• Ungrouped

     

    Kay Bonetti of the Kirkus Review interviews Jamaica Kincaid, and explores some themes of her writing. At the end of the interview you will find a short "biographical sketch" of Jamaica Kincaid. Author interviews often offer insights into narrative references, directions, voice, and the overall purpose of  the narrative--the main points the author hopes we discover and consider.

    Required
    Jamaica Kincaid Hates Happy Endings (1).doc

     

    This essay is written in a playful tone by a teacher of literature who covers a whole lot of information about literary techniques and strategies!  I recommend you skim the essay and familiarize yourself with some of the terminology he presents. Some of the literary works may not be familiar (each professor has his/her particular tastes in what to teach), but still the literary references presented are clear and may be useful for you.

    "Professors read, and think, symbolically. Everything is a symbol of something, it seems, until proven otherwise. We ask, Is this a metaphor? Is that an analogy? What does the thing over there signify?

    A related phenomenon in professorial reading is pattern recognition. Most professional students of literature learn to take in the foreground detail while seeing the patterns that the detail reveals. Like the symbolic imagination, this is a function of being able to distance oneself from the story, to look beyond the purely affective level of plot, drama, characters. Experience has proved to them that life and books fall into similar patterns. Nor is this skill exclusive to English professors. Good mechanics, the kind who used to fix cars before computerized diagnostics, use pattern recognition to diagnose engine troubles: if this and this are happening, then check that. Literature is full of patterns, and your reading experience will be much more rewarding when you can step back from the work, even while you’re reading it, and look for those patterns."

    Required
    How to Read Literature Like a Professor.pdf

     

    An analysis is not a summary! An analysis involves using specific evidence from the text and explaining how it relates to a particular theme of what you're reading. It also involves explaining the author's purpose for using specific elements of literature.

    Step 1: Read the chapter and annotate. "But wait," you protest. "I've already read the chapter. Now you want me to do it again?" YES. This time, read the chapter with a critical eye. Highlight and mark things you feel are important. Annotate! (See our class “Handouts” and “Bookmarks” links)

    This handout will guide you step-by-step through the process of writing a successful "Critical Chapter Analysis."  More of the details of this assignment can be found on the "Grading and Assignments" page of our course site.

    Although you may not be familiar with the process, this handout will help you. Don't let fear get in your way. You can do this!

    Required
    CriticalAnalysisChapterWriting2.pdf
    While focused on a reorder icon, press the Enter key or spacebar to "select" the icon. While a reorder icon is selected, pressing the up and down arrows will change the order of the selected item within the list. Pressing Enter key or spacebar again will drop the selected item at that location in the list.
While focused on a reorder icon, press the Enter key or spacebar to "select" the icon. While a reorder icon is selected, pressing the up and down arrows will change the order of the selected item within the list. Pressing Enter key or spacebar again will drop the selected item at that location in the list.
Edit the following settings for all selected Resources.
Select a start and end date and time
Start: Start:
End: End:
  • Close Reading (Literary Analysis)

    Name Description Status Source
    The Close Reading Method

     

    In this handout from Harvard College Writing Center, there are several steps listed that will help you develop the skill of "close reading."  The first and most important is "Read with a pencil in hand and annotate the text."  Why annotate instead of highlight with a marker or underline? When you write down a response or put a question mark next to a section of text, you are actively engaging with the ideas presented. If you write in the margin--"I don't agree" then you know that this idea is not one that you readily accept. If you put a question mark in the margin, then you acknowledge the idea presented by the author is either questionable to you (as in you may not believe it) or that you do not understand the concept and need to explore it more thoroughly. Another method of highlighting is to create your own system of symbols you will place in the margin. For example, the question mark may indicate doubt about the validity of the concept whereas if you put a "plus" symbol after the question mark, it may indicate a lack of understanding and your need to explore the concept further. Annotation is active engagement with the text.

    When you underline a passage--you are working with your thinking at the moment and depending upon your memory to recount at a later time why you have underlined that passage. The reason for your "underlining" may be lost. You may have underlined an entire paragraph--but why?  Did it contain a main point, a questionable claim?  An unclear passage you were trying to unpack?  At a later date, the underlined passage my represent a blur of "importance" without any reasonable indicators ---like a question mark or a word or two in the margins to give you a clue as to why it was important. More helpful strategies to develop your "close reading" skills are presented throughout this handout.

    Required writingcenter.fas.harvard.edu Edit The Close Reading Method Delete The Close Reading Method
    Purposeful Annotation of Your Text

     

    This video clearly explains the method, purpose and benefit of annotation. Although it was created for teachers (middle and high school), the presenter does an excellent job of breaking down what it means to "annotate a text."  This particular skill will serve you in your academic career and any career you pursue in the real world. 

    For the purpose of this class, you will use your annotations as evidence you may wish to include to enhance your "Process Portfolio" (please see syllabus for this assignment descriptor). As mentioned in the video, you can organize your annotations into summaries, paraphrases, or general notes to help you better understand each text and its possibilities. These writings will provide an evidentiary trail of your thinking, a collective "map" of your thinking that leads to your final paper---The Comparative Analysis.

    Required www.youtube.com Edit Purposeful Annotation of Your Text Delete Purposeful Annotation of Your Text
    Developing your Reading Habit!

     

    This University of Minnesota link will guide you through various strategies for reading literature. Even though we will be taking a stance of "close reading" (discussed in another "bookmark" on this page), there will be times when you will need to read quickly and skim portions of the book you are assigned. Techniques of "speed reading" will be useful for you to develop. Please take time to peruse this link---skim it if you must!

    Required www.tc.umn.edu Edit Developing your Reading Habit! Delete Developing your Reading Habit!
    While focused on a reorder icon, press the Enter key or spacebar to "select" the icon. While a reorder icon is selected, pressing the up and down arrows will change the order of the selected item within the list. Pressing Enter key or spacebar again will drop the selected item at that location in the list.
  • Writing Help (Comparative Analysis

    Name Description Status Source
    Literary Comparative Analysis

     

    This handout points out that the "comparative analysis" is more complicated and has more depth than one would think. It moves beyond the "compare/contrast" essay into more in-depth and complex observations regarding the themes, characters, theories, claims, or other elements you are presenting for consideration. The key to writing an acceptable analysis is of course the thesis. Your thesis should represent clear and critical thinking that indicates thoughtful consideration of the context and background of your chosen comparative elements. Carefully study the "theses" presented in the handout. They progress from the obvious to the more complex. Make sure yours resembles the latter.

    Required svcwritingcenter.wordpress.com Edit Literary Comparative Analysis Delete Literary Comparative Analysis
    Structuring your Argument

     

    Frame of Reference. This is the context within which you place the two things you plan to compare and contrast; it is the umbrella under which you have grouped them. The frame of reference may consist of an idea, theme, question, problem, or theory; a group of similar things from which you extract two for special attention; biographical or historical information. The best frames of reference are constructed from specific sources rather than your own thoughts or observations. Thus, in a paper comparing how two writers redefine social norms of masculinity, you would be better off quoting a sociologist on the topic of masculinity than spinning out potentially banal-sounding theories of your own. Most assignments tell you exactly what the frame of reference should be, and if you will be using outside sources or not.

    Grounds for Comparison. Let's say you're writing a paper on the theme of "betrayal" in Kite Runner and Two Old Women. The rationale behind your choice, the grounds for comparison, lets your reader know why your choice is deliberate and meaningful, not random. For instance, you could talk about specific relationships of characters, or cultural norms, or the guilt that is embedded in "betrayal."  Who experiences this action in each book? How do they respond? Why did it happen and in what context? Was it resolved in both narratives? How the characters responded to being betrayed could be your comparison theme.

    Thesis. The grounds for comparison anticipates the comparative nature of your thesis. As in any argumentative paper, your thesis statement will convey the gist of your argument, which necessarily follows from your frame of reference. So you will have a thesis that clearly explains your points of comparison in each novel.

    Required writingcenter.fas.harvard.edu Edit Structuring your Argument Delete Structuring your Argument
    While focused on a reorder icon, press the Enter key or spacebar to "select" the icon. While a reorder icon is selected, pressing the up and down arrows will change the order of the selected item within the list. Pressing Enter key or spacebar again will drop the selected item at that location in the list.
  • Ungrouped

    Name Description Status Source
    Jamaica Kincaid Interview

     

    This interview will yield insights about the life of Jamaica Kincaid and the history of the "perpetual paradise" that was her home, the island of Antigua. Listen closely to enjoy the full impact of her acerbic wit through her critiques of English Colonization and through her own personal observations and experiences. She also offers us a glimpse of the "writing life" through which she models courage, compassion, and critique of our shared world.

    Required www.youtube.com Edit Jamaica Kincaid Interview Delete Jamaica Kincaid Interview
    Kite Flyers of Afghanistan

     

    “We don’t have, like, soccer, baseball or basketball,” said Ahmad Roshazai, a translator at a medical clinic near Bagram who was flying kites on the hill with two of his brothers. He had cuts on his fingers from handling the bladelike fighting string. “We don’t have any good places for that,” he said. “No green places.”

    He added: “This is the only game we have every Friday. That’s it.”

    The inveterate kite fighters speak of their craft as part science and part art. The key to excellence depends on a combination of factors, both empirical and ineffable: the flexibility and balance of the kites’ bamboo frames, the strength of the glue binding the tissue paper skin, the quality of the string, the evenness of the spool and, of course, the skill of the fliers and their ability to adjust to the vicissitudes of the wind."

    As in our class assigned novel, the "Kite Runners" are children who cannot afford kites of their own to do "battle" in the sky. They chase wayward kites that have been defeated and then retrieve them, either to return them or keep them as their own. 

    What kinds of comparisons to this sport do you see to sports in our community? What does this "kite flying" signify? How does this sport create a sense of belonging or exclusion? Why would this sport be banned by the Taliban?

    Required www.nytimes.com Edit Kite Flyers of Afghanistan Delete Kite Flyers of Afghanistan
    Chimimanda Adiche "TED TALK"

     

    The title of this TED TALK is "The Danger of a Single Story."  In it the Nigerian author, Chimimanda Adiche, whose book we are reading, talks about perceptions gained from her childhood reading explorations, and how she rarely came upon a character in a book whose  life experiences mirrored her own. It is a great example of how we innocently assume that the specifics of many of our human experiences are universal. An interesting talk by the author of AMERICANAH. You may get some ideas about your assignments by listening to her speak her truth.

    Required www.youtube.com Edit Chimimanda Adiche "TED TALK" Delete Chimimanda Adiche "TED TALK"
    Octavia Butler Short Interview

     

    In this interview on National Public Radio (NPR), Octavia Butler talks a little about what it is to be an "outsider" and draws from her own childhood memories. This short piece on "Race" may be useful to hear/read as we confront this critical issue in our class texts. You may also get ideas of "themes" to use in your "Comparative Analysis" essay.

    Required www.npr.org Edit Octavia Butler Short Interview Delete Octavia Butler Short Interview
    Writing Help Handouts

    The University of North Carolina offers worksheets on every conceivable writing topic. They are easy to read and follow, provide clear examples, and are trustworthy. Please access this site to resolve any writing questions you may have. This is a favorite resource of mine that was welcomed by my WSU students during my teaching years there. Our Heritage Writing Center also suggests the Online Writing Lab (OWL) at Purdue. That is also an excellent resource to utilize! Heritage also offers 24 hour tutorial assistance through Smarthinking. Please consult with the Writing or Tutorial Center at Heritage for more information on that resource.

    Required writingcenter.unc.edu Edit Writing Help Handouts Delete Writing Help Handouts
    While focused on a reorder icon, press the Enter key or spacebar to "select" the icon. While a reorder icon is selected, pressing the up and down arrows will change the order of the selected item within the list. Pressing Enter key or spacebar again will drop the selected item at that location in the list.
While focused on a reorder icon, press the Enter key or spacebar to "select" the icon. While a reorder icon is selected, pressing the up and down arrows will change the order of the selected item within the list. Pressing Enter key or spacebar again will drop the selected item at that location in the list.
Edit the following settings for all selected Resources.
Select a start and end date and time
Start: Start:
End: End: