English 207: Appalachian Literature  

Midterm Study Guide

Dr. Tina L. Hanlon

Ferrum College, English Department

Please note: If you have questions or see mistakes in this study guide, contact the professor as soon as possible.

General Guidelines:

Short Answer Section: 5 questions (5 points each)
One point is earned by naming the author and title of the work (if not given in the question). Only literary works discussed in class will appear in the short answer section but you may mention other works if that makes sense for the question. The remaining points are given for a brief discussion of the significance of the item or quotation in the question. 

This sample comes from American literature that is not Appalachian, but it contains good illustrations of strengths and weaknesses in answers for the short answer portion of the text.

Sample Short Answer Question: Discuss briefly the significance of the broken unicorn.

One-point answer (too brief; doesn’t discuss significance; not a complete sentence; author not identified):

a figurine that breaks in The Glass Menagerie

Two-point answer (brief identification but nothing on significance):

Williams, The Glass Menagerie. This is Laura's favorite figurine in her collection of glass animals.

Three-point answer (good on significance of item but nothing precise on how the item relates to main characters or plot or period/genre of literature. The key word "broken" has not been explained. Also there is awkward wording in this answer and the play is called a "story.")

The unicorn in Williams’ The Glass Menagerie symbolizes the unique virgin, fragile, and beautiful aspects of the young person in the story. It represents the unreal fantasy in real life circumstances.

Four-point answer (too much plot summary and not precise enough on thematic significance):

The glass unicorn was one of Laura's favorite figurines in her menagerie of glass animals. She lived with her mother and brother and she was afraid to go out into the world because she felt self-conscious about her physical handicap. Her collection at home was very important to her. Laura and Jim were dancing when they knocked it over and broke it. When that happened she said the unicorn would now be like the other animals. Since she had liked Jim since they were in high school together, and he was helping her feel more self-confident, she gave him the unicorn, but he told her he was engaged to another girl, so the play ends sadly.

Five-point answer (gets right to the point about the significance of the unicorn):

The unicorn is Laura's favorite glass piece in The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams. It represents her uniqueness and virginity. However, while she and Jim are dancing, the unicorn falls and loses its horn, making it just one of the other horses. This represents Laura's feeling that she is now like everyone else; she is dancing despite her handicap.
 

Essay Question (25% of test grade):

Tips on avoiding common pitfalls on tests of this type with paragraph and essay questions:

Assignments from beginning of semester to Oct. 12:

Higgs, vol. 1, chap. 1. Roots, Exploration, Settlers (you can skip Speer, 16-30). Read in vol. 2, “Land and Language” by Jim Wayne Miller, p. 484. 

George Ella Lyon Assignment

Jo Carson Assignment

Gurney Norman: "Fat Monroe" in Higgs, beginning of vol. 2, 351-56.

"Where Daniel Boone Stood," in Higgs, vol. 1, 315-18.

"Snow Day" is a very, very short story you can read online.

Lee Smith short story "Between the Lines" in Higgs, 428-37

In Bloodroot (on reserve in library and in web site below):
Lee Smith: "Terrain of the Heart." 278-81; background in Smith's web site at http://www.leesmith.com/ (You can read "Terrain of the Heart" on the web site under Articles)

Breece d'J Pancake assignment for 9/26: "The First Day of Winter"

Harriet Arnow assignment for 9/28: "The Washerwoman" in Higgs, 383-89

James Still assignment for Oct. 3-5: River of Earth

James Still poems and background: Higgs, pp. 133-35, 393, 677-78, 683, 741; Lee Smith's "Terrain of the Heart"; AppLit Bibliography and Study Guide; links on AppLit's Author Links page, including James Still Homepage. Other poems (on 2 pages) distributed in class.

Ruth White, Belle Prater's Boy

Higgs, vol. 2, "Ghost Story by Kathryn Stripling Byer, 453-43, and "Death Crown" by Robert Morgan, 481

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