BiblioFiles: A CenterForLit Podcast about Great Books, Great Ideas, and the Great Conversation
A podcast by Emily Andrews - Tuesdays
175 Episodes
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BiblioFiles #49: Mimesis and the Art of Teaching Literature
Published: 7/13/2018 -
BiblioFiles #48: Authorial Intention and Meaning in Literature
Published: 6/29/2018 -
BiblioFiles #47: Thunder Cake, Picture Books, and Identity
Published: 6/15/2018 -
BiblioFiles #46: Leadership in Literature
Published: 5/25/2018 -
Lit, Period #5: American Realism
Published: 5/11/2018 -
BiblioFiles #45: What is an Education?
Published: 4/27/2018 -
BiblioFiles #44: Literary Reading and Levels of Understanding
Published: 4/13/2018 -
BiblioFiles #43: Dystopian Fiction, Fast Reads, and the Red Rising Trilogy (What Are We Reading?)
Published: 3/30/2018 -
BiblioFiles #42: Are the Great Books Still Relevant Today?
Published: 3/16/2018 -
BiblioFiles #41: The Late, Great "Literary Analysis" Debate with David Kern
Published: 3/2/2018 -
Lit, Period #4: Transcendentalism
Published: 2/16/2018 -
BiblioFiles #40: Politics and Literature
Published: 2/2/2018 -
BiblioFiles #39: Current Fantasy Offerings and the Nature of the Genre (What Are We Reading?)
Published: 1/20/2018 -
BiblioFiles #38: Good Criticism for Bad Books
Published: 1/5/2018 -
BiblioFiles #37: Wuthering Heights, Byronic Heroes, and Teenage Melodrama (What Are We Reading?)
Published: 12/22/2017 -
Lit, Period #3: The Romantics
Published: 12/9/2017 -
BiblioFiles #36: Mystery Fiction (and Branagh's Murder on the Orient Express)
Published: 11/25/2017 -
BiblioFiles #35: Heroism
Published: 11/10/2017 -
Lit, Period #2: The Augustan Age
Published: 10/27/2017 -
BiblioFiles #34: Karl Barth and Existentialism (What Are We Reading?)
Published: 10/13/2017
In which the CenterForLit staff embarks on a quest to discover the Great Ideas of literature in books of every description: ancient classics to fresh bestsellers; epic poems to bedtime stories. This podcast is a production of The Center for Literary Education and is a reading companion for teachers, homeschoolers, and readers of all stripes.