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A Critical response/Pottermania”

A Critical response/Pottermania”
Order Description
Pick a passage from “Pottermania” (I’ve included this text) that contains an interpretive problem (a tension, an ambiguity, a complicated idea, or a site of possible misunderstanding in the text) you wish to explore. The passage can be as short as a single paragraph and should not be longer than a single page. Make a claim about how the writer’s choices of language and form affect the argument. Your analysis should stay close to the text (and may draw upon the entire text to support your analysis of the passage). Your reader should then be able to understand the text in a deeper way.

Goals:
Identify an interpretive problem that is worth addressing, using a passage that will reward close reading.
Formulate a claim that leads your reader compellingly to an understanding of your project and is not obvious.
Establish a motive for the essay in your introduction. Here you will answer the “so what”? question, suggesting why your essay is important and interesting to an intelligent reader. Draw out the implications of your project in your conclusion.
Structure the essay around your central claim, making sure that each paragraph is adding an essential piece to your project.
Use evidence persuasively, quoting from the text when necessary, summarizing or paraphrasing accurately and responsibly when appropriate. Do not provide evidence from other sources or make general assertions (e.g. claims about “human nature”).

In other words, just use “Pottermania”.

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A Critical response/Pottermania”

A Critical response/Pottermania”
Order Description
Pick a passage from “Pottermania” (I’ve included this text) that contains an interpretive problem (a tension, an ambiguity, a complicated idea, or a site of possible misunderstanding in the text) you wish to explore. The passage can be as short as a single paragraph and should not be longer than a single page. Make a claim about how the writer’s choices of language and form affect the argument. Your analysis should stay close to the text (and may draw upon the entire text to support your analysis of the passage). Your reader should then be able to understand the text in a deeper way.

Goals:
Identify an interpretive problem that is worth addressing, using a passage that will reward close reading.
Formulate a claim that leads your reader compellingly to an understanding of your project and is not obvious.
Establish a motive for the essay in your introduction. Here you will answer the “so what”? question, suggesting why your essay is important and interesting to an intelligent reader. Draw out the implications of your project in your conclusion.
Structure the essay around your central claim, making sure that each paragraph is adding an essential piece to your project.
Use evidence persuasively, quoting from the text when necessary, summarizing or paraphrasing accurately and responsibly when appropriate. Do not provide evidence from other sources or make general assertions (e.g. claims about “human nature”).

In other words, just use “Pottermania”.

Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.

Comments are closed.

A Critical response/Pottermania”

A Critical response/Pottermania”
Order Description
Pick a passage from “Pottermania” (I’ve included this text) that contains an interpretive problem (a tension, an ambiguity, a complicated idea, or a site of possible misunderstanding in the text) you wish to explore. The passage can be as short as a single paragraph and should not be longer than a single page. Make a claim about how the writer’s choices of language and form affect the argument. Your analysis should stay close to the text (and may draw upon the entire text to support your analysis of the passage). Your reader should then be able to understand the text in a deeper way.

Goals:
Identify an interpretive problem that is worth addressing, using a passage that will reward close reading.
Formulate a claim that leads your reader compellingly to an understanding of your project and is not obvious.
Establish a motive for the essay in your introduction. Here you will answer the “so what”? question, suggesting why your essay is important and interesting to an intelligent reader. Draw out the implications of your project in your conclusion.
Structure the essay around your central claim, making sure that each paragraph is adding an essential piece to your project.
Use evidence persuasively, quoting from the text when necessary, summarizing or paraphrasing accurately and responsibly when appropriate. Do not provide evidence from other sources or make general assertions (e.g. claims about “human nature”).

In other words, just use “Pottermania”.

Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.

Comments are closed.

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