The McGraw-Hill ReaderMcGraw-Hill, 1985 - 686 páginas Addressing the continuing interest in core liberal arts issues, interdisciplinary themes, multicultural perspectives, and critical thinking, THE MCGRAW-HILL READER provides students with a full range of quality prose works spanning various ages, cultures, and subjects. The finely-tuned editorial apparatus encourages students to respond actively to the essays, to formulate their own critical judgments, and to develop in writing their reactions to and perspectives on the thematic concerns of the selections. The Seventh Edition features thirty-eight new essays that address current issues such as the quality of education, the role of technology, and the impact of media. The text concludes with a new appendix on writing a research paper. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 81
Página 195
... mind of the scholar by his eyes and ears , through his affections , imagination , and reason ; it is poured into his mind and is sealed up there in perpetuity , by propounding and repeating it , by questioning and requestioning , by ...
... mind of the scholar by his eyes and ears , through his affections , imagination , and reason ; it is poured into his mind and is sealed up there in perpetuity , by propounding and repeating it , by questioning and requestioning , by ...
Página 462
... mind takes charge instead and goes off on some alien vision . The mind has such a congenial time that it forgets what set it going . Van Gogh and Corot and Michelangelo are three different painters , but if the mind is undisciplined and ...
... mind takes charge instead and goes off on some alien vision . The mind has such a congenial time that it forgets what set it going . Van Gogh and Corot and Michelangelo are three different painters , but if the mind is undisciplined and ...
Página 649
... mind . This summer his health was poor and his spirits were low . For such a temper , Adams was not the best companion , since his own gaiety was not folle ; but he risked going now and then to the studio on Mont Parnasse to draw him ...
... mind . This summer his health was poor and his spirits were low . For such a temper , Adams was not the best companion , since his own gaiety was not folle ; but he risked going now and then to the studio on Mont Parnasse to draw him ...
Contenido
Personal Narrative | 1 |
MAXINE HONG KINGSTON The Woman Warrior | 9 |
JAMES THURBER The Night the Bed Fell | 16 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 109 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
American Anaïs Nin Analyze asked attitude beautiful become bourgeoisie civilization culture dark Darwin's finches describe earth economic effect elephant English examples Explain eyes face father feel Freud geese George Orwell girl give hand heard Henry Reed human idea important Indian Indian Imperial Police Isaac Bashevis Singer kind Kiowas language learned live Llanstephan look manners marriage Maya Angelou means migraine mind modern moral morning mother narrative nature Negro never night novel paragraph perhaps person philistine Plato political QUESTIONS Rainy Mountain reason seemed sense sentence Sisyphus social society story street T. H. HUXLEY tell thesis things thought tion tone trees village whole woman women words Write an essay young