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xxxiiiContentsJudith Sargent Murray, from On the Equality of the Sexes (nonfiction, 1790) 424 Moses Seixas and George Washington, Letters on Religious Tolerance (nonfiction, 1790) 428 Benjamin Banneker, Letter to Thomas Jefferson (nonfiction, 1791) 431 Red Jacket, Defense of American Indian Religion (nonfiction, 1805) 436 Francis Scott Key, The Star-Spangled Banner (poetry, 1814) 439 TalkBack Ada Lim%u00f3n, A New National Anthem (poetry, 2018) 442 Washington Irving, Rip Van Winkle (fiction, 1820) 444 Jane Johnston Schoolcraft, The Forsaken Brother (fiction, 1827) 459 Edward Hicks, The Peaceable Kingdom (painting, c. 1833) 464 Suggestions for Writing A Meeting of Old and New Worlds: Beginnings to 1830 4781. Akhil Reed Amar, from Second Thoughts: What the Right to Bear Arms Really Means(nonfiction, 1999) 467 2. Thomas Sowell, Do Gun-Control Laws Control Guns? (nonfiction, 2013) 468 3. Pew Research Center, Views on Gun Policies (graph, 2023) 470 4. Leah Libresco, I Used to Think Gun Control Was the Answer. My Research Told Me Otherwise. (nonfiction, 2017) 471 5. Nicholas Kristof, How to Speak to Gun Enthusiasts (nonfiction, 2022) 473 Conversation What Does the Second Amendment Mean Today? 4667 America in Conflict 481 1830%u20131865 Herman Melville, from Moby Dick (fiction, 1851) 486 Preparing to Write a Close Analysis of Fiction 487 Annotating Fiction for Close Analysis 487 Moving from Annotation to Analysis 488 ACTIVITY Preparing to Write a Close Analysis of Fiction 489Developing a Thesis Statement 489 Moving from Summary to Interpretation 489 Supporting Your Thesis 490 Writing Topic Sentences 490 Writing Workshop Close Analysis of Fiction 485Copyright %u00a9 Bedford, Freeman & Worth Publishers. Distributed by Bedford, Freeman & Worth Publishers. For review purposes only. Not for redistribution.