Our responses to the Best American Essays of 2019
Critical Responses
Teacher’s Note from Ms. Pate
Critical responses permit us to enter into conversations with great writers, wrestling with their ideas in a kind of exploratory dialogue. Check out Ryan’s response to the limitations of likeability, Noah’s dialogue with Alexander Chee on how fictionalizing yourself helps you to know yourself, Matti’s and Gray’s distinct explorations of environmental writing, Irene’s challenge to Michelle Alexander’s conception of resistance, Jay’s and Edward’s inquiry into Jia Tolentino’s exposé of incel culture, and Lizzy, Teddy, and E-Jun’s various treatments of Rabih Alameddine’s critique of diversity initiatives in publishing.
Not only are the ideas themselves engaging, but these essays are excellent models for authentic, analytical writing. Want to see ways to integrate evidence well? Would you like to see examples of students who warrant their claims, by providing clear connections between their claims, evidence, and reasoning? Are you wondering how analytical, critical responses can be grounded in personal connections? These essays are worth a read if any of these questions apply to you!
Read it
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Read it 〰️

What a Book Represents About Individuality
A Critical Response to Death of an English Major by Gary Taylor
“We must all savor, pounce upon, explore, be in awe of — and most importantly — celebrate people based on the unique diction that make up their book.”

The English Major Lens
A Critical Response to Death of an English Major by Gary Taylor
“…an extreme focus on generalities kills particularity and glosses over the complexities of our world. However, an extreme focuson particularities inhibits connection and ignores major aspects of identity.”

Damsel Deceased: The Professors Accolade
A Critical Response to Death of an English Major by Gary Taylor
“As a professor responsible for hundreds of students, Taylor was aware one could die. College aged kids are known to be impulsive, and not the most responsible — accidents can happen, and injury or even death is a possibility. But he didn’t imagine someone would be shot and killed.”