*Literacy Inventories, 2019-2020

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

*Literacy Inventories, 2019-2020 Guided Reading Library Book # of # of Box # Title Author Publisher Genre ISBN # Year Level Books Missing A 1 Changes, Changes (wordless) Hutchins, Pat Scholastic Informational 590459651 2000 8 A 1 Here I Am! Lee, Frances Okapi (pair) Personal Narrative 978-1-74320-490-0 6/2014 8 A 1 I Read Signs Hoban, Tana Scholastic 590486594 8 A 1 In My Garden Cristini, E/Purcelli, L Scholastic 590436341 1999 8 A 1 In the Woods (wordless) Cristini, E/Purcelli, L Scholastic 590436333 1999 8 A 1 My Body Lee, Frances Okapi (pair) Personal Narrative 978-1-74320-489-4 6/2014 8 A 2 Shapes Around Us Rivas, Isabella Okapi (pair) Informational 978-1-74320-492-4 6/2014 8 A 2 We Can VanDam, Cory Rigby 763587109 2005 8 -1 A 2 What Can Jump? Holden, Pam Rigby 763591149 2005 8 -8 A 2 What Shape Can You See? Rivas, Isabella Okapi (pair) Narrative 978-1-74320-491-7 6/2014 8 A 2 Who Likes Ice Cream? Butler, Andrea Rigby 763507083 2005 7 -1 A 2 Zoo, A Butler, Andrea Rigby 732718309 2005 8 -8 A 3 Big Things Randell, Beverley Rigby Informational 076350372x 2005 8 -2 A 3 Dad Randell, Beverley Rigby Informational 763503703 2005 8 A 3 Eating Fruit Finlay, Tom Okapi (pair) Narrative 978-1-74320-494-8 6/2014 8 A 3 I Look at the Fruit Finlay, Tom Okapi (pair) Personal Narrative 978-1-74320-493-1 6/2014 8 A 3 Picnic in the Sand, A Dobeck, Maryann MCP Ready Readers Realistic Fiction 813653860 2001 6 A 3 School Lunch Peterson, Polly MCP Ready Readers Realistic Fiction 813653894 2001 6 -6 A 3 What Rhymes with Cat? Wilson, Kathleen MCP Ready Readers F 813619327 2008 6 -6 A 4 Baby Bear's Ride Evans, Mary MCP Ready Readers 813619300 2008 6 A 4 Baby Chimp Williams, Rebel Wright Group Realistic Fiction 780290550 2005 8 -1 A 4 I Follow Rules at School Swain, Cynthia Benchmark Informational 978-1-60437-413-1 2011 8 A 4 Plant Has Needs, A Swain, Cynthia Benchmark Informational 978-1-60437-411-7 2011 8 -1 A 4 What Can You See in a Desert? Swain, Cynthia Benchmark Informational 978-1-60437-414-8 2011 8 A 4 What Do Communities Have? Swain, Cynthia Benchmark Informational 978-1-60437-415-5 2011 8 -1 A 5 Bear Cub Grows, A Torres, Victoria Benchmark Informational 978-1-4108-7502-0 2011 8 A 5 Counting Pencils Scraper, Katherine Benchmark Informational 978-1-4108-7490-0 2011 8 A 5 Good Citizens Can Help Swain, Cynthia Benchmark Informational 978-1-60437-412-4 2011 8 A 5 Stop! Rose, Eric MCP Ready Readers Realistic Fiction 813653878 2001 6 -6 A 5 Toy Box, The Francis, Stanley MCP Ready Readers Realistic Fiction 813654106 2001 6 A 6 26 Letters and 99 Cents Hoban, Tana Scholastic HMU41831 2000 8 A 6 Of Colors and Things (wordless) Hoban, Tana Scholastic Informational 590440608 2000 8 A 6 Pancakes for Breakfast (wordless) DePaola, Tomie Scholastic F HMU45136 2000 8 A 6 Truck Crews, Donald Scholastic HMU44438 2000 8 A 6 Which One is Different? Oxenford, Doug National Geographic Informational 792246330 2007 6 A 7 Bath, The Nayer, Judy MCP Ready Readers Realistic Fiction 813653983 2001 6 A 7 Learning About Rain Rosen Informational 1-4042-5435-8 2012 6 A 7 Monster Mop Mark, Aimee MCP Ready Readers F 813653851 2001 6 -6 A 7 My Pet Rivas, Isabella Okapi (pair) Informational 978-1-74234-489-8 6/2014 8 A 7 Pets at Home Wood, Emily Okapi (pair) Informational 978-1-74234-488-1 6/2014 8 A 7 Red or Blue? Stevens, Jenni MCP Ready Readers Realistic Fiction 813653991 2001 6 A 8 Hat!, The Starr, Alex MCP Ready Readers F 813653975 2001 6 1 Guided Reading Library A 8 Hide and Seek Rivas, Isabella Okapi (pair) Narrative 978-1-74234-490-4 6/2014 8 A 8 Learning About Clouds Braidich, Shelby Rosen Informational 1-4042-5436-6 2012 6 A 8 Little House Peterson, Polly MCP Ready Readers F 813654076 2001 6 A 8 Look Closer Logan, Claudia MCP Ready Readers Informational 813654297 2001 7 A 8 My Birthday Cerini, Paul Okapi (pair) Informational 978-1-74234-491-1 6/2014 8 A 8 My Room Spevack, Judy MCP Ready Readers Realistic Fiction 813654084 2001 6 A 9 Dogs Wood, Emily Okapi (pair) Informational 978-1-74234-485-0 6/2014 8 A 9 Me Wood, Emily Okapi (pair) Personal Narrative 978-1-74234-484-3 6/2014 8 A 9 Treasure Hunt Mitton, Tony Rigby F 7963504157 2005 8 A 9 Weather Theodorou, Rod Rigby Informational 763504165 2005 8 A 9 What A Mess! Mitton, Tony Rigby Realistic Fiction 763504106 2005 8 A 9 Workers Sipowitz, Art Rigby F 763587141 2005 8 A 10 Farm, The Butler, Andrea Rigby Informational 763507059 2005 8 A 10 Fruit Salad Butler, Andrea Rigby Informational 763500291 2005 8 A 10 Getting Around Cerini, Paul Okapi (pair) Informational 978-1-74234-493-5 6/2014 8 A 10 In the Garden Lee, Frances Okapi (pair) Informational 978-1-74234-486-7 6/2014 8 A 10 My Toys Cerini, Paul Okapi (pair) Informational 978-1-74234-492-8 6/2014 8 A 10 Who Likes Ice Cream? Butler, Andrea Rigby 763507083 2005 7/6 -7 A 10 Wow! Look at That Lee, Frances Okapi (pair) Informational 978-1-74234-487-4 6/2014 8 A 11 Animals at the Zoo Lee, Frances Okapi (pair) Informational 978-1-74234-495-9 6/2014 8 -8 A 11 Curly and His Friends Mitton, Tony Rigby 763533599 2007 6 A 11 Goodnight Bobbie Hawes, Alison Rigby Realistic Fiction 763533602 2007 6 A 11 My Birthday Party Peters, Catherine Houghton Mifflin 395910080 2001 6 A 11 Naughty Kitten Mitton, Tony Rigby Realistic Fiction 763504203 2005 8 -8 A 11 Where Are the Animals? Finlay, Tom Okapi (pair) Informational 978-1-74234-494-2 6/2014 8 A 12 Baby Smith, A/J Giles/B RandellRigby Informational 763596957 2007 6 A 12 Balloons Smith, A/J Giles/B RandellRigby Realistic Fiction 763597031 2007 6 A 12 Fun With Paper Lee, Sylvia Wright Informational 1404514198 2007 6 A 12 What Can Jigarees Do? Cowley, Joy Wright Group F 780272722 2005 8 A 13 I Am Running Smith, A/J Giles/B RandellRigby Informational 763596949 2007 6 A 13 I Can Peters, Catherine Houghton Mifflin Informational 395910110 2001 6 A 13 In Our Classroom Smith, A/J Giles/B RandellRigby Informational 763596973 2007 6 A 14 Birthday Cake, The Cowley, Joy Wright F 078025287X 2007 6 A 14 In The Mountains Lassen, Whitney Wright Informational 780289110 2007 6 A 15 Animal Moves Bishop, Nic Wright 322036550 2007 6 A 15 Building with Blocks Cutting, Jillian Wright Realistic Fiction 78252969 2007 6 A 15 Down to Town Cowley, Joy Wright F 780252896 2007 6 A 15 Tracking Kimble, Jack Wright 322036534 2007 6 B 1 At the Zoo Peters, Catherine Houghton Mifflin Realistic Fiction 395910145 2001 6 B 1 Can You Go Here? Lee, Frances Okapi (pair) Narrative 978-1-74320-496-2 6/2014 8 B 1 Cars Hubley, Curtis Houghton Mifflin Informational 395910137 2001 6 B 1 I Am Peters, Catherine Houghton Mifflin 395910129 2001 6 B 1 Let's Move! McGovern, Kate L. MCP Ready Readers Realistic Fiction 813606853 2008 6 -1 2 Guided Reading Library B 1 My School Peters, Catherine Houghton Mifflin I 395910153 2001 6 -6 B 1 On My Bike Lee, Frances Okapi (pair) Informational 978-1-74320-495-5 6/2014 8 B 1 Up in the Sky Smith, A/J Giles/B RandellRigby Informational 757856047 2007 6 B 1 Up They Go Francis, Stanley MCP Ready Readers Realistic Fiction 813653614 2008 6 B 2 All Wet Nayer, Judy MCP Ready Readers 813654335 2001 6 -6 B 2 Fun With Fruit James, Ray Wright Informational 1404508791 2007 6 -6 B 2 How to Make a Hen House Hollyl, Bill MCP Ready Readers 813654254 2001 6 -1 B 2 In the Rain Haber, Rebecca MCP Ready Readers 813654246 2001 6 B 2 Our Families Young, Sally Rigby Informational 763534897 2007 6 B 2 Socks Solins, Mary MCP Ready Readers 813654114 2001 6 -1 B 3 At Grandpa's House Wood, Emily Okapi (pair) Narrative 978-1-74320-497-9 6/2014 8 -1 B 3 Ball Games Giles, Jenny Rigby Realistic Fiction 763503975 2005 8 -1 B 3 Cakes for Sale Wood, Emily Okapi (pair) Narrative 978-1-74320-498-6 6/2014 8 -1 B 3 Dear Santa Drew, David Rigby F 732719259 2005 8 -8 B 3 My Monster and Me Kijak, Anna MCP Ready Readers F 813606772 2008 6 B 3 Time for Dinner Randell, Beverley Rigby Informational 076354146x 2005 8 B 3 Way I Go to School, The Randell, Beverley Rigby Informational 763541540 2005 8 -1 B 4 At the Museum Economos, ChristineMCP Ready Readers 813654408 2001 6 B 4 Birthday Present, The Smith, Mavis Scholastic 590275240 1999 8 -2 B 4 Dress-Up Box, The Cerini, Paul Okapi (pair) Narrative 978-1-74320-499-3 6/2014 8 B 4 Going Shopping Cerini, Paul Okapi (pair) Narrative 978-1-74320-500-6 6/2014 8 B 4 Have You Seen My Duckling? Tafuri, Nancy Scholastic WKH44385 2001 8 B 4 Nest, The Stone, Susan Wright Informational 1404508813 2007 6 B 5 Dancing Shoes Lawrence, Lucy Rigby F 732718449 2005 8 B 5 Designs Robinson, Fay Celebrations 673578259 2001 6 B 5 Giant's Day Out, The Andrew, Moira Rigby F 763504548 2005 8 -8 B 5 I See Cubes Scraper, Katherine Benchmark Informational 978-1-4108-8107-6 2011 8 B 5 Storm, The Cowley, Joy ES Assessment/Wright Group 780275292 2005 6 -6 B 5 Time For Lunch Lewis, Kathryn E.
Recommended publications
  • Reagan's Victory
    Reagan’s ictory How HeV Built His Winning Coalition By Robert G. Morrison Foreword by William J. Bennett Reagan’s Victory: How He Built His Winning Coalition By Robert G. Morrison 1 FOREWORD By William J. Bennett Ronald Reagan always called me on my birthday. Even after he had left the White House, he continued to call me on my birthday. He called all his Cabinet members and close asso- ciates on their birthdays. I’ve never known another man in public life who did that. I could tell that Alzheimer’s had laid its firm grip on his mind when those calls stopped coming. The President would have agreed with the sign borne by hundreds of pro-life marchers each January 22nd: “Doesn’t Everyone Deserve a Birth Day?” Reagan’s pro-life convic- tions were an integral part of who he was. All of us who served him knew that. Many of my colleagues in the Reagan administration were pro-choice. Reagan never treat- ed any of his team with less than full respect and full loyalty for that. But as for the Reagan administration, it was a pro-life administration. I was the second choice of Reagan’s to head the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). It was my first appointment in a Republican administration. I was a Democrat. Reagan had chosen me after a well-known Southern historian and literary critic hurt his candidacy by criticizing Abraham Lincoln. My appointment became controversial within the Reagan ranks because the Gipper was highly popular in the South, where residual animosities toward Lincoln could still be found.
    [Show full text]
  • Using Youtube to Teach Presidential Election Propaganda: Twelve Representative Videos
    ·~'ocial l:'ducatton 13r7), pp 3 .25 _3 .3 9, 3 6.2 •.rJ20()9 National Council £or the Social Swdics Using YouTube to Teach Presidential Election Propaganda: Twelve Representative Videos Wayne Journell ne of the primary goals of social studies education in the United States is many schools block access to YouTube to prepare students for civically active, politically informed, and socially on school property. Certainly, many 0 engaged democratic citizenship. Too often, however, the curricula fall short of the advertisements described in this of this goal. Textbooks and state curriculum standards tend to portray citizenship article can be found on other websites as a static concept rather than an active process that involves awareness of, and or through a savvy Google search.5 participation within, a democratic political system.1 However, YouTube has the advantage of an easy-to-use search engine and a This is best illustrated by the way many students are to make informed political name brand that middle and high school teachers approach presidential elections decisions as adults, then they must learn students recognize. At the conclusion in their classrooms, a topic Haas and to decipher ways politicians manipulate of this article, I offer suggestions for Laughlin argue should be "the quintessen­ media. minimizing any risks associated with tial example of teaching social studies."2 The good news is that access to presi­ using YouTube in the classroom. Yet teachers often fail to adequately pre­ dential propaganda has never been easier. pare students to understand the nuances The Internet, in particular, is a wonderful Twelve Representative Videos of presidential politics, particularly with repository for examples of both historic respect to political propaganda.
    [Show full text]
  • Examining the Changing Use of the Bear As a Symbol of Russia
    UC Santa Barbara UC Santa Barbara Previously Published Works Title The “Forward Russia” Flag: Examining the Changing Use of the Bear as a Symbol of Russia Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5xz8x2zc Journal Raven: A Journal of Vexillology, 19 ISSN 1071-0043 Author Platoff, Anne M. Publication Date 2012 License https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ 4.0 Peer reviewed eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California The “Forward Russia” Flag 99 The “Forward Russia” Flag: Examining the Changing Use of the Bear as a Symbol of Russia Anne M. Platoff Introduction Viewers of international sporting events have become accustomed to seeing informal sporting flags waved by citizens of various countries. The most famil- iar of these flags, of course, are the “Boxing Kangaroo” flag used to represent Australia and the “Fighting Kiwi” flag used by fans from New Zealand. Both of these flags have become common at the Olympic Games when athletes from those nations compete. Recently a new flag of this type has been displayed at international soccer matches and the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics. Unlike the Kangaroo and Kiwi flags, this new flag has been constructed using a defaced national flag, the Russian tricolor flag of white, blue, and red horizontal stripes, readopted as the flag of the Russian Federation after the breakup of the Soviet Union. A number of variations of the flag design have been used, but all of them contain two elements: the Russian text Vperëd Rossiia, which means “Forward Russia”, and a bear which appears to be break- ing its way out of the flag.
    [Show full text]
  • Antinuclear Politics, Atomic Culture, and Reagan Era Foreign Policy
    Selling the Second Cold War: Antinuclear Cultural Activism and Reagan Era Foreign Policy A dissertation presented to the faculty of the College of Arts and Sciences of Ohio University In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy William M. Knoblauch March 2012 © 2012 William M. Knoblauch. All Rights Reserved. 2 This dissertation titled Selling the Second Cold War: Antinuclear Cultural Activism and Reagan Era Foreign Policy by WILLIAM M. KNOBLAUCH has been approved for the Department of History and the College of Arts and Sciences by __________________________________ Chester J. Pach Associate Professor of History __________________________________ Howard Dewald Dean, College of Arts and Sciences 3 ABSTRACT KNOBLAUCH, WILLIAM M., Ph.D., March 2012, History Selling the Second Cold War: Antinuclear Cultural Activism and Reagan Era Foreign Policy Director of Dissertation: Chester J. Pach This dissertation examines how 1980s antinuclear activists utilized popular culture to criticize the Reagan administration’s arms buildup. The 1970s and the era of détente marked a decade-long nadir for American antinuclear activism. Ronald Reagan’s rise to the presidency in 1981 helped to usher in the “Second Cold War,” a period of reignited Cold War animosities that rekindled atomic anxiety. As the arms race escalated, antinuclear activism surged. Alongside grassroots movements, such as the nuclear freeze campaign, a unique group of antinuclear activists—including publishers, authors, directors, musicians, scientists, and celebrities—challenged Reagan’s military buildup in American mass media and popular culture. These activists included Fate of the Earth author Jonathan Schell, Day After director Nicholas Meyer, and “nuclear winter” scientific-spokesperson Carl Sagan.
    [Show full text]
  • Orchestrating Public Opinion
    Paul ChristiansenPaul Orchestrating Public Opinion Paul Christiansen Orchestrating Public Opinion How Music Persuades in Television Political Ads for US Presidential Campaigns, 1952-2016 Orchestrating Public Opinion Orchestrating Public Opinion How Music Persuades in Television Political Ads for US Presidential Campaigns, 1952-2016 Paul Christiansen Amsterdam University Press Cover design: Coördesign, Leiden Lay-out: Crius Group, Hulshout Amsterdam University Press English-language titles are distributed in the US and Canada by the University of Chicago Press. isbn 978 94 6298 188 1 e-isbn 978 90 4853 167 7 doi 10.5117/9789462981881 nur 670 © P. Christiansen / Amsterdam University Press B.V., Amsterdam 2018 All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this book may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the written permission of both the copyright owner and the author of the book. Every effort has been made to obtain permission to use all copyrighted illustrations reproduced in this book. Nonetheless, whosoever believes to have rights to this material is advised to contact the publisher. Table of Contents Acknowledgments 7 Introduction 10 1. The Age of Innocence: 1952 31 2. Still Liking Ike: 1956 42 3. The New Frontier: 1960 47 4. Daisies for Peace: 1964 56 5. This Time Vote Like Your Whole World Depended On It: 1968 63 6. Nixon Now! 1972 73 7. A Leader, For a Change: 1976 90 8. The Ayatollah Casts a Vote: 1980 95 9. Morning in America: 1984 101 10.
    [Show full text]
  • In the Supreme Court of the United States ______FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION, Appellant, V
    Nos. 06-969 & 06-970 In the Supreme Court of the United States __________ FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION, Appellant, v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO LIFE, INC., Appellee, and SENATOR JOHN MCCAIN, REPRESENTATIVE TAMMY BALDWIN, REPRESENTATIVE CHRISTOPHER SHAYS, AND REPRESENTATIVE MARTIN MEEHAN, Appellant-Intervenors, v. WISCONSIN RIGHT TO LIFE, INC., Appellee. __________ On Appeal From the United States District Court For The District of Columbia __________ BRIEF FOR AMICI CURIAE THE LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS OF THE UNITED STATES, COMMON CAUSE, INC., THE GREENLINING INSTITUTE AND UNITED STATES PUBLIC INTEREST RESEARCH GROUP IN SUPPORT OF APPELLANT __________ DANIEL R. ORTIZ Counsel of Record UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA SCHOOL OF LAW* 580 Massie Road Charlottesville, VA 22903 (434) 924-3127 *Affiliation listed for address purposes only. ii TABLE OF CONTENTS Page TABLE OF AUTHORITIES................................................. iv INTEREST OF AMICI CURIAE ............................................ 1 SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT.............................................. 2 ARGUMENT.......................................................................... 4 I. SINCE WRTL’S THREE ADS ARE THE “FUNCTIONAL EQUIVALENT OF EXPRESS ADVOCACY,” THEY SHOULD RECEIVE NO CONSTITUTIONAL EXEMPTION................................ 4 II. THE DISTRICT COURT’S FOUR-CORNERS, FIVE-FACTORS APPROACH CREATES A “MAGIC FEATURES” TEST, WHICH, LIKE THE “MAGIC WORDS” TEST THIS COURT REPUDIATED IN McCONNELL, PERMITS CORPORATIONS TO FUND FROM THEIR GENERAL TREASURIES ADS INTENDED TO INFLUENCE
    [Show full text]
  • Le Ve L Bo X # Title Author Publisher Genre
    Title Author Publisher Genre Level Box # # of # Books of A 6 26 Letters and 99 Cents Hoban, Tana Scholastic 8 A 15 Animal Moves Bishop, Nic Wright 6 A 1 At the Zoo Peters, Catherine Houghton Mifflin RF 6 A 12 Baby Smith, A/J Giles/B RandellRigby I 6 A 4 Baby Bear's Ride Evans, Mary MCP Ready Readers 6 A 4 Baby Chimp Williams, Rebel Wright Group RF 8 A 12 Balloons Smith, A/J Giles/B RandellRigby RF 6 A 7 Bath, The Nayer, Judy MCP Ready ReadersRF 6 A 5 Bear Cub Grows, A Torres, Victoria Benchmark I 8 A 3 Big Things Randell, Beverley Rigby I 8 A 14 Birthday Cake, The Cowley, Joy Wright F 6 A 15 Building with Blocks Cutting, Jillian Wright RF 6 A 1 Changes, Changes (wordless) Hutchins, Pat Scholastic I 8 A 5 Counting Pencils Scraper, Katherine Benchmark I 8 A 11 Curly and His Friends Mitton, Tony Rigby 6 A 3 Dad Randell, Beverley Rigby I 8 A 15 Down to Town Cowley, Joy Wright F 6 A 10 Farm, The Butler, Andrea Rigby I 8 A RRBox 1 Float or Sink? Rosen 8 A 10 Fruit Salad Butler, Andrea Rigby I 8 A 12 Fun With Paper Lee, Sylvia Wright I 6 A 5 Good Citizens Can Help Swain, Cynthia Benchmark I 8 A 11 Goodnight Bobbie Hawes, Alison Rigby RF 6 A 8 Hat!, The Starr, Alex MCP Ready ReadersF 6 A 13 I Am Running Smith, A/J Giles/B RandellRigby I 6 A 13 I Can Peters, Catherine Houghton Mifflin I 6 A 4 I Follow Rules at School Swain, Cynthia Benchmark I 8 A 1 I Read Signs Hoban, Tana Scholastic I 8 A 1 In My Garden Cristini, E/Purcelli, L Scholastic 8 A 13 In Our Classroom Smith, A/J Giles/B RandellRigby I 6 A 14 In The Mountains Lassen, Whitney Wright
    [Show full text]
  • University of North Carolina at Asheville
    Archived thesis/research paper/faculty publication from the University of North Carolina Asheville’s NC Docks Institutional Repository: http://libres.uncg.edu/ir/unca/ UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT ASHEVILLE Letters from East Asheville A THESIS SUBMITTED IN CANDIDACY FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF LIBERAL ARTS BY Thomas Maycock ASHEVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA December 2018 i Maycock ARTIST’S STATEMENT The act of writing is inherently presumptuous. Outside the narrow confines of a personal diary, the decision to put pen to paper implies some expectation that others will find the words to be of value. Writers of serious novels aim high, intending to grapple with hard questions, seek deep meaning, or deliver powerful emotional impacts. Novels require a significant commitment on the part of readers, who in turn hope that the rewards will be commensurate with the investment. Poetry also places unique demands on the reader, as extracting meaning and value requires a certain level of attention and engagement. At first glance, the personal essay as a form seems relatively modest in comparison. The stakes are usually lower, and the author only asks minutes of a reader’s time, not hours or days. In reality, though, the personal essay is just as audacious as any other form of creative writing. There is, in fact, something particularly egotistical about the personal essay. Writer E. B. White put it this way in the foreword to a collection of essays entitled Essays of E.B. White: The essayist is a self-liberated man, sustained by the childish belief that everything he thinks about, everything that happens to him, is of general interest.
    [Show full text]
  • Józef Jaskulski
    Narrative Uses of the Topoi of the Western in Post-9/11 American Television Commercials Józef Jaskulski Praca doktorska napisana pod kierunkiem Prof. UW dr. hab. Marka Pary ża WARSZAWA 2018 Table of Contents Introduction: “Pioneers, Outlaws, Indians, and Gas:” The Myth of the Western in Television Ads Since 9/11 ………………………………………………………. 4 Chapter 1: The War on Terror as Frontier Warfare: Figurations of the Old West in Post-9/11 (Para)military Recruitment Commercials ...………….......... 33 1.1. “They're There, Now and Fifty Years From Now”: The Myth of the Cavalry in Post- 9/11 USAF Recruitment Ads ..…….…………………………………. 43 1.2. Defenders, Avengers: Shades of the Alamo in Post-9/11 Border Patrol Recruitment Videos.………………….....…………………………………….. 66 Chapter 2: Liminal Mediation in Times of Crisis: The Presidential Campaigns of George W. Bush and Mitt Romney…………………………............................ 93 2.1.“She Must Be Scared – and So Do You”: The Specter of Ethan Edwards and the 2004 George W. Bush Presidential Ads……………………...……….. 99 2.2. “A Good Man With(out) a Gun”: Mitt Romney’s Presidential Bid and the Legacy of Shane ….………………………………………...………... 130 Chapter 3: Automobiles in the Garden: Cowboys, Homesteaders, and the Pastoral Tendency in Contemporary Car Advertising……………………….. 159 3.1. “Forget There’s People and Things That Ain’t So Simple as This”: Dodge Ram and the Cult of the Cowboy…...……………………………………….. 166 3.2. Towards a Techno-Pastoral: Dodge Ram and the Cult of the Homesteader…..……………………………..………………………... 194 Chapter 4: Consumable Others: Simulations of Ethnicity in Food Industry Advertising in Post-recession America…………………...……………………. 214 2 4.1. Consumable Others: Simulations of Ethnicity in Food Advertising in Post-recession America…………………………………………………… 221 4.2.
    [Show full text]
  • ACLU Facial Recognition PRR Emails Redacted
    Mullaney, Arielle (EPS) From: The Washington Post <[email protected]> Sent: Tuesday, October 16, 2018 10:15 AM To: Brownell, Jeffrey (OGR) Subject: The Daily 202: Kathleen Sebelius stumping with Democrats highlights the rapidly changing politics of health care If you're having trouble reading this, click here. Share: Listen to The Big Idea Kathleen Sebelius stumping with Democrats highlights the rapidly changing politics of health care 1 Kathleen Sebelius, former Health and Human Services secretary, talks with Mandela Barnes, the Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor in Wisconsin, after a campaign event Monday afternoon in Milwaukee. She later rallied in Madison with Tony Evers, the Democrat challenging Gov. Scott Walker. (James Hohmann/The Washington Post) BY JAMES HOHMANN with Breanne Deppisch and Joanie Greve THE BIG IDEA: MILWAUKEE—If you made a list five years ago of Democratic surrogates who candidates in purple states like Wisconsin would want to campaign with, 2 Kathleen Sebelius’s name would not appear. The botched rollout of Obamacare made her politically toxic, and she took the fall as the Obama administration’s scapegoat for the early problems with Healthcare.gov. But fortunes change in politics. A law that cost scores of Democratic lawmakers their seats over four election cycles is now widely seen as an asset. And the former secretary of health and human services was welcomed to the campaign trail on Monday with open arms by Tony Evers, the Democrat challenging Gov. Scott Walker (R-Wis.) in one of the hardest fought contests of 2018. Sebelius reminded a group of Democratic volunteers at a field office of what Sarah Palin used to say about her.
    [Show full text]
  • THE EARLY DAYS: a Sourcebook of Southwestern Region History
    THE EARLY DAYS: A Sourcebook of Southwestern Region History Book 1 Compiled by Edwin A. Tucker Supervisory Management Analyst Division of Operations Cultural Resources Management Report No. 7 USDA Forest Service Southwestern Region September 1989 TABLE OF CONTENTS Cover: An open pine forest covering Smith's Butte, Tusayan National Forest, October 18, 1913. Photo by A. Gaskill. This publication is part of a Southwestern Region series detailing the cultural resources of the Region. Tables Figures Foreword Acknowledgements Editor's Foreword SECTIONS Setting The Scene Correspondence National Forests The Waha Memorandum The Fred Winn Papers Personal Stories Fred Arthur Leon F. Kneipp Richard H. Hanna Tom Stewart Frank E. Andrews Roscoe G. Willson Henry L. Benham Elliott S. Barker Lewis Pyle Robert Springfel C. V. Shearer F. Lee Kirby William H. Woods Edward G. Miller Henry Woodrow Benton S. Rogers Jesse I. Bushnell John D. Guthrie Apache Ranger Meeting Short Histories Over Historic Ground by John D. Guthrie History of Datil National Forest (Anon.) History of Grazing on the Tonto, by Fred Croxen Interviews Fred W. Croxen Quincy Randles Fred Merkle Edward Ancona Morton C. Cheney Stanley F. Wilson Paul Roberts TABLES 1. National Forests in District 3 in 1908 FIGURES 1. Santa Fe Forest Reserve Office in 1902 2. The first Ranger meeting, in 1903 on the Gila Forest Reserve 3. Gila Supervisor McClure and Forest Officers in 1903 4. Old Bear Canyon Ranger Station. Gila National Forest in 1907 5. Supervisor McGlone, Chiricahua N. F. in 1904 6. Tonto Supervisor's cottage at Roosevelt in 1913 7. The combined Gila and Datil Ranger Meeting at Silver City in 1908 8.
    [Show full text]
  • Dying Hard: Reasserting American Strength Through Popular Action Films, 1984-1989
    DYING HARD: REASSERTING AMERICAN STRENGTH THROUGH POPULAR ACTION FILMS, 1984-1989. STERLING CROWE SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS IN HISTORY NIPISSING UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES NORTH BAY, ONTARIO © STERLING CROWE AUGUST 2011 Author’s Declaration Page I hereby declare that I am the sole author of this Major Research Paper. I authorize Nipissing University to lend this Major Research Paper to other institutions or individuals for the purpose of scholarly research. I further authorize Nipissing University to reproduce this Major Research Paper by photocopying or other means, in total or in part, at the request of other institutions or individuals for the purpose of scholarly research. Abstract “Dying Hard: Reasserting American Strength through Popular Action Films, 1984-1989” investigates the ways in which action films of the 1980s articulated federal policy through the gendered rhetoric of the male, white, heterosexual hard-body hero. Embodying foreign and domestic policies of the Reagan administration, the hard-body hero was deployed as a collective symbol of the promoted normative national body. Through an examination of selected action films – Red Dawn, Rambo: First Blood II, Rocky IV, Die Hard, and The Package – this Major Research Paper delineates the desired traits for the normative national body, the federal policies and rhetoric housed. Furthermore, the MRP will investigate the development of a hypermasculine characterization of American strength and identity. IV
    [Show full text]