+
Instructional Video11:43
Curated Video

Pride and Prejudice Part 1: Crash Course Literature

12th - Higher Ed
In which a series about literature, which is wanting of an episode on Jane Austen, gets the first of two episodes. It's Pride and Prejudice, everybody! John Green talks about Pride and Prejudice as a product of Regency England, gives you...
+
Instructional Video11:11
Curated Video

Liberals, Conservatives, and Pride and Prejudice Part 2: Crash Course Literature 412

12th - Higher Ed
This is it! The final episode of CC Literature season 4 is a deeper look at Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice. Today we'll explore the novel's take on materialism, and we'll talk about whether the novel has a liberal or conservative...
+
Instructional Video7:20
Englishing

ESL - Dystopian Literature Characteristics

9th - Higher Ed
What is a dystopia society? What are the characteristics of dystopian literature? What are some examples of dystopia literature? These and more are some of the questions Mr. P. will answer during this lesson. This lesson is designed for...
+
Instructional Video6:59
Curated Video

Explaining Literature with Five W's

3rd - Higher Ed
Explaining Literature with Five W's restates ideas about fictional text by answering who, what, when, where and why questions.
+
Instructional Video11:31
Curated Video

Langston Hughes & the Harlem Renaissance: Crash Course Literature 215

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green teaches you about the poetry of Langston Hughes. Langston Hughes was a poet and playwright in the first half of the 20th century, and he was involved in the Harlem Renaissance, which was a cultural movement among...
+
Instructional Video13:55
Curated Video

1984 by George Orwell, Part 1: Crash Course Literature 401

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green returns for a dystopian new season of Crash Course Literature! We're starting with George Orwell's classic look at the totalitarian state that could be in post-war England. Winston Smith is under the eye of Big...
+
Instructional Video13:03
Curated Video

The Yellow Wallpaper: Crash Course Literature 407

12th - Higher Ed
Today on Crash Course Literature, John Green teaches you about The Yellow Wallpaper, by Charlotte Perkins Gilman. The Yellow Wallpaper tells the story of a woman who is a prisoner in her own home, in the name of caring for her mental...
+
Instructional Video11:11
Curated Video

Pride and Prejudice, Part 1: Crash Course Literature 411

12th - Higher Ed
In which a series about literature, which is wanting of an episode on Jane Austen, gets the first of two episodes. It's Pride and Prejudice, everybody! John Green talks about Pride and Prejudice as a product of Regency England, gives you...
+
Instructional Video10:40
Curated Video

Liberals, Conservatives, and Pride and Prejudice, Part 2: Crash Course Literature 412

12th - Higher Ed
This is it! The final episode of CC Literature season 4 is a deeper look at Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice. Today we'll explore the novel's take on materialism, and we'll talk about whether the novel has a liberal or conservative...
+
Instructional Video11:35
Curated Video

Gender, Guilt, and Fate - Macbeth, Part 2: Crash Course Literature 410

12th - Higher Ed
This week on Crash Course Literature, John Green is continuing to talk about Shakespeare's dark, bloody, Scottish play, Macbeth. This time around, we're looking at the play's characters operate, how the play deals with gender, and the...
+
Instructional Video3:21
Curated Video

Is Twitter the Newest Form of Literature?

12th - Higher Ed
Everyone is familiar with Twitter, the uber-popular micro-blogging site, which limits the user to 140 characters. The tweet is perfect for sharing your favorite links and updating the world about your life, but it might also be the...
+
Instructional Video4:12
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Mining literature for deeper meanings - Amy E. Harter

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Writing a great English paper can be tough because literature doesn't always reveal its deeper meanings immediately. You might not know Mr. Darcy's true feelings for Elizabeth Bennett in Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice or grasp the...
+
Instructional Video11:31
Tom Nicholas

Modernism - WTF? An introduction to Modernism in art and literature

12th - Higher Ed
Modernism; it can be confusing. So, in today's What The Theory? I wanted to provide something of a modernism crash course. We'll be looking at many different forms of modernist art as well as a tiny bit of modernist architecture and...
+
Instructional Video12:01
Schooling Online

Powering Through Prose: Ray Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451 - Theme of Literature and Writing

3rd - Higher Ed
Imagine living in a world where simply reading a good book could get you killed! This lesson explores the theme of Literature and Writing in Ray Bradbury’s novel, Fahrenheit 451. Watch how Guy Montag’s awakening to the joy of literature...
+
Instructional Video3:56
Curated Video

Interpreting Literature

3rd - Higher Ed
“Interpreting Literature” looks at the technique of making meaning from what an author writes both literally and figuratively within a literary work. This skill is known as interpretation. Readers can use various techniques to interpret...
+
Instructional Video4:32
Catalyst University

Finding Journal Articles FAST! | Using Mendeley Literature Search

Higher Ed
In this video, I briefly explain how to use Mendeley's Literature Search tool to find specific peer-reviewed journal articles FAST.
+
Instructional Video3:55
Curated Video

Contemporary Chinese Literature

12th - Higher Ed
Chinese scholar and literary translator Michael Berry (UCLA) gives us some recommendations for stimulating contemporary Chinese literature.
+
Instructional Video6:08
Cerebellum

The Elements Of Fiction - Types Of Literature

9th - 12th
The Elements of Fiction - Ernest Hemingway, Mark Twain, Robert Louis Stevenson . These are just three of the renowned authors whose work is cited in The Elements of Fiction, which explores: Plot elements, character, conflict, flashback,...
+
Instructional Video5:02
Curated Video

Society's Impact on Literature

3rd - Higher Ed
A video entitled “Society’s Impact on Literature” which evaluates the level of impact that society has on literature.
+
Instructional Video8:34
Oxford Comma

Why Literature Students Read Freud While Psychology Students Don't

9th - 12th
While many of his theories have been debunked and disproven, Freud continues to have a massive influence on literary criticism. How did a man who was never fully focused on literature forever alter the way we discuss it? And what are we...
+
Instructional Video5:54
Wonderscape

Hyperbole: The Art of Exaggeration in Literature

K - 5th
New ReviewThis video unpacks hyperbole, a figure of speech that uses intentional exaggeration for emphasis or humor. It demonstrates hyperbole's widespread use in literature, referencing works by Mark Twain and Lewis Carroll, and includes an...
+
Instructional Video5:22
Wonderscape

Decoding Paradoxes: Contradictions in Literature

K - 5th
New ReviewThis video explores paradoxes in literature, explaining how they present self-contradictory statements that reveal deeper truths. It discusses examples like "wise fool" and "bittersweet" and examines George Orwell's use of paradox in...
+
Instructional Video6:59
Curated Video

How and Why We Read: Crash Course English Literature

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green kicks off the Crash Course Literature mini series with a reasonable set of questions. Why do we read? What's the point of reading critically. John will argue that reading is about effectively communicating with other...
+
Instructional Video5:27
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why should you read "One Hundred Years of Solitude"? - Francisco Diez-Buzo

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Gabriel Garcia Marquez's novel "One Hundred Years of Solitude" brought Latin American literature to the forefront of the global imagination and earned Garcia Marquez the 1982 Nobel Prize for Literature. What makes the novel so...

Other popular searches