Jeremy Greene
Chelmsford High School
worldhistoryteacher@hotmail.com
WHAP Summer Reading and Video List 2010
All eras – main focus 1750-present
Lesson Format: What follows is my summer reading and video assignment for my 12th grade WHAP course. This is always a work in progress so email me at anytime to get an updated version.
Please note I do not let student’s choose books that have been made into movies or mini-series (so for example the Ladies #1 Detective Agency books have been taken off the reading list – others might want to add such books to their list).
Also, many of the books listed in extra credit will be making their way to regular credit for next year (as I said – work in progress!)
The purpose of this assignment is to get them interested in world history. This year I had the summer reading due after April break in the hopes they would do it over the summer and then during the year pick up one or two books to do for extra credit. This did not work so I have flipped due dates with David Christian’s This Fleeting World which I used this year as an introduction into history. Next year, This Fleeting World will be due after April break and used as a review. And the free choice books and videos will be front-loaded with a seminar day – hopefully this will create the excitement around a few books / authors and movies / directors – so students will hopefully read books and watch movies over Christmas break, for instance.
Also, the Crosby book will be carved up next year into three separate quizzes (all quizzes are open note – notes that if I wish I can collect). So there will be 3 different due dates for that book next year. You’ll note that section 3 is due first. This is because I start with 1914- (contact me if you want to know why)
Of the required books, the kids enjoy Stewart Gordon’s book the most. If you can I would urge you to give it a shot.
And, no, I have not read them all!
Summer Reading and Viewing for AP World History.
Thank you for signing up for AP World History (affectionately referred to as WHAP). We will all be reading four books of outside reading for the course and you’ll also be required to watch some movies:
1) A book from the list provided (submitted by the last meeting of the second week of school)
2) A video pairing – see list below. (submitted by the last meeting of class of the second week of school)
3) Alfred Crosby’s Children of the Sun (Finish section 3 by 10/10, section 1 by 11/11 and section 2 by 2/2 – there will be 3 quizzes using this book)
4) Stewart Gordon’s When Asia was the World (Finish by the Friday the week after Holiday break – first week in January)
5) David Christian’s This Fleeting World published by Berkshire Publishing, 2007. (Finish by end of April break). The book is a quick read - 120 pages long (92 pages of text) – but hard to find. So plan accordingly.
6) There is plenty of extra credit available!!!
(I am sending a request to the public library to order the books and videos on the list – all but a handful can be bought on-line, nearly all are available through inter-library loan.)
1+2) For the Christian and Crosby books:
For each section of the book (there are three), please type a one page summary single spaced of the main points and arguments made by the author. You may use YOUR notes[1] – 6 single sided pages for the quizzes
Also, write how the content touches upon the five themes of the course. No more than a page typed! See sample below.
The five themes of the course are described on page 5 of the course description, found here:
http://www.collegeboard.com/prod_downloads/ap/students/worldhistory...
The AP course website is at this page:
http://www.collegeboard.com/student/testing/ap/sub_worldhist.html
Sample work page for theme page:
Themes (Note many sections will tackle only one or two themes!):
1. Interaction between humans and the environment:
Write information covered in the chapter that fits into this theme: demography and disease, migrations, patterns of settlement, technology (as listed in the Course Description – see url)
note form is ok, so are bullets
2. Development and interaction of culture:
Do the same as you did for theme #1 for theme #2
3. same as #1+2
4. same as #1+2
5. same as #1+2
(OVER)
1a) Also for the Christian book:
From the “Worth Debating” and “Thought Experiment” choose three of them and answer the question posed in no more than 2 pages. Submit this to turnitin.com by Friday after April break.
3) For the Gordon book:
I recommend reading the last chapter to begin and end your reading – chapter 10.
Take notes on each explorer / chapter as you see fit, but no more than one page for each – Chapters 1-9.
You will have a timed open note quiz on one of the chapters.
Secondly, take notes on the following themes – 1 page each:
1) Religion
2) commodities – books, silk (robes!), spices, etc.
3) communication between people of different languages and cultures
There will be a timed quiz, using YOUR NOTES on this as well. You will pass in your notes with the quiz.
4) For the supplemental reading – please, see the assignment attached.
5) For video viewing – please, see attached
6) Additionally the following books will be helpful for learning about world history – can be kept in the water closet!:
a) Larry Gonick’s Cartoon Histories of the Universe
b) William and J.R. McNeill, The Human Web
c) Judy Jones and William Wilson, An Incomplete Education
d) David Kidder and Noah Oppenheim, The Intellectual Devotional
e) Eric Sass and Steve Wiegand, The Mental Floss History of the World
7) And for your desk (take it out of the water closet!):
William and J.R. McNeill, The Human Web – this is probably the best book to compare to Felipe Fernandez-Armesto’s The World (your textbook!)in its different judgments and set-up.
World History Fiction/Graphic booksfootnote"">[2]
1.
“Other”
books not on the list are acceptable WITH PERMISSION
2.
No double
dipping – you cannot read a book you have already read or are going to read
this year for a class at CHS. This
will result in a zero!
3.
Shorter
books are often combined with an “and” that means you must read both!
4.
You may
read extra books off the lists for extra credit after you complete the required
assignment (see attached form).
Michelle Abeng, No Telephone to Heaven or Abeng and Jamaica Kincaid, Small Island
Marquerite Abouet, Aya trilogy (read all of them)
Chinua Achebe, Things Fall Apart* and D.T. Niane, Sundiata
Chinua Achebe, Anthills of the Savannah or Arrow of God\
Chinua Achebe, Girls at War and Home and Exile
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Purple Hibiscus or Half a Yellow Sun*
Aravind Adiga, White Tiger or Between the Assassinations
Daniel Alarcon, War by Candlelight or Lost City Radio
Rabih Alemeddine, The Hakawati or Koolaids or I, the Divine
Sherman Alexie, The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven (may be done for extra credit)
Monica Ali, Brick Lane*
Julia Alvarez, In the Name of Salome or Before We Were Free and How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents or Yo!
Nadeem Aslam, The Wasted Vigil or Maps for Lost Lovers or Season of the Rain Birds
Tariq Ali, Shadows of a Pomegranate Tree*
Isabel Allende, Zorro* or the House of Spirits or Daughter of Fortune or others by same author
Hannan Al-Shaykh, Beirut Blues
Tahmima Anam, A Golden Age
Kim Antieau, Broken Moon* and read articles about honor killings in Pakistan
Uwem Apkan, Say You’re One of Them
Alaa al Aswany, Chicago
Mariano Azuela, The Underdogs
Miriam Ba, So Long a Letter and a book by Chinua Achebe or at least 100 pages from Apkan, Say You’re One of Them
Adam Bagdasarian, Forgotten Fire
Stephen Barnett, The Road to Makokota
Carolyn Baugh, The View from the Garden City*
William Bayer, Tangier* or Isabelle
Sandra Benitez, Bitter Grounds or The Weight of All Things
Medea Benjamin, Don’t Be Afraid of Gringo
Tom Bissel, God Lives in St. Petersburg
Heinrich Boll, Children are Civilians Too*
Tom Bradby, The Master of Rain or his other novel for extra credit
Mark Brazaitis, Steal My Heart or The River of Lost Voices
Tessa Bridal, Tree of Red Stars*
Geraldine Brooks, The Tree of Red Stars or Year of Wonders or others by same author
Robert Olen Butler, A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain*
Robero Calasso, The Ruin of Kasch* or Ka
Jung Chang, Wild Swans
J.M. Coetzee, Life and Times of Michael K or others by same author
Evan Connell, Lost in Udar Pradesh
Anita Desai, Clear Light of Day
Tsitsi Dangarembga, Nervous Conditions or The Book of Not
Edwidge Danticat, Brother, I’m Dying or The Farmer of Bones or Krik? Krak! or Breath, Eyes, Memory
Louis de Bernieres, Birds Without Wings
Guy Delisle, two of the following: Burma Chronicles, Pyongyang, Shenzhen (graphic)
Kiran Desai, The Inheritance of Loss
Sharon Draper, Copper Sun*
Alan Drew, Gardens of Water*
Eileen Drew, The Ivory Crocodile or Blue Taxis and Paul Eggers’s The Departure Lounge
Stella Pope Duarte, If I Die in Juarez
Dave Eggars, What is the What*
Paul Eggers, Saviors or The Departure Lounge and Eileen Drew’s Blue Taxis
Robert Elegant, Mandarin or Dynasty* or Manchu*
Shusako Endo, Samurai* or Silence
E. M. Forster, A Passage to India*
Frederick Forsyth, The Dogs of War*
Ben Fountain, Brief Encounters with Che Guevara (you can skip the last story)*
George MacDonald Fraser, Flashman or Flashman in the Great Game or any of the Flashman Papers set in the non-west for regular credit and any for extra credit.
Carlos Fuentes, Crystal Frontier* or The Orange Tree* or others by same author
Josten Gaardner, Sophie’s World*
Eduardo Galeano, Genesis or Faces and Masks or Century of the Wind
Nicole Galland, Crossed*
Jason Goodwin, The Janissary Tree* or The Snake Stone or The Bellini Card
Nadine Gordimer, The Lying Days* or Burger’s Daughter* or others* by same author
Amitav Ghosh, Sea of Poppies or In an Antique Land or Shadow Lines or The Glass Palace or others
Anthony Grey, Saigon*
Laila Halaby, West of the Jordan
Moshin Hamid, Moth Smoke or The Reluctant Fundamentalist
Muhammad Hanif, The Case of Exploding Mangoes
Le Ly Hayslip, When Heaven and Earth Changed Places
Merle Hodge, Laetitia and Crick Crack, Monkey
Tess Uriza Holthe, When the Elephants Dance*
Duong Thu Huong, Paradise of the Blind
Mark Jacobs, Stone Cowboy
Hala Deeb Jabbour, A Woman of Nazareth*
Ha Jin, Waiting*
Lloyd Jones, Mr. Pip or Biografi
Yasmina Khadra, The Attack* or The Swallows of Kabul or The Sirens of Baghdad or In the Name of God or Wolf Dreams or any of the inspector Llob mysteries
Uzma Aslam Khan, Trespassing
Richard Kim, Lost Names and/or Sook Nyul Choi, The Year of Impossible Goodbyes and/or Linda Sue Park, When My Name was
Keoko and/or Yoko Kawahima Watkins,
So Far From the Bamboo Grove (read at
least 2 of the 4)
David Kherdian, Monkey (extra credit)
Jamaica Kincaid, Small Island and Lucy or Autobiography of my Mother
Barbara Kingsolver, The Poisonwood Bible*
Elias Khoury, Gate of the Sun
Rachel Kushner, Telex from Cuba
Jhumpa Lahiri, Interpreter of Maladies* or Unaccustomed Earth
Laila Lalami, Secret Son or Hope and Other Dangerous Pursuits
Nam Le, The Boat
John Le Carre, Mission Song or A Most Wanted Man
YiYun Li, A Thousand Years of Good Prayers
David Liss, The Coffee Trader or others are acceptable for extra credit
Bette Bao Lord, Spring Moon*
Earl Lovelace, Salt or The Dragon Can’t Dance
Jason Lutes, Berlin (graphic) (both books)
Dandi Dale Mackall, Eva Underground*
Kamala Markandaya, Nectar in Sieve
Hisham Matar, In the Country of Men
Marsha Mehran, Pomegranate Soup or Rosewater and Soda Bread
Anchee Min, The Last Empress or Wild Ginger or Becoming Madame Mao or Empress Orchid or Katherine
Rohinton Mistry, A Fine Balance*, Swimming Lessons
Rutu Modan, Exit Wounds (graphic) with a Joe Sacco book
Daniyal Mueenuddin, In Other Rooms, Other Wonders
Marnie Mueller, Green Fires
V.S. Naipaul, A Bend in the River* or Half a Life or others by the same author
Margaret A. Ogola, The River and the Source (one book)
Ben Okri, The Famished Road*
Joanne Omanq, Incident at Akabal
Michael Ondaatje, Anil’s Ghost*
Helen Oyeyemi, The Icarus Girl*
Ferdinand Oyono, Houseboy
Amos Oz, Unto Death* and The Hill of Evil Counsel* or Where the Jackal Howls* or others
Orhan Pamuk, My Name is Red or The Black Book
Alan Paton, Ah, But Your Land is Beautiful* or Too Late the Phalarope*
Amjed Qamar, Beneath My Mother’s Feet*
Nahid Rachlin, Jumping Over Fire or Married to a Stranger or Veils and The Foreigner
Robert Rosenberg, This is not Civilization or the Avram Cohen mysteries
Norman Rush, Mating or Whites or Mortals
Joe Sacco, Palestine or Safe Area Gorazde (graphic)
Meghan Nuttall Sayres, Anahita’s Woven Riddle*
Lisa See, her detective / mystery books – Snow Flower and the Secret Fan, etc.
Shyam Selvadurai, Funny Boy*
Eduardo Sguigla, Fordlandia
Kamila Shamsie, Burnt Shadows or Kartography or Broken Verses
Kashmira Sheth, Keeping Corner
Bapsi Sidhwa, The Pakistani Bride or An American Brat (Extra Credit)
Joan Silber, The Size of the World
Khushwant Singh, Train to Pakistan
Zadie Smith, White Teeth*
Dalia Sofer, Septembers of Shiraz
Alexander Solzhenitsyn, One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
John Speed, The Temple Dancer or Tiger Claws
Suzanne Fisher Staples, Under the Persimmon Tree*, House of Djinn, Shiva’s Fire, Shabanu, Haveli (read at least 2)
Alan Stratton, Chanda’s War* and Chanda’s Secret*
Melanie Sumner, Polite Society
Indu Sundaresan, The Twentieth Wife or The Feast of Roses or The Splendor of Silence (extra credit) or In the Convent of Little Flowers
Mashid Suri, Tales of a Persian Teenage Girl
J.P. Stassen, Deogratias: A Tale of Rwanda and at least 120 pages from Philip Gourevitch’s We Wish to Inform You (see below)
Roma Tearne, Mosquito
Osamu Tezuka, Buddha (graphic - all 8 volumes – 2000 + pages)
Ngugi Wa Thiang’o, Weep Not Child and The River Between
Ngugi Wa Thiang’o Grain of Wheat or Petals of Blood
Maria Thomas, African Visas* or Come to Africa and Save Your Marriage or Antonia Saw the Oryx First
Pramoedya Ananta Toer, Child of All Nations or House
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