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A Brief Guide to Arguing About Literature
Third EditionJohn Schilb; John Clifford
©2020ISBN:9781319293857
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ISBN:9781319215934
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ISBN:9781319449094
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Everything you need to know to read, write, and argue about literature, in one brief book.
A Brief Arguing about Literature helps you navigate arguments, evaluate internet sources, and write analysis through the use of fiction, poetry, and essays -- all at an affordable price. This book is a primer in both writing arguments and reading literature, with thought-provoking selections by a diverse array of authors, related to contemporary issues.
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Learn MoreTable of Contents
Preface for Instructors
Contents by Genre
1. What is Argument?
Paul Goldberger, Disconnected Urbanism
Understanding Rhetoric
The Elements of Argument
Sample Argument for Analysis
David W. Barno, A New Moral Compact
Writing a Response to an Argument
Strategies for Analyzing an Argument So You Can Write a Response to It
An Argument for Analysis
Regina Rini, Should We Rename Institutions that Honor Dead Racists?
2. Writing Effective Arguments
Strategies for Developing an Effective Style of Argument
Structuring Your Argument; Beyond the Five-Paragraph Essay
Student Response to an Argument
Justin Korzack, How to Slow Down the Rush to War
Arguments for Analysis
Lee Siegel, Why I Defaulted on My Student Loans
*Afshan Jafar, Not a Fan of Fat Shaming? Stop Thin Praising
3. How Do You Argue about Literature?
What Is Literature?
Why Study Literature in a College Writing Course?
A Story for Analysi
Jamaica Kincaid, Girl (story)
Strategies for Making Arguments about Literature
Sample Student Argument about Literature
Ann Schumwalt, The Mother’s Mixed Messages in “Girl”
Looking at Literature as Argument
John Milton, When I Consider How My Light Is Spent (poem)
Robert Frost, Mending Wall (poem)
Literature and Current Issues
Rivka Galchen, Usl at the Stadium (story)
*Cole Stryker, The Problem with Public Shaming
*Laila Lalami, The Social Shaming of Racists is Working
4. The Reading Process
Strategies for Close Reading
A Poem for Analysis
Sharon Olds, “Summer Solstice, New York City” (poem)
Applying the Strategies
Reading Closely by Annotating
*Emily Skillings, Girls Online (poem)
Further Strategies for Close Reading
Use Topics of Literary Studies to Get Ideas
Lynda Hull, Night Waitress (poem)
5. The Writing Process
*Rachel Kadish, Letters Arrive from the Dead (story)
Strategies for Exploring
Strategies for Planning
Strategies for Composing
First Draft of a Student Paper
Strategies for Revising
A Checklist for Revising
Revised Draft of a Student Paper
Strategies for Writing a Comparative Paper
Don Paterson, Two Trees (poem)
Luisa A. Igloria, Regarding History (poem)
List Similarities and Differences
Consider “Weighting” Your Comparison
A Student Comparative Paper
Jeremy Cooper, ”Don Paterson’s Criticism of Nature’s Owners”
6. Writing about Literary Genres
Writing about Stories
Eudora Welty, A Visit of Charity (story)
The Elements of Short Fiction
Plot and Structure/Point of View / Characters /Setting /Imagery/ Language/ Theme
Final Draft of a Student Paper
Tanya Vincent, The Real Meaning of Charity in “A Visit of Charity”
Writing about Poems
Mary Oliver, Singapore (poem)
Yusef Komunyakaa, Blackberries (poem)
Edwin Arlington Robinson, The Mill (poem)
The Elements of Poetry
Speaker and Tone / Diction and Syntax / Figures of Speech / Sound/ Rhythm and Meter /Theme
Final Draft of a Student Paper
Michaela Fiorucci, “Negotiating Boundaries”
Writing about Plays
August Strindberg, The Stronger (play)
The Elements of Drama
Plot and Structure/ Characters/ Stage Directions and Setting /Imagery /Language/ Theme
Final Draft of a Student Paper
Trish Carlisle, “Which Is the Stronger Actress in August Strindberg’s Play?”
7. Writing Researched Arguments
Begin Your Research by Giving It Direction
Search for Sources in the Library and Online
Evaluate the Sources
Record Your Sources’ Key Details
Strategies for Integrating Sources
New Avoid Plagiarism
Strategies for Documenting Sources (MLA Format)
MLA In-Text Citation
MLA Works Cited
Three Annotated Student Researched Arguments
An Argument that Uses a Literary Work to Examine Social Issues
Sarah Michaels, “The Yellow Wallpaper” as a Guide to Social Factors in Postpartum Depression
An Argument that Deals with Existing Interpretations of a Literary Work
Katie Johnson, The Meaning of the Husband’s Fainting in “The Yellow Wall-Paper”
An Argument that Places a Literary Work in Historical and Cultural Context
Brittany Thomas, The Relative Absence of the Human Touch in “The Yellow Wall-Paper”
Contexts for Research: Confinement, Mental Illness and “The Yellow Wallpaper”
Charlotte Perkins Gilman, The Yellow Wallpaper
Cultural Contexts
Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Why I Wrote “The Yellow Wallpaper”
S. Weir Mitchell, From The Evolution of the Rest Treatment
John Harvey Kellogg, From The Ladies’ Guide in Health and Disease
*8. Evaluating Internet Resources in a Post-Truth Age
Evaluating Written Arguments You Find on the Internet
Wendy Brenner, Prayer for Gluten (poem)
Varda He, Restaurants should be more aware of celiac, gluten-free diet limits
Critically Analyzing Web Sites’ Truth Claims
Understanding Strategies in Visual Arguments on the Internet
*Wilfred Owen, Dulce et Decorum Est (poem)
*British WWI recruitment poster
*Linda Hogan, Song for the Turtles in the Gulf (poem)
*Environmental ads
*WH Auden, Refugee Blues (poem)
*Cartoon: “No room, you’ll sink us!”
*Alberto Ríos, The Border: A Double Sonnet (poem)
*Map: U.S.-Mexico border
*Katie Bickham, The Ferryman (poem)
*Graph: Mass Shootings in 2018
Identifying Biases You Might Bring to Your Internet Research
Appendix: Writing with Critical Approaches to Literature
Contemporary Schools of Criticism
New Criticism; Feminist Criticism; Psychoanalytic Criticism; Marxist Criticism; Deconstruction; Reader-Response Criticism; Postcolonial Criticism; New Historicism; Queer Theory
Working with the Critical Approaches
James Joyce, Counterparts (story)
Molly Fry, A Refugee at Home (student paper)
James Joyce, Eveline