lady Gregory Contributor
John Kani Contributor
Anton Chekhov Contributor
William Wycherley Contributor
Seán O'Casey Contributor
Athol Fugard Contributor
Jean Racine Contributor
Caryl Churchill Contributor
Lorraine Hansberry Contributor
Ben Jonson Contributor
August Strindberg Contributor
Oscar Wilde Contributor
Molière Contributor
Harold Pinter Contributor
Eugene O'Neill Contributor
Bernard Shaw Contributor
Aristophanes Contributor
Aeschylus Contributor
Bertolt Brecht Contributor
Henrik Ibsen Contributor
Euripides Contributor
Tennessee Williams Contributor
Sophocles Contributor
Tom Stoppard Contributor
Arthur Miller Contributor
Samuel Beckett Contributor

Statistics

Works
12
Members
869
Popularity
#29,448
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
4
ISBNs
23

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