FOUNDATIONS IN COMMUNICATION, COMPOSITION & LEARNING SEMESTER 2, SPRING 2019
The Character Analysis Paper
First and foremost, it is important to recognize that this paper is, in essence, a specialized type of argument paper.
Therefore, it may be helpful at the beginning to recall these general observations about the argument paper: As you write your argument paper, become “a person of goodwill.” You should argue, or advance an idea, and then articulate evidence and reasons to support your argument.
There are several strategies for writing an argument/argumentative paper, but the organizational structure outlined here is most straightforward, and is appropriate for your current assignment, as specified below. One final point as you draft and review your draft: remember that Clarity is not negotiable. If your sentences are not clear, if readers do not understand what you have written, you must go back and clarify. There is no point in writing if your words are not understood.
Here is one of the main strategies for constructing a paper in which you argue a position:
1. Introduce the issue. State your thesis. 2. Provide a paragraph of relevant background information. 3. Give the first reason for your argument, and offer support for this reason from either the
text you are considering or from research. 4. Give the second reason, with support from the text (or from research). 5. Give the third reason, with support from the text (or from research). 6. Acknowledge at least one opposing argument or consideration that differs from your
argument. Take a moment to clearly refute (object to, with reason) the opposing argument. Indicate how your reasoning prevails over the opposing position.
7. Conclude with restating your thesis, by making a call to action, and/or by stating the broader implications of your argument.
8. List Works Cited. What makes this particular assignment unique is its focus on a literary subject. In the section of the Little Seagull Handbook (62-65) that focuses on Literary Analysis, the writers list the following key elements:
● An arguable thesis ● Careful attention to the language of the text ● Attention to patterns and themes ● A clear interpretation ● MLA style
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FOUNDATIONS IN COMMUNICATION, COMPOSITION & LEARNING SEMESTER 2, SPRING 2019
The Character Analysis Paper Assignment
For this assignment, you will be developing a critical analysis of one of the characters in the novel The Good Negress.
The set of discussion questions for the novel lists the following major characters:
● Denise Palms ● Granma’am ● Margarete ● Missus Pearson ● Missus James
● Luke edward ● David ● Big Jim ● Josephus Johnson
In your discussion, you will develop an argument regarding one of the characters in this list. Develop specific claims about the role of this character in the novel, potentially including her or his relationships with the other characters, the degree to which he or she changes over the course of the novel, or what conflict(s)—with herself, with others, with society—the character faces and how effectively she or he addresses that/those conflict(s). It is important to keep in mind for the purposes of this assignment that these characters are fictional, not real people. It might be tempting to approach this subject from a more personal perspective, but doing so runs the danger of engaging in a more superficial or informal discussion. For this reason, avoid such considerations as whether you personally like the character, whether he or she reminds you of a family member or friend of yours, and what differences you might see in the world of the novel and the twenty-first century world in which you live. The point of this assignment is to examine the choices that the author has made in her development of the character you are discussing and how she or he functions, as a character, inside the imaginative world of the novel. In order to develop and support your argument, you will need to identify and discuss specific moments from the novel. You will need therefore to make direct references to the text—through quotations, summaries and paraphrases of specific passages—and you will need to utilize proper parenthetical citations throughout your discussion and include a proper Works Cited page at the end. In addition to the outline and Works Cited page, your final essay should be a minimum of 1000 words (roughly three to four pages) long.
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