Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Women’s Literature Study

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August 3, 2015 By Jennifer Lambert 28 Comments

I spent a summer minimester reading and discussing women’s issues with my favorite professor (who was a man with a daughter) and only half a dozen girls. It was a small, intimate class and I learned a lot about myself and who I wanted to be.

One of my favorite college courses was a Women’s Literature Study.

I have three daughters and a son. I want them to love women authors too. I want my girls to grow into strong women. I want my son to be respectful of women.

While some of these titles have graphic content, they are important works to understand women around the world and how we struggle for identity, to be heard.

Throughout history, men have had power and control.

Women were in the background, in the kitchen, in the nursery, hidden away from the world, unseen and unheard.

Many of these authors challenge social, cultural, and political ideas. Their voices will not be silenced.

This is a book list for a mature reader. I read most of these titles in college and beyond. These would be great options for a book club.

I look forward to reading these books again and discussing them with my daughters when they’re ready.

Women's Literature Study - Top Ten Women Authors

My Top Ten Women Authors

1. Margaret Atwood

I love Atwood’s writing style and her focus on gender politics. When people ask what my favorite book is, I am quick to say Surfacing. It was a life-changing read for me.

2. Amy Tan

Spellbinding stories of Chinese and Chinese-American women and their struggles as mothers and daughters and to be seen and heard throughout history.

3. Sandra Cisneros

A writer focusing on the cultural identity of Chicana women amidst the isolation of misogyny and white American dominance.

4. Julia Alvarez

She grew up as a Dominican American in New York. She focuses primarily on issues of cultural assimilation and identity, as evident in the combination of personal and political tones in her writing.

5. Isabel Allende

Her works focus on mystical realism as she writes from personal experience, focusing on South American women‘s relationships.

6. Barbara Kingsolver

She focuses on topics such as social justice, biodiversity, and human interaction with their communities and environments.

7. Alice Walker

In all her written works, Walker examines the creative inheritance of one’s maternity. She has been an activist all her adult life: for civil rights, the poor, women – all living beings. She coined the term “Womanism” as the black women’s struggle for gender equality, as opposed to the term “Feminism” that primarily focuses on white women.

8. Kate Chopin

Regional Cajun and Creole race interests and feminism mark Chopin’s writing style. Specifically The Awakening is recommended for its frank approach to sexual themes. The main character leaves her marriage to have an affair. It was shocking for the times and received much criticism. Desiree’s Baby focuses on matters of race and moralism.

9. Jhumpa Lahiri

An Indian American author, born in London and raised in Rhode Island. She highlights the immigrant experience, the clash of cultures and assimilation, and the poignant, tangled ties between generations.

10. Azar Nafisi

After resigning from her job as a professor at a university in Tehran due to repressive policies, the author secretly gathered seven female students to read forbidden Western classics every week in her home. She wrote about it in Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books. Celebrate our freedom of education and learn about the desperation of these women to learn.

Some other Good Books About Women:

  • Kabul Beauty School by Deborah Rodriguez

The author originally traveled to Afghanistan to offer humanitarian aid. Soon, she learned she could create an extraordinary community of women by empowering them through the art of beauty.

  • Tess of the D’Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy

This novel challenged the sexual morals of late Victorian England. The themes and events certainly offer many discussion opportunities.

  • Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel

The main character’s voice is silenced. She is only able to express herself when she cooks. Esquivel employs magical realism and writes like a screenplay. Setting is turn-of-the-century Mexico.

There are so many wonderful writers to name that it was hard to narrow it down to a top ten!

Who are your favorite female authors?

Literature Study (or Book Report) Notebooking Pages
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Fahrenheit 451 Unit Study

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July 13, 2015 By Jennifer Lambert 3 Comments

Fahrenheit 451 is one of my all-time favorite books.

I remember reading Fahrenheit 451 (and other amazing literature) in Ms. Walker’s 10th grade English class. I sat behind ginger curly-haired Mandy, second desk from the front, on the far left, away from the door, by the window.

When I became an English teacher, I was thrilled to teach 10th grade, my favorite literature curriculum. I would read the last section aloud to the class. I ended up emotionally drained, teary-eyed, hoarse. My students applauded my performance.

Fahrenheit 451 Literature Unit Study

Fahrenheit 451 Unit Study

Liz didn’t particularly care for this book at first.

Fahrenheit 451 Unit

Here is a partial reading list for this year.

I introduced the novel with background studies on McCarthyism, science fiction, politics, and socio-economics after WWII. It’s important to understand what audience the novel was written for. And it’s still relevant today!

Culture

We related the characters and society in Fahrenheit 451 to our modern society. We identified issues in current events and history. We discussed how events in history could lead society to destruction.

We discussed what’s important to our society and how we can be a light in the darkness. We don’t have a TV and we go screen-free often to remind ourselves to focus on relationships. We periodically clear our schedule to rest and revive our minds and souls.

We compared/contrasted and discussed these characters:

  • Clarisse to modern teens.
  • Montag to fireman, husbands, adults today.
  • Mildred and her friends to modern wives and mothers.
  • Beatty as establishment/government/authority/present.
  • Faber as protector/mentor/past.
  • Granger as revolutionary/future.

We discussed value of life with some current events like abortion, euthanasia, life support, medical ethics.

These conversations led us into discussion about how religion plays a role in the novel and in our lives.

Religion

There are allusions to the Bible throughout Fahrenheit 451.

We read Ecclesiastes. Montag tries to memorize this chapter and it’s certainly a great theme for his character.

We skipped over most of the questions and discussions in the Progeny Press study guide. They were getting just ridiculous. I’m all for allusions to the Bible, but some of the ones they asked for were just a stretch. We skipped sections of the guide and completed others.

Faber’s description of Christ and Christianity spotlights all that’s wrong with churchianity.

“Lord, how they’ve changed it in our ‘parlors’ these days. Christ is one of the ‘family’ now. I often wonder if God recognizes His own son the way we’ve dressed him up, or is it dressed him down? He’s a regular peppermint stick now, all sugar-crystal and saccharine when he isn’t making veiled references to certain commercial products that every worshiper absolutely needs.” p. 77-78

The denominations and schisms within the American Church confuse truth seekers. I have spent most of my life looking for the Real Church.

Too often, church is disguised as entertainment: rock concerts, fortune tellers, get-rich-quick schemes, dating services, finance classes, social events.

We’re learning church history and reading stories about missionaries. We’re paying attention to current events. We’re frightened about the state of the American church. We’re seeing through history how liberalism and other “isms” have affected so many countries.

History

We discussed historical and political events that occurred leading up to the 1950s.

There was a worldwide fear of war after WWII that led to McCarthyism, Communism, the Cold War, and the popularity of science fiction novels, shows, and comics.

Our theme the last few months is summarized by the character Faber:

“I’m one of the innocents who could have spoken up and out when no one would listen to the ‘guilty’ but I did not speak and thus became guilty myself.” p.78

This is also discussed during Nazi Germany and during Communist regime and we read many stories about heroes who spoke up during these horrific times. It is good to revisit the book of Esther in the Bible. Since we love comics and sci fi, we’re discussing how they give kids hope in a fallen world. Of course, our ultimate hope is Jesus, but I don’t see anything wrong with these fictions. They offer a great political commentary in a pretty package.

We love learning history through literature. So many voices with different perspectives and ideas.

Literature

Lots of great allusions to poets and political literature. Many allusions to the Bible and mythology. Offers great opportunity for literary analysis and research.

One of the reasons we began homeschooling is because I wanted to control my children’s education. I love literature. I wanted to teach my children to love reading. I wanted them to love learning. I saw what schools did to children and I didn’t want that for our family.

“The public itself stopped reading of its own accord.” p. 83

I have a hard time respecting people who don’t like literature or art.

“The good writers [and artists] touch life often. The mediocre ones run a quick hand over her. The bad ones rape her and leave her for the flies.” p. 79

Of course, we discussed censorship. We discussed also how TV and Internet displace reading literature. I was against owning Kindles and iPads a long time. It is very difficult to have balance with so much technology. I encourage my kids to experience life and to read to expand their minds. Sitting stationary in front of a screen is a last resort.

A list of resources that have similar themes in Fahrenheit 451 (viewer discretion):

Videos and Other Books

  • The Book of Eli
  • Mad Max
  • The Giver and the book quartet by Lois Lowry
  • Planet of the Apes
  • Divergent
  • The Terminator
  • The Stand by Stephen King
  • 12 Monkeys
  • Red Dawn
  • Swan Song by Robert McCammon
  • Children of Men
  • Equilibrium

Notebooking

We used several different graphic organizers and various notebooking page templates to learn about Fahrenheit 451. 

  • Venn Diagrams
  • Characterization Pages
  • Plot Charts
  • Theme Information
  • Literary Terms
  • Outlines

This is how I approach most novels I teach. I look at overall themes and how I can incorporate them into our other studies. I pull in relevant Bible passages, missionary stories, church history, current events to show how the literature stands up throughout generations to teach us wisdom.

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Fairy Tales Unit

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August 26, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 3 Comments

This month, we’re reading fairy tales!

fairy tales

Fairy tales are part of our history and literature reading this quarter with Tapestry of Grace Year 3.

We didn’t really have time for crafts since we’re still on our summer schedule and busy with the garden, traveling on vacation, and doing lots of fun activities outside our home, but we notebooked and discussed the lovely language and art in the books we read.

We researched the Grimm brothers and Hans Christian Andersen and how they gathered their tales for their collections. Fascinating stuff.

Notebooking:

  • Homeschool Share Fairy Tale notebooking
  • character notebooking from The Notebooking Fairy
  • compare/contract form from The Notebooking Fairy – great for comparing/contrasting the traditional tale with a modern story or movie
  • Emergent Readers from the Measured Mom
  • Story map from Amy’s Wandering

Books:

  • Grimm’s Complete Fairy Tales
  • An Illustrated Treasury of Hans Christian Andersen’s Fairy Tales
  • Irish Fairy Tales and Folklore by W. B. Yeats
  • Nordic Tales
  • The Classic Fairy Tales by Norton
  • The Complete Fairy Tales by George MacDonald 
  • The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales by Jon Scieszka
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