TOWRITING GUIDE
ST. MARTIN’S THE
S H O R T T E N T H E D I T I O N
Rise B. Axelrod Charles R. Cooper
with e-Pages
1 Introduction: Thinking about Writing 1
PART 1 Writing Activities
2 Remembering an Event 8 3 Writing Profiles 58 4 Explaining a Concept 116 5 Finding Common Ground 172 6 Arguing a Position 242 7 Proposing a Solution 296 8 Justifying an Evaluation 350 9 Speculating about Causes 402
10 Analyzing Stories 457
PART 2 Critical Thinking Strategies
11 A Catalog of Invention Strategies 508 12 A Catalog of Reading Strategies 521
PART 3 Writing Strategies
13 Cueing the Reader 546 14 Narrating 561 15 Describing 574 16 Defining 586 17 Classifying 594 18 Comparing and Contrasting 601 19 Arguing 608 20 Analyzing Visuals 626
Brief Contents
21 Designing Documents 640 22 Writing in Business and Scientific
Genres 652
PART 4 Research Strategies
23 Planning a Research Project 666 24 Finding Sources and Conducting Field
Research 674
25 Evaluating Sources 690 26 Using Sources to Support Your Ideas 697 27 Citing and Documenting Sources in MLA
Style 709
28 Citing and Documenting Sources in APA Style 739
PART 5 Writing for Assessment
29 Essay Examinations 752 30 Writing Portfolios 766
PART 6 Writing and Speaking to Wider Audiences
31 Oral Presentations 772 32 Working with Others 777 33 Writing in Your Community 781
To access the e-Pages that accompany this text, visit bedfordstmartins.com/theguide/epages. Students who do not buy a new book can purchase access to e-Pages at this site.
Chapter 2: Remembering an Event Shannon Lewis, We Were Here [student reading selection] Juliane Koepcke, How I Survived a Plane Crash [newspaper
article and linked podcast interview] Andrew Lam, Waterloo [book excerpt] Playing with Genre: Kate Beaton, Treasure [annotated cartoon]
Chapter 3: Writing Profiles Brianne O’Leary, Fatty’s Custom Tattooz and Body Piercing
[student reading selection] Sam Dillon, 4,100 Students Prove “Small Is Better” Rule Wrong
[newspaper article and slideshow] Veronica Chambers, The Secret Latina [magazine article
with illustrations] Playing with Genre: Dirty Jobs with Mike Rowe, Skull Cleaner
[linked video]
Chapter 4: Explaining a Concept Ammar Rana, Jihad: The Struggle in the Way of God [student
reading selection] Slate, What Extremely Walkable and Unwalkable Neighborhoods
Look Like [interactive maps and chart] Melinda Beck, What Cocktail Parties Teach Us [newspaper article] Playing with Genre: National Geographic Online, Mapping Memory
[annotated web pages]
Chapter 5: Finding Common Ground Chris Sexton, Virtual Reality? [student reading selection] Playing with Genre: Bloggingheads.tv [podcast interview with
jonathan haidt]
Understanding the Issue of Unpaid Internships Raphael Pope-Sussman, Let’s Abolish This Modern-Day Coal Mine
[op-ed] David Lat, Why Mess with a Win-Win Situation? [op-ed] Camille Olson, A Valuable Idea, If We Follow the Law [op-ed]
Understanding the Issue of Global Warming David McCandless, The Global Warming Skeptics vs. the Scientific
Consensus [infographic]
Chapter 6: Arguing a Position Michael Niechayev, It’s Time to Ban Head-First Tackles and Blocks
[student reading selection]
Farhad Manjoo, Troll, Reveal Thyself [annotated web page and linked podcast interview]
Laurie Fendrich, Sex for Tuition [op-ed] Playing with Genre: Ad Council / U.S. Department of Transportation,
The “It’s Only Another Beer” Black and Tan [annotated advertisement]
Chapter 7: Proposing a Solution Molly Coleman, Missing the Fun [student reading selection] TempoHousing, Keetwonen (Amsterdam Student Housing)
[interactive web page] Zach Youngerman, Did Bad Neighborhood Design Doom Trayvon
Martin? [op-ed] Playing with Genre: Ad Council, The $9 Lunch [annotated
advertisement]
Chapter 8: Justifying an Evaluation Brittany Lemus, Requiem for a Dream: Fantasy versus Reality
[student reading selection] Marlon Bishop, Gig Alert: Bright Eyes [interactive web page
and sound file] Jean M. Twenge and W. Keith Campbell, Isn’t Narcissism
Beneficial, Especially in a Competitive World? [book excerpt] Playing with Genre: Yelp, Kuma’s Korner [annotated web page]
Chapter 9: Speculating about Causes Michele Cox, The Truth about Lying [student reading selection] On the Media, The Reel Sounds of Violence [podcast interview
with daniel engber] Shirley S. Wang, A Field Guide to the Middle-Class U.S. Family
[newspaper article] Playing with Genre: Jonathan Jarvis, The Crisis of Credit Visualized
[animated infographic]
Chapter 10: Analyzing Stories Sally Crane, Gazing into the Darkness [student reading selection] David Ratinov, From Innocence to Insight: “Araby” as an Initiation
Story [student reading selection] Playing with Genre: Natalie George, Lacey Patzer, and Sam
Williams, “The Story of An Hour” by Kate Chopin [student video] Adrian Tomine, Mandarin Accent [graphic story (excerpt)] Sandra Tsing Loh, My Father’s Chinese Wives [story] Jamaica Kincaid, Girl [audio recording]
Inside the e-Pages for The St. Martin’s Guide
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The St Martin’s Guide to Writing
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Preface iii
The St Martin’s Guide to Writing
Rise B. Axelrod University of California, Riverside
Charles R. Cooper University of California, San Diego
Bedford / St. Martin’s
SHORT TENTH EDITION
For Bedford/St. Martin’s
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President, Bedford/St. Martin’s: Denise B Wydra Presidents, Macmillan Higher Education: Joan E Feinberg and Tom Scotty Editor in Chief: aren S Henry Director of Development: Erica T Appel Director of Marketing: aren R Soeltz Production Director: Susan W Brown Associate Production Director: Elise S aiser Managing Editor: Shuli Traub
Copyright © 2013 2010 2008 2004 by Bedford St Martin’s All rights reserved No part of this book may be reproduced stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic mechanical photocopying recording or otherwise except as may be expressly permitted by the applicable copyright statutes or in writing by the Publisher
Manufactured in the United States of America
8 7 6 5 4 3 f e d c b a
For information, write: Bedford St Martin’s 75 Arlington Street Boston MA 02116 617-399-4000
ISBN 978-1-4576-3250-1 paperback with Handbook ISBN 978-1-4576-0442-3 hardcover with Handbook ISBN 978-1-4576-4081-0 loose-leaf edition with Handbook ISBN 978-1-4576-0450-8 paperback without Handbook
Acknowledgments
Acknowledgments and copyrights are continued at the back of the book on pages A-1–A-4 which constitute an extension of the copyright page It is a violation of the law to reproduce these selec- tions by any means whatsoever without the written permission of the copyright holder
v
We owe an enormous debt to all the rhetoricians and composition specialists whose theory research and pedagogy have informed The St. Martin’s Guide to Writing We would be adding many pages if we were to name everyone to whom we are indebted
The members of the advisory board for the tenth edition a group of dedicated composition instructors from across the country have provided us with extensive insights and suggestions for the chapters in Part One and have given us the benefit of their advice on new features The St. Martin’s Guide to Writing has been greatly enhanced by their contributions
Advisory Board
Lisa Bickmore Salt Lake Community College
Mary Brantley Holmes Community College–Ridgeland
Jo Ann Buck Guilford Technical Community College
Wallace Cleaves University of California–Riverside
Leona Fisher Chaffey College
Gwen Graham Holmes Junior College–Grenada
Lesa Hildebrand Triton College
Stephanie Kay University of California–Riverside
Donna Nelson-Beene Bowling Green State University
Gail Odette Baton Rouge Community College
Gray Scott Texas Woman’s University
David Taylor St. Louis Community College
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vii
When we first wrote The St. Martin’s Guide to Writing our goal was to provide stu- dents with the clear guidance and practical strategies they needed to harness their potential as writers — an achievement that will be key to their success in college at work and in the wider world We also wanted to provide instructors with the hands- on tools they needed to help their students write with a clear understanding of their rhetorical situation Our goals have remained the same and so The St. Martin’s Guide retains the core features that over the years have drawn so many instruc- tors and programs to the Guide But now it also includes many new features that we believe will keep the Guide the most practical hands-on text for teachers and students
Core Features of the Guide The St. Martin’s Guide retains its emphasis on active learning — learning by doing — by providing practical guides to writing promoting genre awareness to aid the transfer of writing skills from one genre or context to another and integrating reading and writing through hands-on activities of critical thinking reading and analysis
Practical Guides to Writing
Each chapter in Part One offers practical flexible guides that help students draft and revise essays in a variety of analytical and argumentative genres Commonsensical and easy to follow these writing guides teach students to
assess the rhetorical situation focusing on their purpose and audience with spe- cial attention to the genre and medium in which they are writing
ask probing analytical uestions
practice finding answers through various kinds of research including memory search field research and traditional source-based research
These flexible guides to writing begin with a Starting Points chart to offer students multiple ways of finding the help they need when they need it Each also includes a Critical Reading Guide to help students assess their own writing and the writing of their classmates and a Troubleshooting Guide to help students find ways to improve their drafts All these guides are organized and color-coded to emphasize the genre’s basic features In short the guides to writing help students make their writing
Preface
Prefaceviii
THINKING CRITICALLY
Summarize: Tell the writer what you understand the subject of the evaluation to be, and identify the kind of subject it is.
Praise: Point to a place where the subject is presented effectively — for example, where it is described vividly and accurately, where it is named, or where it is clearly placed in a recognizable genre or category.
Critique: Tell the writer where readers might need more information about the subject, and whether any information about it seems inaccurate or possibly only partly true. Suggest how the writer could clarify the kind of subject it is, either by naming the category or by giving examples of familiar subjects of the same type.
Has the writer presented the subject effectively?
Subject
A CRITICAL READING GUIDE
Summarize: Tell the writer what you understand the overall judgment to be, and list the criteria on which it is based.
Praise: Identify a passage in the essay where support for the judgment is presented effectively — for example, note particularly strong supporting reasons, appeals to criteria readers are likely to share, or especially compelling evidence.
Critique: Let the writer know if you cannot find a thesis statement or think the thesis is vague or overstated. Tell the writer where the evaluation could be improved — for example, suggest another reason that could be added; propose a way to justify one of the criteria on which the evaluation is based; or recommend a source or an example that could be used to bolster support for the judgment.
Has the writer supported the judgment effectively?
Each chapter in Part One introduces a genre of writing By working through several genres students learn how writers employ the basic features and strategies of a genre to achieve their purpose with their readers The Arguing a Position essay for exam ple teaches students to examine critically their views on a controversial issue as well as those of their prospective readers with an eye toward developing an argument that not only is well reasoned and well supported but also responds constructively to read ers’ likely uestions and concerns The Finding Common Ground essay teaches stu dents how to analyze opposing arguments on a controversial issue—unpacking the ways writers use the classical appeals of logos ethos and pathos to promote their underlying values and beliefs Whereas the primary purpose in Arguing a Position is persuasive to convince readers to take seriously the writer’s point of view the primary purpose in a Finding Common Ground essay is analytical to explain the basis for divergent points of view and determine where if anywhere compromise might be forged Studying multiple genres —as well as multiple examples of each genre —helps students understand that genre is not simply a way for rhetoricians to classify texts or
thoughtful clear organized and compelling—in a word effective for the rhetorical situation
Preface ix
for teachers to construct assignments More important genre awareness helps them understand how we actually communicate with one another in a variety of contexts and situations Genre awareness makes us better communicators better readers and writers in whatever medium we are using
Systematic Integration of Critical Reading and Reflective Writing
Students are asked to read and analyze essays in the genre they are learning to write The activities following the professional reading selections prompt students to read actively by asking them to reflect on the essay and connect it to their own experience and to read like a writer paying attention to the strategies the writer uses to convey his or her ideas and connect with readers
What’s New Although the tenth edition of The St. Martin’s Guide to Writing builds on the success of previous editions many of the strategies the Guide employs have changed in order to connect more effectively with a new generation of teachers and students Even in the years since the publication of the ninth edition there have been the increasingly burdensome demands on the time attention and energy of teachers and students and the tremendous growth in access to high-speed Internet So the guiding principle for the tenth edition has been to maximize active learning by enhancing the book’s visual rhetoric, giving students more opportunities for hands-on learning, and pro- viding students and instructors with more readings and more interactive activities than ever before: more showing more doing more options more learning
More Readings in the e-Pages
The Guide is the first rhetoric to integrate e-Pages that come alive online with video Web sites podcasts and more An electronic extension of the printed page e-Pages make it possible for us to include more reading selections in the Guide than ever before The e-Pages for The St. Martin’s Guide, Tenth Edition include the following:
Ten more student essays. Each is accompanied by a headnote identifying the student writer and describing the assignment that the essay was written to fulfill are available free through the e-Pages Additional student essays are also avail- able on the book’s companion site and in Sticks and Stones, a collection of student essays from across the country that is available free to adopters
Twenty-one more professional readings take advantage of what the Web can do to give instructors more choices than ever before Each reading is accompa- nied by a headnote describing the writer and the venue in which the selection originally appeared and each is followed by an Analyze Write activity that
Prefacex
asks students to think and write about how the selection employs a basic feature of the genre A Consider Possible Topics feature is also included to help students identify topics about which they could write
Student Site for The St. Martin’s Guide to Writing—bedfordstmartins.com/theguide—or by typing the following URL into the address bar of a Web browser: bedfordstmartins.com /theguide/epages
Students receive automatic access with the purchase of a new book If the activa tion code printed on the inside back cover of the student edition has expired students
415GUIDE TO READINGGUIDE TO WRITING A WRITER AT WORK THINKING CRITICALLY
Vedantam The Telescope Effect
Shankar Vedantam Th e Telescope Eff ect
SHAN AR VEDANTAM is a National Public Radio correspondent and a journalist for the Philadelphia Inquirer, Slate, and the Washington Post He has been honored with fellowships and awards by Harvard University the World Health Organization the Society of Professional Journalists and the American Public Health Association In addition to his many articles Vedantam writes plays and fiction including his short story collection The Ghosts of Kashmir 2005 “The Telescope Effect” is excerpted from his book The Hidden Brain: How Our Unconscious Minds
Elect Presidents, Control Markets, Wage Wars, and Save Our Lives 2010 The photograph of the rescued dog Hokget which appears in the reading selection on p 416 is from the Honolulu
As you read consider the following uestions:
The Insiko 1907 was a tramp tanker that roamed the hunted the seas for fishing fleets in need of fuel the Insiko had a cargo of tens of thousands of gallons of diesel It was supposed to be an Indonesian ship except that it was not registered in Indonesia because its owner who lived in China did not bother with taxes In terms of international law the Insiko 1907
largest ocean on earth On March 13 2002 a fire broke out in the Insiko’s engine room The ship was about eight hundred miles south of Hawaii’s Big Island and adrift Its crew could not call on anyone for help and no one who could help knew of the Insiko’s existence let alone its problems 1
Drawn by wind and currents the Insiko eventually got within two hundred twenty miles of Hawaii where it was spotted by a cruise ship called the Norwegian Star on April 2 The cruise ship diverted course rescued the Taiwanese crew and radioed the United States Coast Guard But as the Norwegian Star pulled away from the Insiko and steamed toward Hawaii a few passengers on
tain’s puppy had been left behind on the tanker It is not entirely clear why the cruise ship did not
rescue the Jack Russell mixed terrier or why the
1
2
3
Taiwanese crew did not insist on it Whatever the
were abandoned on the terrible immensity of the Pacific The Norwegian Star senger who heard the barking dog called the Hawaiian Humane Society in Honolulu The Humane Society
ports began appearing about the terrier whose name was Hokget
Something about a lost puppy on an abandoned ship on the Pacific gripped people’s imaginations
cue One check was for five thousand dollars “It
tunity for people to feel good about rescuing a dog People poured out their support A handful of people
ing money to the homeless ’” But Burns felt the great thing about America was that people were free to give money to whatever cause they cared about and people cared about Hokget
On April 26 nearly one and a half months after the puppy’s ordeal began the American Quest found the Insiko female pup was still alive and hiding in a pile of
4
5
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Preface xi
25GUIDE TO READINGGUIDE TO WRITING A WRITER AT WORK THINKING CRITICALLY
Make connections: Remembering idols. We often fi nd ourselves profoundly affected by what happens to people we’ve never
idol showing us not only how Tupac’s death affected her then but what she thinks of her teenage self ’s obsession now that she is older
Recall a time when the emotional impact of an event that happened to someone else or to other people was powerful enough to affect your behavior decisions or actions for the day or longer Consider the reasons for your reactions Your instructor may ask you to post your thoughts to a class discussion board or blog or to discuss them with other students in class Use these uestions to get started:
Use the basic features.
Dialogue is a narrating strategy that helps writers dramatize a story uoting with descriptive speaker tags —
He said, “ .” She asked, “ ?”
hearing what was said and how it was said But all of the dialogue strategies — uoting
clude demonstrate how effective this sentence strategy can be
1 Skim the story, highlighting the dialogue and underlining the speaker tags. Also note
2 Consider each bit of dialogue, paraphrase, or summary to see what role it plays. Does it tell you something about the speaker or her relationship with another person? Does it convey feelings or attitudes? Does it advance the narrative or something else?
Speaker tag
To learn more about quoting
phrasing, and summarizing in autobiographical stories, see pp. 11–12; to learn more about using them in your own writing, see the Guide to Writing, pp. 35–36 and 38–39.
REFLECT
bedfordstmartins.com/theguide/epages and following the instructions there
Leaner chapters make it easier for instructors to get and keep students reading and to focus their attention on what matters most This edition of The St. Martin’s Guide to Writing is tighter and more focused than ever
A new design helps guide students through the chapters with headings that show students where they are where they’ve been and where they’re going in the chapter and that help students identify the activities and understand the purpose they serve in active learning
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Prefacexii
problem. (pp. 299–300)
(p. 332)
Problem (p. 314)
Studies (p. 320)
(pp. 326–27)
seriousness. (pp. 335–36)
for your readers. (pp. 336–37)
Problem. (p. 344)
GUIDE TO WRITING
The Writing Assignment
munity or group to which you belong and address your proposal to one or more members of the group or to outsiders who might help solve the problem
This Guide to Writing is designed to help you compose your own proposal and apply what you have learned from reading other essays in the same genre This Starting Points chart will help you fi nd answers to uestions you might have about composing a proposal Use the chart to fi nd the guidance you need when you need it
The Writing Assignment
Invention,
Planning, and Composing
Improving the
Proofreading
330
331
341
343
330
How do I come up with a problem to write about?
How can I best define the problem for my readers?
(pp. 301–2)
Implementation (p. 327)
How do I come up with a plausible solution?
s show students the techni ues writers use to communicate effectively with their readers
is worth the expense time and effort to do so
Read fi rst to fi nd the proposed solution usually declared in a thesis statement early in the essay Typically the thesis describes the proposed solution briefl y and indicates how it would solve the problem as in this example which contrasts the problem’s disadvantages with the solution’s benefi ts:
So not only do discourage frequent study and undermine students’ performance, they also If professors gave brief exams at fre uent intervals students would be spurred to learn more and worry less They would study more regularly perform better on tests and enhance their cognitive functioning O’Malley par 2
Th h k h h i h i d id d
Problem and its disadvantages
Thesis proposing solution and its benefits
A mini table of contents and a Starting Points chart at the opening of each Guide to Writing section in Part One help students fi nd the information they need Starting Points Critical Reading, and Troubleshooting guides use speech bubbles to prompt students to refl ect on interrogate and revise their writing on their own
Preface xiii
Integrated sentence strategies foreground the sentence patterns writers use to communicate effectively with their readers Examples from the reading selections demonstrate the fl exibility of the pattern
In the Guide to Writing sentence strategies are integrated into the Ways In activities to invite students to use them for their own rhetorical purpose and to make them their own as they revise
Frame the problem for your readers. Once you have made a preliminary choice of a problem consider what you know about it what research will help you explore what others think about it and how you can interest your readers in solving it Then determine how you can frame or reframe
you revise later
Give an example to make the problem specific:
has been [in the news/ in movies/a political issue] because of [name event].
Example: Lately the issue of bullying has been in the news sparked by the suicide of Tyler Clementi a gay college student
Bornstein par 1
Brainstorm a list: Spend 10 minutes listing everything you know about the problem Write uickly leaving judgment aside for the moment After the 10 minutes are up you can review your list and highlight or star the most promising information
Use cubing: Probe the problem from a variety of perspectives:
problems or contrast it with other related problems
views, consult Chapter 24,
writing, see Chapter 11, pp. 510, 514–15.
Use t e bas c eatu es.
Writers sometimes have to remind their readers why an issue is controversial Beginning with the title Solove works to undermine the widely held assumption
wellian and afkaes ue based on the novels 1984, by George Orwell and The Trial, by Franz afka To present this contrast Solove uses sentence patterns like these:
Not , but .
focus on , which is characterized by even notice , which is characterized by .
Here are a couple of examples from Solove’s position argument:
The problems are not just Orwellian but afkaes ue par 10
Legal and policy solutions focus too much on the problems under the Orwellian metaphor — those of surveillance — and aren’t ade uately addressing the afkaes ue problems — those of information processing par 9
Prefacexiv
Greater attention to the writing situation helps students transfer the skills they’re learning to other courses and contexts: Practicing the Genre activities at the beginning of the chapter encourage students to explore the genre collaboratively Playing with Genre boxes at the end of each Guide to Reading section encourage students to consider the effects of genre A new chapter on writing in business and scientific genres encourages students to consider how genre drives design and formatting
Concept explanations may appear in textbooks or magazines but they also appear in a variety of other contexts You can fi nd podcasts that explain concepts on iTunes University or Web tutorials that explain concepts on sites from Microsoft.com to the National Library of Medicine nlm nih gov Infographics like the example below from National Geographic Online are used fre uently to explain complex concepts
Infographics and Other Concept
Explanations Online
version of this feature, plus activities, go to
.
In the next section of this chapter we ask you to explain a concept Consider how you can best engage your readers’ attention and make the explanation clear to your audience and possibly yourself What explanatory strategies will
your explanation in a different medium in a graphic or an online tutorial help
Consider too whether using visuals or conveying your concept explanation in a different medium would be acceptable to your instructor
With the tenth edition the full version of The St. Martin’s Guide to Writing is now available in a wider variety of formats than ever before including hardcover,
www.bedfordstmartins.com/theguide/epages
Preface xv
paperback, loose leaf, and versions For a full list of options visit us online at bedfordstmartins.com/theguide/catalog
The St. Martin’s Guide to Writing, Tenth Edition helps students build profi ciency in the four categories of learning that writing programs across the country use to assess their students’ work: rhetorical knowledge critical thinking reading and writing writing processes and knowledge of conventions The chart below shows in detail how The St. Martin’s Guide helps students develop these profi ciencies
DESIRED STUD ES RELEVANT FEATURES THE ST. MARTIN’S GUIDE
Rhetorical Knowledge
purpose(s) for the genre of writing covered in that chapter.
audiences particular genre covered in that chapter. In Chapters 6–10, which cover argument, there is also extensive discussion of the need to anticipate opposing positions and
kinds of rhetorical situations rhetorical situation, from remembering an event (Chapter 2) to analyzing stories (Chapter 10).
structure appropriate to the rhetorical situation
Guides to Writing help students systematically develop their own effective structures. Document design is covered in the Guide to Writing in each of these chapters, as well as in a dedicated Chapter 21, “Designing Documents,” and in a new Chapter 22, “Writing in Business and Scientific Genres.”
Adopt appropriate voice, tone, and level of formality
Many of the Sentence Strategies in each chapter in Part One deal with these issues. Also, see purpose and audience coverage mentioned previously.
reading and writing
constructive peer criticism. In addition, In College Courses, In the Community, and In the Workplace sections, which open each Part One chapter, as well as Playing with
outside the composition course.
(continued)
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Prefacexvi
DESIRED STUD ES RELEVANT FEATURES THE ST. MARTIN’S GUIDE
Rhetorical Knowledge continued
Write in several genres The Guides to Writing in each of the nine chapters in Part One offer specific advice on writing to remember an event; to profile a person, activity, or place; to explain a concept; to analyze opposing positions and find common ground; to argue a position; to propose a solution; to justify an evaluation; to speculate about causes; and to analyze literature. In addition, Chapter 22 covers business and scientific genres, and Chapters 23–26 cover research strategies that many students will use while writing in the genres covered in Part One.
Critical Thinking, Reading, and Writing
inquiry, learning, thinking, and communicating whose apparatus introduces students to thinking about the features of the genre; then a
Guide to Writing leads them through the process of applying these features to an essay of their own. Chapter 11, “A Catalog of Invention Strategies,” and Chapter 12, “A Catalog
Other Part Two chapters include coverage of specific invention, reading, and writing strategies useful in a variety of genres.
as a series of tasks, including finding, evaluating, analyzing, and synthesizing appropriate primary and secondary sources
The Guides to Writing in each chapter in Part One break writing assignments down into doable focused thinking and writing activities that engage students in the recursive process of invention and research to find, analyze, and synthesize
various strategies useful in working with sources, including annotating, summarizing,
coverage of finding, evaluating, using, and acknowledging primary and secondary
creating an annotated bibliography.
Integrate their own ideas with those of others integrate and introduce quotations, how to cite paraphrases and summaries so as to
strategies and research coverage in several Part One chapters offer additional support.
language, knowledge, and power Make Connections, a recurring section in the apparatus following the professional
the context of the world they live in. These preliminary reflections come into play in the Guides to Writing, in which students are asked to draw on their experiences in college, community, and career in order to begin writing. Thinking Critically sections, which conclude Part One chapters, ask students to reconsider what they have learned, often in a social/political context.
Preface xvii
DESIRED STUD ES RELEVANT FEATURES THE ST. MARTIN’S GUIDE
Processes
Be aware that it usually takes multiple drafts to create and complete a successful text
The need for a critical reading of a draft and for revision is emphasized in Chapter 1 as well as in the Guides to Writing in each chapter of Part One. Case studies of
Part One chapter.
Develop flexible strategies for generating ideas, revising, editing, and proofreading
invention and research, getting a critical reading of a draft, revising, editing, and proofreading. Also in each Part One chapter, Ways In invention activities encourage students to start from their strengths, and Starting Points and Troubleshooting charts offer specific, targeted advice for students with different challenges. A dedicated Chapter 11, “A Catalog of Invention Strategies,” offers numerous helpful suggestions for idea generation.
process that permits writers to use later invention and rethinking to revise their work
on rethinking and revising at multiple stages. Ways In activities, Starting Points charts, and Troubleshooting charts in Part One chapters encourage students to discover, review, and revise their own process(es) of writing.
social aspects of writing processes
Learn to critique their own and Part One chapter offer students specific advice on constructively criticizing—and praising — their own work and the work of their classmates. Peer review is also covered in depth in Chapter 32, “Working with Others.”
Learn to balance the advantages of relying on others with the responsibility of doing their part
beginning of the chapter, Make Connections activities after the readings, and, in the
work is also covered in depth in Chapter 32, “Working with Others.”
address a range of audiences demonstrate how purpose and medium interact. Sidebars provide information and
See also Chapters 24 and 25 for extensive coverage of finding, evaluating, and using
communities for research, and Chapter 22, which offers advice on creating Web sites. Guide
(continued)
Prefacexviii
Acknowledgments We owe an enormous debt to all the rhetoricians and composition specialists whose theory research and pedagogy have informed The St. Martin’s Guide to Writing We would be adding many pages to an already long book if we were to name everyone to whom we are indebted suffi ce it to say that we have been eclectic in our borrowing
We must also acknowledge immeasurable lessons learned from all the writers professional and student alike whose work we analyzed and whose writing we used in this and earlier editions
So many instructors and students have contributed ideas and criticism over the years The members of the advisory board for the tenth edition a group of dedicated composition instructors from across the country have provided us with extensive
DESIRED STUD ES RELEVANT FEATURES THE ST. MARTIN’S GUIDE
Knowledge of Conventions
Learn common formats for different kinds of texts
Document design is covered in a dedicated Chapter 21 as well as in two sections
formats for a range of texts appear on pp. 731–38 (research paper); p. 653 (memo);
letter); pp. 662–63 (lab report); and pp. 649–50 (table, diagram, graph, chart, map, and other figures).
Develop knowledge of genre conventions ranging from structure and paragraphing to tone and mechanics
are introduced up front and then consistently reinforced throughout the chapter.
each Guide to Writing.
Practice appropriate means of documenting their work
Chapter 26 offers detailed advice on how to integrate and introduce quotations,
own ideas, and how to avoid plagiarism. Chapters 27 and 28 offer coverage of MLA and APA documentation in addition to an annotated sample student research paper. Chapter 20, “Analyzing Visuals,” also offers a complete student paper with MLA documentation. In addition, research sections in each Guide to Writing in the Part One chapters help students with the details of using and appropriately documenting
Control such surface features as syntax, grammar, punctuation, and spelling
Proofreading section in each chapter in Part One. The full version of the Guide also includes a concise yet remarkably comprehensive handbook that covers syntax, grammar, punctuation, and spelling.
Preface xix
insights and suggestions on the ninth edition and have given us the benefit of their advice on new readings and other new features for the tenth edition For their many contributions we would like to thank Lisa Bickmore Salt Lake Community College Mary Brantley Holmes Community College–Ridgeland Jo Ann Buck Guilford Technical Community College Wallace Cleaves University of California–Riverside Leona Fisher Chaffey College Gwen Graham Holmes Junior College–Grenada Lesa Hildebrand Triton College Stephanie ay University of California–Riverside Donna Nelson-Beene Bowling Green State University Gail Odette Baton Rouge Community College Gray Scott Texas Woman’s University and David Taylor St Louis Community College
Many other instructors have also helped us improve the book For responding to detailed uestionnaires about the ninth edition we thank Yolanda Ainsworth University of Texas at El Paso ara Poe Alexander Baylor University Amy Azul Mt San Antonio College Melissa Batai Triton College Jac ueline Blackwell Thomas Nelson Community College Vanessa M Cavett Holmes Community College– Ridgeland Sherry Cisler Arizona State University Susan Marie Cruea Bowling Green State University James Dail Riverside Community College Heath A Diehl Bowling Green State University Leona Fisher Chaffey College MacGregor Frank Guilford Technical Community College Patricia L Golder Victor Valley College Valerie A Gray Harrisburg Area Community College David R Hammontree Jack- son Community College Anne Helms Alamance Community College Lesa Hildeb- rand Triton College Richard Hishmeh Palomar College Dawn Hubbell-Staeble Bowling Green State University Rick Jones South Suburban College Lucinda Ligget Ivy Tech Community College Gwen W Macallister Covenant College ate McConnell Ivy Tech Community College Sara E McFarland Northwestern State University Linda McHenry Fort Hays State University C Liegh McInnis Jackson State University David Michael Merchant Louisiana Tech University Caroline Nobile Edinboro University of Pennsylvania Jennifer L Odom John Tyler Community College Clayann Gilliam Panetta Christian Brothers University Gordon Petry Bradley University im Salrin Bradley University Marguerite Anne Samuels Cecil College Graham Gray Scott Texas Woman’s University Frank Shimerdla Metropolitan Community College Wanda Synstelien Southwest Min- nesota State University Ruthe Thompson Southwest Minnesota State University Patrick Tompkins John Tyler Community College Susan Waldman Leeward Community and College and Carmen Wong John Tyler Community College
For helping us select new readings and providing feedback on our revisions we thank Yolanda Ainsworth University of Texas at El Paso John Alberti Northern
entucky University ara Poe Alexander Baylor University James Allen College of DuPage Laura Baltuska South Suburban College a’ran Bechet-Benjamin Thomas Nelson Community College Paul Beehler University of California– Riverside Tammie Bob College of DuPage ristin Brunnemer Pierce College Cagle University of Nevada–Las Vegas Gary Cale Jackson Community College Stacey Coulter Holmes Community College Steven P Deaton Holmes Community College–Ridgeland Darren DeFrain Wichita State University Tammy DiBenedetto Riverside College Joanne Diddlemeyer Tidewater Community College Marilu dos
Prefacexx
Santos South Suburban College Anne Dvorak Metropolitan Community College– Longview Christopher Ervin Western entucky University Janis Flint-Ferguson Gordon College MacGregor Frank Guilford Technical Community College Linda Gannon College of Southern Nevada Valerie Gray Harrisburg Area Community College athleen Gurnett University of California–Riverside Anne Helms Ala- mance Community College Lesa Hildebrand Triton College Dawn Hubbell- Staeble Bowling Green State University im Jameson Oklahoma City Community College Peggy Jolly University of Alabama at Birmingham Rick Jones South Sub- urban College Nadene eene Indiana University– okomo Jessica idd Universi- ty of Alabama Lucinda Ligget Ivy Tech Community College Carol Marion Guil- ford Technical Community College Linda Matthews South Suburban College ate McConnell Ivy Tech Community College Sarah E McFarland Northwestern State University Mary McMullen-Light Metropolitan Community College–Longview David Michael Merchant Louisiana Tech University Troy Nordman Butler Com- munity College Gail Odette Baton Rouge Community College Matt Oliver Old Dominion University Staci Perryman-Clark Western Michigan University athryn Raign University of North Texas Amanda Rzicznek Bowling Green State Univer- sity ym Snelling Metropolitan Community College Cathy Stablein College of DuPage Bonnie Startt Tidewater Community College Candace Stewart Ohio State University Elissa Weeks Stogner Loyola University Deana St Peter Guilford Tech- nical Community College Jamey Trotter Arapahoe Community College Janice Vierk Metropolitan Community College Melanie Wagner Lake-Sumter Community College Gwenna Weshinskey College of DuPage Jeana West Murray State College Brian Whaley Utah Valley University Lynn Wolstadt South Suburban College and Hui Wu University of Texas at Tyler
For this new edition of the Guide, we also gratefully acknowledge the special contributions of Gray Scott who made recommendations of reading selections helped draft some of the reading apparatus and was generally available as a sound- ing board and a font of good advice Natasha Cooper Syracuse University who pro- vided expert advice on the revised coverage of research Christine Garbett Bowling Green State University who wrote all comprehension uizzes for the reading selec- tions that appear on the Web site and in the instructor’s manual Beth Castrodale who helped find e-Pages selections and wrote the apparatus to accompany them and Leona Fisher who revised and updated the instructor’s manual Finally we are espe- cially grateful to the student authors for allowing us to use their work in Sticks and Stones and the Guide
We want to thank many people at Bedford St Martin’s especially Senior Editor Jane Carter without whom this book would not have been written Peter Jacoby who worked miracles keeping all the details straight and keeping us on schedule imber- ly Hampton without whom we would have no e-Pages or x-Book and Amy Saxon who single-handedly managed the reviewing process while also editing many of the book’s ancillaries including Sticks and Stones and the Guide Web site
Diana George made many valuable contributions to this revision with her care- ful copyediting as did Jamie Thaman and Lori Lewis with their meticulous
Preface xxi
proofreading and Melanie Belkin with her indexing of the text Sue Brown Shuli Traub and Jenny Peterson kept the whole process running smoothly
Thanks also to the immensely talented design team — book designer Jerilyn Bockorick as well as Bedford St Martin’s art directors Lucy rikorian and Anna Palchik — for making the tenth edition the most beautiful and most functional yet Our gratitude also goes to Linda Winters and Barbara Hernandez for their hard work clearing permissions and Martha Friedman and Debbie Needleman for their imagi- native photo research and uick work clearing permissions for the e-Pages
We also want to thank Erica Appel Director of Development aren Henry Editor in Chief and Leasa Burton Senior Executive Editor — all of whom offered valued advice at many critical stages in the process Thanks as well to Joan Feinberg and Tom Scotty for their adroit leadership of Macmillan Higher Education Denise Wydra for her skillful guidance of Bedford St Martin’s and Marketing Director
aren Soeltz and Executive Marketing Manager Molly Parke — along with the extraordinarily talented and hardworking sales staff — for their tireless efforts on be- half of the Guide
Rise dedicates this book to two young women whose writing she very much looks forward to reading: Amalia Serenity Axelrod-Delcampo and Sophie Amistad Axelrod-Delcampo
Prefacexxii
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Preface xxiii
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VideoCentral: English (Access Card). At 142 videos and counting, VideoCentral: English is the premiere collection of video content for the English classroom. With content drawn from interviews that have literally spanned the nation, our videos in- clude some of the best writers across the literary realm, the media industries, and the academic world—writers like Ha Jin, Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, and Frank McCourt. And they include students across the disciplines who are learning how im- portant writing is for their success in college and beyond. Topics include every stage of the writing process, the elements of each genre, and the ways that writing has been shaped by media and technology.
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Prefacexxiv
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Preface xxv
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TeachingCentral (bedfordstmartins.com/teachingcentral). Designed for the con- venience of instructors, this rich Web site lists and describes Bedford/St. Martin’s acclaimed print series of free professional sourcebooks, background readings, and bibliographies for teachers. In addition, TeachingCentral offers a host of free online resources, including the following:
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Preface vii
1 Introduction: Thinking about Writing 1 Why Write? 1 Write to communicate effectively in different rhetorical situations. 2 Write to think. 3 Write to learn. 3 Write to succeed. 3 Write to know yourself and connect to other people. 3
How The St. Martin’s Guide to Writing Helps You Learn to Write 4 Learn to write by using the Guides to Reading. 4 Learn to write by using the Guides to Writing. 4
THINKING CRITICALLY 5
REFLECTION: A Literacy Narrative 5
PART 1 Writing Activities
2 Remembering an Event 8 PRACTICING THE GENRE: Telling a Story 10
GUIDE TO READING 11
Analyzing Remembered Event Essays 11 Determine the writer’s purpose and audience. 11 Assess the genre’s basic features. 11
Readings 13 Jean Brandt, Calling Home 13
Shannon Lewis, We Were Here (student reading selection)
Contents
For readings that go beyond the printed page, see bedfordstmartins.com/theguide/epages.
www.bedfordstmartins.com/theguide/epages
xxviii Contents
Annie Dillard, An American Childhood 17
Jenée Desmond-Harris, Tupac and My Non-thug Life 22
Tom Ruprecht, In Too Deep 27
Juliane oepcke, How I Survived a Plane Crash (newspaper article and linked podcast interview)
Andrew Lam, Waterloo (book excerpt)
PLAYING WITH GENRE: 31
ate Beaton, Treasure (annotated cartoon)
GUIDE TO WRITING 32
The Writing Assignment 32 STARTING POINTS: 32
Writing a Draft: Invention, Research, Planning, and Composing 33 Choose an event to write about. 34
TEST YOUR CHOICE 35
Shape your story. 35
WAYS IN: 35
Organize your story to enhance the drama. 36
TEST YOUR CHOICE 37
Choose your tense and plan time cues. 38 Use dialogue to tell your story. 38 Develop and refine your descriptions. 39
WAYS IN: Describing People and Places 40
Incorporate the descriptive details throughout your story. 41
WAYS IN: Working Descriptions into Action Sequences 41
Consider ways to convey your event’s autobiographical significance. 42
WAYS IN: Conveying 42
Write the opening sentences. 43 Draft your story. 44
Evaluating the Draft: Getting a Critical Reading 44 A CRITICAL READING GUIDE 44
Improving the Draft: Revising, Formatting, Editing, and Proofreading 45 Revise your draft. 46
A TROUBLESHOOTING GUIDE 46
Think about design. 48 Edit and proofread your draft. 49
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A WRITER AT WORK 51
Jean Brandt’s Essay 51 The First Draft 54 Critical Reading and Revision 55
THINKING CRITICALLY 56
Reflecting on What You Have Learned 56
Reflecting on the Genre 57
3 Writing Profiles 58 PRACTICING THE GENRE: Conducting an Interview 60
GUIDE TO READING 61
Analyzing Profiles 61
Determine the writer’s purpose and audience. 61 Assess the genre’s basic features. 61
Readings 63 Brian Cable, The Last Stop 63
Brianne O’Leary, Fatty’s Custom Tattooz and Body Piercing (student reading selection)
John T. Edge, I’m Not Leaving Until I Eat This Thing 69
Amanda Coyne, The Long Good-Bye: Mother’s Day in Federal Prison 74
Gabriel Thompson, A Gringo in the Lettuce Fields 81
Sam Dillon, 4,100 Students Prove “Small Is Better” Rule Wrong (newspaper article and slideshow)
Veronica Chambers, The Secret Latina (magazine article with illustrations)
PLAYING WITH GENRE: Profiles in the Media 87
Dirty Jobs with Mike Rowe, Skull Cleaner (linked video)
GUIDE TO WRITING 88
The Writing Assignment 88 STARTING POINTS: Writing a Profile 88
Writing a Draft: Invention, Research, Planning, and Composing 89 Choose a subject to profile. 90
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TEST YOUR CHOICE 90
Conduct your field research. 91
WAYS IN: Manag Time 91
WAYS IN: Preparing for and Conducting Interviews and Observations 92
Integrate quotations from your interviews. 95 Create an outline that will organize your profile effectively for your readers. 96 Consider document design. 97 Determine your role in the profile. 97
WAYS IN: Determining 97
Develop your perspective on the subject. 98
WAYS IN: Developing 99
Write the opening sentences. 101 Draft your profile. 101
Evaluating the Draft: Getting a Critical Reading 101 A CRITICAL READING GUIDE 102
Improving the Draft: Revising, Formatting, Editing, and Proofreading 103 Revise your draft. 103
A TROUBLESHOOTING GUIDE 104