Monday, November 6, 2023

WEEK 8

Good morning!

HERE'S YOUR WORK....

1. Revise your book or film review. 

2. Write a limited literary analysis. Show how Guy de Maupassant communicates the theme that APPEARANCES ARE DECEIVING. 

Requirements (read these very carefully):

i.  Use evidence from the text to support your arguments.

ii.  Quote the text at least 3 times (no citations needed).

iii.  Watch this short video on incorporating direct quotations.  

iv.  Do NOT summarize the story in this essay. I'm your audience and I've read it bunches of times. You will, of course, need to reference what happens in the story in order to make your points, but you don't need to summarize anything. Here's the difference between summarizing (bad!) and referencing (good!): 

Summarizing: "Yoda was a Jedi master who mentored Luke Skywalker." (You don't need to tell me that.)

Referencing: "When Yoda used the force to pull the x-wing out of the water, he was showing Luke that strength is not in one's size." (You can tell me that because you're analyzing.)

Do you see the difference? If you said the first example to anyone who knew the Star Wars story, they would say, "Duh." But you might say the second example to that same person, and they would say, "Hmm. Good point." Avoid the Duh statements. 


v.  organize it in a logical way. Here's one such way:
1) intro paragraph that mentions the theme, the story, the author's full name (After that you can simply refer to the author by last name, and you won't need to mention the story title again).
2) three body paragraphs to unpack the theme (you could walk chronologically through the story or pick 3 elements like plot, characterization, or setting to discuss.)
3) conclusion paragraph. 

vi. Proof it carefully.

vii.  600 words minimum



3. Read the following:

The essays you'll be looking at (they're at the end of this post) all fall into the category of definition /classification (a sub-category of expository or informative writing). This kind of essay defines or classifies something (the "something" can be just about anything, but generally the something can be stated IN A WORD.)

As you read the examples, take note of a few things (and this will all make more sense after you've read the examples): 

1. Though "definition/classification" sounds stuffy and academic, most of these examples are anything but. Be creative.

2. The organization is not rigid like some of the other essays we've done. Be creative.

3. The variety of topics is wide: a thing, a person, a place, feeling, idea, an activity, an area of study, a mental action. You could also differentiate between two things as in ---- vs. ---- (see the last grammar vs. usage essay below). Be creative.

4. I'll repeat myself here: you NEED to be creative. You're not reporting back to me on what a dictionary definition says—I can read a dictionary for that—You're creating a new way of looking at something!

One more time: This will make more sense after you read the essays below.


4. Do the following for each essay below:

1. Explain what other modes of discourse are being used (i.e. in addition to its being an expository piece, does it also include descriptionnarration, and/or argumentation?).

2. Briefly describe the various parts of the definition. An outline would work for this. 


Here are the essays:



5. Propose a word, term, or phrase for your definition/classification essay, and briefly explain your thesis. IF YOU WANT TO SHOOT ME AN EMAIL EARLY IN THE WEEK, I'LL APPROVE IT FOR YOU. Here's how my sport topic might sound: 

"I'm defining the term sport. I don't like how sport includes so many things, so I'm going to propose a stricter definition. 

Choosing a term to define can be tricky. You're not writing an essay on how a word or phrase makes you feel or on what you think about when you hear a particular word or phrase. That would be a purely reflective piece. This is primarily an expository essay. You're teaching your readers a new definition. It will likely have some argumentative discourse too; you're trying to convince your reader that your definition is helpful.

Good luck! (There's no such thing as luck; in fact, as a Christian who believes in God's complete sovereignty, I could write an essay re-defining the phrase "good luck" to mean something like "I hope things go well for you in that particular endeavor." See? There are topics all around us. I would start looking in the places you're most interested in.)


Be inspired by IsaiahBehold, I am doing a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it? I will make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert. Is 43:19

Due Friday at 5:00, as usual. Have a great week!


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