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Monday, October 19, 2015

What is Literary Merit?

            What is literary merit, anyway? The biggest question to wander around the minds of eager teenagers in AP Literature and Composition classes-it definitely crosses my mind at least 500 times a day. Even with that over exaggeration, though, as AP Lit (it’s lit!!) students, we need to analyze the books that we read in order to utilize them correctly for the AP Exam in May 2016. So… what books are worthy enough for this title?
            There has to be a starting point-the first ever book that has been credited to being a literary merit in order for other books to follow, right? Wrong. Literary merit is a very subjective term where only he (or she) who reads it can figure out if the book is worthy or not. You all are going to hate me for saying this, but no matter how addicting the Hunger Games series is, these books are not works of literary merit. Let’s not get too rowdy now here, I am just stating a well-known fact. Yes, I have read the series and they were very addicting. But, that’s all that they were. Entertainment is not a viable reason for works of literary merit. One of the biggest viable reasons for a work of literary merit is ambiguity. Having multiple meanings for one topic gives the reader more of a chance to explain him or herself in a perspective that no one else sees, and maybe even enlighten those people.         
            Literary merit is such a vague term that no one can ever put a solid definition on it. However, that is the whole point adding this term to the AP Exam. According to College Board,  the major reason to add in this vague term is because they want students to showcase the skills they learned their AP Lit classes through complex books that are considered of literary merit. Neat, right? The horrible organization that hands out horrible exams like the SATs and AP Exams actually care about students!! Shocker!!

            That’s all I have for now. Keep checking back for more updates!

EG

Sunday, October 4, 2015

Introduction

This is my new blog! Honestly, I wish anyone luck to whoever attempts at reading this because it will probably be atrocious since my analyzation of literature is pretty unintelligent. 
 On the fourth day of school, we had to write a well-detailed paragraph on what kind of reader we were, and I wrote vividly on my experiences with reading. I love to read, but I do not like to read actual literature. And I am talking about the Charles Dickens, Jane Austen, and Richard Wright kind of literature. I was never into that. I liked to read any fiction book and I would fall in love with every single one, which is where my love for Disney comes from, soon concentrated into Frozen. You will soon find out that I can connect anything to this movie.
My goal for this blog is to expand my explanations on literature. I want to learn how to analyze good literature and dig deeper than the surface. I hope that with this blog and with my classmates’ blogs as well, I will learn how to create those holes to dig and finally get the feeling of accomplishment and confidence in my English skills.

            No matter what happens though, all I want to do is to learn. Learn new ways and new perspectives to expand my horizons on what other people are thinking, even if it is wrong. Who knows, some of you may think the same and be influenced by my childish blog. I am just trying to make literature fun again, even if that includes unnecessary gifs that may or may not connect to the topic at hand. Hope you enjoy and stick around!

EG
http://rack.3.mshcdn.com/media/ZgkyMDEzLzExLzAxL2ZiL3JlYWRpbmdpY2FyLjg2YTc4LmdpZgpwCXRodW1iCTg1MHg4NTA-CmUJanBn/02f11443/959/reading-icarly.jpg