Writing About Lit: a Primer

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Writing about Lit: a Primer Dr. Gerald Lucas

description

A brief lecture that introduces the basics we need to know when writing about literary texts. Recorded live in my World Literature 2 class, 1/9/08.

Transcript of Writing About Lit: a Primer

Page 1: Writing About Lit: a Primer

Writing about Lit: a PrimerDr. Gerald Lucas

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Present Tense

• Write about literature in the present tense

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Present Tense

• Write about literature in the present tense

• Odysseus pokes out the cyclops’ eye.

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Present Tense

• Write about literature in the present tense

• Odysseus pokes out the cyclops’ eye.

• Not: Odysseus poked out the cyclops’ eye.

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Research

• Begin with

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Research

• Begin with

• Dictionaries

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Research

• Begin with

• Dictionaries

• Encyclopedias

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Research

• Begin with

• Dictionaries

• Encyclopedias

• Google

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Research

• Begin with

• Dictionaries

• Encyclopedias

• Google

• Yahoo

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Cite

• Cite only solid sources, like

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Cite

• Cite only solid sources, like

• Professional web sites

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Cite

• Cite only solid sources, like

• Professional web sites

• Journal articles (some online)

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Cite

• Cite only solid sources, like

• Professional web sites

• Journal articles (some online)

• Books

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Titles

• Titles of short works are in quotation marks

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Titles

• Titles of short works are in quotation marks

• Poem: “To His Coy Mistress”

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Titles

• Titles of short works are in quotation marks

• Poem: “To His Coy Mistress”

• Story: “Babylon Revisited”

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Titles

• Titles of short works are in quotation marks

• Poem: “To His Coy Mistress”

• Story: “Babylon Revisited”

• Song: “Ants Marching”

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Titles

• Titles of short works are in quotation marks

• Poem: “To His Coy Mistress”

• Story: “Babylon Revisited”

• Song: “Ants Marching”

• Episode of TV Series: “Doomsday”

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Titles

• Long works are italicized

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Titles

• Long works are italicized

• Novel: Fight Club

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Titles

• Long works are italicized

• Novel: Fight Club

• Film: Star Wars

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Titles

• Long works are italicized

• Novel: Fight Club

• Film: Star Wars

• TV Series: Star Trek

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Titles

• Long works are italicized

• Novel: Fight Club

• Film: Star Wars

• TV Series: Star Trek

• Play: Hamlet

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If unsure about how to present a title: look it up!

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Vocabulary

• Use literary vocabulary

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Vocabulary

• Use literary vocabulary

• “novel,” not “book”

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Vocabulary

• Use literary vocabulary

• “novel,” not “book”

• “protagonist,” not “main character”

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Vocabulary

• Use literary vocabulary

• “novel,” not “book”

• “protagonist,” not “main character”

• “antagonist,” not “bad guy”

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Vocabulary

• Use literary vocabulary

• “novel,” not “book”

• “protagonist,” not “main character”

• “antagonist,” not “bad guy”

• “film,” not “movie”

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When arguing a point: use specific textual evidence.

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Quote Correctly

• Incorporate the quotation and citation

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Quote Correctly

• Incorporate the quotation and citation

• The writer shares a connection: “the axolotls spoke to me” (398).

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Quote Correctly

• Incorporate the quotation and citation

• The writer shares a connection: “the axolotls spoke to me” (398).

• The writer shares a connection. “The axolotls spoke to me” (398).

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Quote Correctly

• Incorporate the quotation and citation

• The writer shares a connection: “the axolotls spoke to me” (398).

• The writer shares a connection. “The axolotls spoke to me” (398).

• Use punctuation correctly with quotation marks (FAQs 78)

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When a quotation is long, it should be block quoted.

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Use Proper MLA

• Refer to The Writer’s FAQs (176)

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Use Proper MLA

• Refer to The Writer’s FAQs (176)

• Must have:

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Use Proper MLA

• Refer to The Writer’s FAQs (176)

• Must have:

• In-text parenthetical citation

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Use Proper MLA

• Refer to The Writer’s FAQs (176)

• Must have:

• In-text parenthetical citation

• Works cited entry

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In-Text Citations

• Appear at the end of the sentence

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In-Text Citations

• Appear at the end of the sentence

• List the author’s last name and page # in parentheses

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Works Cited Page

• Lists any work that you cite

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Works Cited Page

• Lists any work that you cite

• Uses MLA style in English courses unless told otherwise

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Works Cited Page

• Lists any work that you cite

• Uses MLA style in English courses unless told otherwise

• Must follow a particular format

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MLA is tricky only if you don’t look it up!

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Writing about Literature

• Focus

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Writing about Literature

• Focus

• Do not try to write it all

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Writing about Literature

• Focus

• Do not try to write it all

• Illustrate a theme or motif

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Writing about Literature

• Focus

• Do not try to write it all

• Illustrate a theme or motif

• Analyze a character

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Writing about Literature

• Focus

• Do not try to write it all

• Illustrate a theme or motif

• Analyze a character

• Discuss a metaphor

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Writing about Literature

• Focus

• Do not try to write it all

• Illustrate a theme or motif

• Analyze a character

• Discuss a metaphor

• Trace a symbol

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Have a thesis!

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Organize

• Focus on a major issue

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Organize

• Focus on a major issue

• Follow a logical order

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Organize

• Focus on a major issue

• Follow a logical order

• Compare or contrast characters, works, etc.

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Organize

• Focus on a major issue

• Follow a logical order

• Compare or contrast characters, works, etc.

• Work toward synthesis

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Write Critically

• Use citations

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Write Critically

• Use citations

• Focus on response

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Write Critically

• Use citations

• Focus on response

• Remember art

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Write Critically

• Use citations

• Focus on response

• Remember art

• Consider style and rhetoric

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Write Critically

• Use citations

• Focus on response

• Remember art

• Consider style and rhetoric

• Don’t ape critics or peers