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FINAL EXAM ESSAY QUESTIONSYour Final Exam will take place in our regular classroom on Monday, May 8, 2017, from 10:10 to 12:10 PM. It will consist of two parts: quote identifications and essay questions. PART I: Quote Identifications Using the quotation list generated by the class, ten quotations will be listed on the test. You will need to identify ten of them by title and author name. In addition, you will need to write a short answer response explaining why the quotation is important in terms of the author's view, the aesthetic issues inherent in the piece, the plot or purpose of the piece, or the social implications of the piece. You may also identify just the title and/or author of each of the remaining quotations for 1 point extra credit per title or author. You will need to prepare an essay exam prep card using the following specifications:
Pick ONE of the following questions for your essay. Be sure to prepare an outline that answers all parts of the question. 1. Twentieth-Century American women of color offer readers insight into the unique challenges they face because of both their race and gender. Using three authors, document how race and gender can either work at cross purposes or combine to add an even larger burden than is felt by male members of that race or white women in general. 2. In families, women play any number of roles: wife, mother, daughter, aunt, sister, niece, or even "the other woman." Explore the complexities of family relationships as described by three writers in their works and build a specific argument around the theme. 3. The personal desires and ambitions of women are every bit as strong as those of men, but the depictions of women who pursue these desires and ambitions show a marked difference in how women may pursue them. In some cases, social convention fetters these ambitions, while in other cases, left unfettered, women may pursue goals in very different ways than their male peers. Using three writers, document how women pursue their goals, focusing on how the social norms that affect women impact (or fail to impact) the pursuit of these goals. 4.The twentieth century saw the rules that govern poetry shatter under the weight of experimentation in both form and content. Using three poets, show how these new freedoms unleashed women to pursue new forms of expression, be it in style, theme, or both.
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