106 slides Dec 12 & 14

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BIU English 106 Slide set #5: Dec. 12 - Dec. 19 Introduction to Literary Forms and Critical Writing I Dr. Daniel Feldman [email protected]

Transcript of 106 slides Dec 12 & 14

BIU English 106 Slide set #5: Dec. 12 - Dec. 19

Introduction to Literary Forms and Critical Writing IDr. Daniel Feldman

[email protected]

Writing Blurbs 6

• I tend to think of fiction as being mainly about characters and human beings and inner experience, whereas essays can be much more expository and didactic and more about subjects or ideas. If some people read my fiction and see it as fundamentally about philosophical ideas, what it probably means is that these are pieces where the characters are not as alive and interesting as I meant them to be.

--David Foster Wallace, novelist

Citation

• What is citation?– Reference to a book, paper, website, or author

quoted in a scholarly work.

• Why cite?

Why cite?What few undergraduates grasp, given that money is

paid in exchange for their heads being cracked open and education poured in, is that you don’t purchase ideas with tuition. The people you read actually own their ideas, and deserve credit for them. Think of it as idea rental: you are free to use any ideas you want, but you must distinguish between an idea, or point of analysis, that is actually yours and one that has been offered up by someone else whose book you have read.

Potter, Claire. “If I Had College-Age Children.” The Chronicle.com. 7 Dec. 2011. Web.

Why cite?“Your research paper is a collaboration between you

and your sources. To be fair and ethical, you must acknowledge your debt to the writers of those sources. If you don’t, you commit plagiarism, a serious academic offense” (Hacker 376).

Hacker, Diana and Nancy Sommers. A Writer’s Reference. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2011. Print.

What is plagiarism?• Failing to cite direct quotations and borrowed

ideas.• Failing to enclose borrowed language in

quotation marks.• Failing to put summaries and paraphrases in your

own words.

(ibid.)

Plagiarism or Not?The great fear of the Romans was of revolt. . . . For

many Romans it was impossible to see a Jew bearing arms as anything but an incipient uprising, complete with arson, murder, pillage, and rapine. The empire was haunted throughout by a deep and horrible fear of insurrection. – From Cornish, Dudley Taylor. The Sable Arm.

Lawrence: UP of Kansas, 1987. Print.– [The source passage is from page 158.]

• Historian Dudley Taylor Cornish observes that many Romans were so terrified of revolts that the sight of armed Jews filled them with fear (158).– Plagiarized?

Plagiarism or Not?The great fear of the Romans was of revolt. . . . For many Romans

it was impossible to see a Jew bearing arms as anything but an incipient uprising, complete with arson, murder, pillage, and rapine. The empire was haunted throughout by a deep and horrible fear of insurrection. – From Cornish, Dudley Taylor. The Sable Arm. Lawrence: UP

of Kansas, 1987. Print.– [The source passage is from page 158.]

• Many Romans found it impossible to see a Jew bearing arms as anything but an incipient uprising complete with arson, murder, pillage, and rapine.– Plagiarized?

Plagiarism or Not?The great fear of the Romans was of revolt. . . . For many Romans

it was impossible to see a Jew bearing arms as anything but an incipient uprising, complete with arson, murder, pillage, and rapine. The empire was haunted throughout by a deep and horrible fear of insurrection. – From Cornish, Dudley Taylor. The Sable Arm. Lawrence: UP

of Kansas, 1987. Print.– [The source passage is from page 158.]

• Historian Dudley Taylor Cornish asserts that "for many Romans it was impossible to see a Jew bearing arms as anything but an incipient uprising complete with arson, murder, pillage, and rapine" (158).– Plagiarized?

How does one cite?MLA parenthetical style

Two parts:

1) Parenthetical citations in essay

2) Works cited list after essay

How to cite by page #• 1) Sample statement in essay text:

– Medieval Europe was a place both of “raids, pillages, slavery, and extortion” and of “traveling merchants, monetary exchange, towns if not cities, and active markets in grain” (Townsend 10).

» Close quotes, place author name and page number in parentheses with no additional punctuation, final period punctuation.

– Townsend argues that Medieval Europe was a place both of “raids, pillages, slavery, and extortion” and of “traveling merchants, monetary exchange, towns if not cities, and active markets in grain” (10).

How to cite by page #• 2) Sample standard reference for works cited

list:

Townsend, Michael. The Story of the Soil. Princeton: Princeton UP, 2001.

Townsend, Michael. “Medieval Betrayals: Land Plots and Empire.” The Journal of Medieval Literature 21.1 (2001): 7-26.

How to cite by URL/title• 1) Sample citations in essay where possible:

– Kurosawa’s Rashomon was one of the first Japanese films to attract a Western audience.

– Chan considers the same topic in the context of Hong Kong cinema.

» Essay provides maximum available information without parenthetical citation.

» Often preferable to include a name in the text.

– The utilitarianism of the Victorians “attempted to reduce decision-making about human actions to a ‘felicific calculus’” (Everett).

» Author cited but no page number available.

Sample citations by URL/title• 2) Sample references for digital / film sources in

works cited list:– Chan, Evans. “Postmodernism and Hong Kong

Cinema.” Postmodern Culture 10.3 (2000): n. pag. Project Muse. Web.

– Everett, Glenn. “Utilitarianism.” The Victorian Web. 11 Oct. 2002. Web.

– Kurosawa, Akira, dir. Rashomon. Daiei, 1950. Film.

Use Quotations Judiciously

• When the quotation is especially vivid or expressive.

• When technical accuracy is necessary.• When it is important to cite a contentious

perspective verbatim.• When the experts words lend gravitas to an

argument.• When the quotation’s exact words pertain to

your analysis.– (Hacker 380)

Number the Narratives:A few last words on genre

The narratives of the world are numberless. Narrative is first and foremost a prodigious variety of genres, themselves distributed amongst different substances – as though any material were fit to receive man’s stories. Able to be carried by articulated language, spoken or written, fixed or moving images, gestures, and the ordered mixture of all these substances; narrative is present in myth, legend, fable, tale, novella, epic, history, tragedy, drama, comedy, mime, painting (think of Carpaccio’s Saint Ursula), stained glass windows, cinema, comics, news item, conversation.

Number the Narratives:A few last words on genre

Moreover, under this almost infinite diversity of forms, narrative is present in every age, in every place, in every society; it begins with the very history of mankind and there nowhere is nor has been a people without narrative. All classes, all human groups, have their narratives, enjoyment of which is very often shared by men with different, even opposing, cultural backgrounds. Caring nothing for the division between good and bad literature, narrative is international, transhistorical, transcultural: it is simply there, like life itself. (79)

Barthes, Roland. “Introduction to the Structural Analysis of Narratives,” in Image-Music-Text. London: Fontana, 1977, p. 79.

New Genres?

• Genres without beginning or end– Prequels– Soap operas

• Hybrids • e.g. Byatt’s “The Thing in the Forest”

Narrative Closure

“Taboo” By Enrique Anderson Imbert (1966)

His guardian angel whispered to Fabian, behind his shoulder:“Careful, Fabian! It is decreed that you will die the minute you pronounce the word doyen.” “Doyen?” asks Fabian, intrigued.And he dies.

Narrative Closure

“Bedtime Story” By Jeffrey Whitmore

“Careful honey, it’s loaded,” he said, reentering the bedroom.Her back rested against the headboard.“This for your wife?”“No, too chancy. I'm hiring a professional.”“How about me?”He smirked. “Cute, but who’d be dumb enough to hire a lady

hit man?”She wet her lips, sighting along the barrel. “Your wife.”

Writing Blurbs 7

Writing can be a pretty desperate endeavor, because it is about some of our deepest needs: our need to be visible, to be heard, our need to make sense of our lives, to wake up and grow and belong. It is no wonder if we sometimes tend to take ourselves perhaps a bit too seriously.

--Anne Lamott, Bird by Bird

Midterm Writing Tips

• Analyze, don’t summarize!– Write for your colleagues and classmates

• Writing is the closest thing to telepathy…..but only when written. Invisible writing

does not communicate!

Midterm Writing Tips

• Review use of commas, semicolons.

• Use narrative present: “Byatt challenges,” “the protagonist believes,” “the reader assumes”

• Indent paragraphs: use the Tab key.

• Format reminders: double-spaced, name and page # on every interior page

Midterm Writing Review

• People that live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones.

• People who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones.

• People, who live in glass houses, shouldn’t throw stones.

Midterm Writing Review

• Romances are entertaining, they are full of exciting adventures.

• Romances are entertaining; they are full of exciting adventures.

• Romances are entertaining; for they are full of exciting adventures.

Midterm Writing Tips

• Work toward:

• Correctness• Clarity• Coherence• Creativity

Memory and Narrative

• Narrative-->Character– Narrative links successive, potentially random

events or actions into a causative, coherent chain

• Story creates a frame for events.

– Character links actions and events to a consistent psychology.

• Character creates an agent for action.

Memory and Narrative

• Is character a product or prerequisite of narrative?–Can character (or story) precede

a text?

Self and Story

• Narrating “I” versus narrated “I”

• Memory-->Story-->Self-->

“I” through time

Autobiography?

Autobiography

The living author of a narrative can in no way be mistaken for the narrator of that narrative.

--Barthes, “Structural Analysis” 52

Creative Nonfiction• Although it sounds a bit affected and

presumptuous, “creative nonfiction” precisely describes what the form is all about. The word “creative” refers simply to the use of literary craft in presenting nonfiction—that is, factually accurate prose about real people and events—in a compelling, vivid manner. To put it another way, creative nonfiction writers do not make things up; they make ideas and information that already exist more interesting and, often, more accessible.

• Lee Gutkind, editor, Creative Nonfiction journal

Creative Nonfiction

• “Though often reading like fiction, [it] is not fiction. It is, or should be, as reliable as the most reliable reportage, although it seeks a larger truth [my italics] than is possible through the mere compilation of verifiable facts, the use of direct quotations, and adherence to the rigid organizational style of the older form.”

• Gay Talese, new journalist, Fame and Obscurity

For Monday 19.12

• Writing assignment on character and voice– How does a narrative’s voice or point of

view affect your reading of it?

– How is character produced?– How would you describe a significant story

or episode in your life or which you witnessed?