Into the Wild
New Journalism by Jon Krakauer
New Journalism
American literary movement in the 1960s and ’70s that pushed the boundaries of traditional journalism and nonfiction writing. The genre combined journalistic research with the techniques of fiction writing in the reporting of stories about real-life events. The writers often credited with beginning the movement include Tom Wolfe, Truman Capote, and Gay Talese.
As in traditional investigative reporting, writers in the genre immersed themselves in their subjects, at times spending months in the field gathering facts through research, interviews, and observation. Their finished works were very different, however, from the feature stories typically published in newspapers and magazines of the time. Instead of employing traditional journalistic story structures and an institutional voice, they constructed well-developed characters, sustained dialogue, vivid scenes, and strong plot lines marked with dramatic tension. They also wrote in voices that were distinctly their own. Their writing style, and the time and money that their in-depth research and long stories required, did not fit the needs or budgets of most newspapers (a notable exception was the New York Herald Tribune), although the editors of Esquire, The New Yorker, New York, and other prominent magazines sought out those writers and published their work with great commercial success. Many of those writers went on to publish their stories in anthologies or to write what became known as “nonfiction novels,” and many of those works became best sellers.
[...] Britannica Article
Ripped from the Headlines
- Download Krakauer's 1993 article "Death of an Innocent" chronicling McCandless's dropout from society.
- Upload the pdf to your Google Drive account.
- Read and annotate it before sharing the document with your instructor.
- Additionally, read initial readers' responses to the article.
Family Happiness
Walden
To Build a Fire
Into the Wild Stations
- Create a Wild folder and share it with your instructor.
- Inside the Wild folder, create eight folders and name them Station 1- Station 8.
- Slug each document inside the folder with the station number and description, e.g., Station 3 Analysis.
- Include name(s) of contributor(s) on each document.
Station 1: Transcendentalism
Station 1
Station 2: Influences
Station 2
Station 3: Author's Style
Station 3
Station 4: Literary Connections
Station 4
Station 5: People and Places
Station 5
Station 6: Survival
What are the seven essential items you and your group think would be most important to bring to survive in the wilderness?
Station 6
Station 7: McCandless
Station 8: Family Values
Culminating Essay: Modern-Day Transcendentalists
Extension Analysis Essay: Into the Wild as a Greek Tragedy
Jan Perry
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