A Guide to Writing in Art and Art History with 2021 MLA Update
First EditionStephen Bernhardt; Nancy Sommers
©2021ISBN:9781319455866
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This ebook has been updated to provide you with the latest guidance on documenting sources in MLA style and follows the guidelines set forth in the MLA Handbook, 9th edition (April 2021).
A Guide to Writing in Art and Art History, part of the Writer’s Help Guidebook Series, offers writing and research support for students writing in the discipline. This compact yet comprehensive guidebook provides the value students want with the essential instruction they need to complete writing tasks successfully. Students will find advice on how to think, read, research, and design and write papers and projects like an art professional.
Coverage includes the following topics, all focused on the specific needs of writers in art and art history:
- Writing process
- Conventions in the discipline
- Integrating and evaluating sources
- Documentation style required in the discipline--with plenty of models
- Sample student writing
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Learn MoreTable of Contents
Introduction: A Guide to Writing in Art and Art History
Thinking like an art professional
Questions art professionals ask
Kinds of evidence art professionals use
Ethical practices in art
Looking at works of art
Responding to a work of art
Understanding point of view
Developing the techniques of description
Researching art
Using databases to find scholarly publications
Primary and secondary sources
Academic journals
Books and online resources
Reading the art literature
Active reading
How to read scholarly books on art
How to read a scholarly article
Checklists for evaluating sources
Designing and writing papers and projects in art
Considering your purpose
Understanding your audience and your writing situation
Checklist for assessing the writing situation
Organizing and drafting
Revising and editing
Writing conventions in art
Word choice
Phrasing for clarity, concision, and directness
Writing effective sentences
Special considerations in writing about art
Integrating, citing, and documenting sources in art
Avoiding plagiarism and recognizing intellectual property
Quoting, summarizing, and paraphrasing sources
Captions and lists of illustrations
MLA style for documenting sources in art
Chicago style for documenting sources in art
Genres of writing in art
Short description of a work of art
Copy for a museum label
Personal response to a work of art
Comparison of two works of art
Formal analysis of a work of art
Contextual analysis
Review of an art exhibition
Research paper
Artist statement
Glossary of vocabulary in art
Additional resources for art and art history
Practice activities
Practice activity: Writing a thesis statement for a research paper
Practice activity: Determining appropriate topics for research
Practice activity: Arguing against and defending
Practice activity: Writing a blog entry using compare and contrast
Practice activity: Timed writing
Practice activity: Writing description vs. analysis
Practice activity: Using databases for basic research in art
Practice activity: Using databases to find scholarly articles
Practice activity: Evaluating a scholarly journal
Practice activity: Locating and evaluating scholarly articles
Practice activity: Using special collections
Practice activity: Evaluating online information
Practice activity: Citing sources in Chicago style
Practice activity: Paraphrasing and citing in Chicago style
Answers to selected activities
Sample student writing: Art and art history
Blog post: Anonymous (Lakota) Pipe Bag, Nineteenth Century
Formal analysis: Vermeer’s The Milkmaid: Illuminating the Dignity of Everyday Labor
Research paper: Manet and the Modern Language of Flowers
Wall text: Delaunay, Homage to Blériot
More help with documentation: MLA and Chicago styles
MLA works cited list: Additional examples
Chicago-style notes and bibliography: Additional examples
Editing strategies
Subject-verb agreement
Pronoun agreement, reference, and case
Strong verbs
Sentence fragments
Run-on sentences
Distracting shifts
Parallel structure
Clear, uncluttered sentences
Sentence emphasis
Commas
Apostrophes
Quotation marks