Writing Papers in Literature Courses
Formatting and Quotations:
Word-process your paper, double-spaced, and use a normal (Arial or Times New
Roman) 12-point font, with 1.00-1.25" margins on all four sides.
A
title page is not necessary.
In MLA style, in the upper-left-hand corner of the first page, type your name,
your professor's name, the course
information, and the date. In
the upper-right-hand corner of each page (in the header) put your last name
and the page number.
Choose
a title that clearly describes your topic; do not simply use the title of
the work(s) you are writing about.
Several spaces below your last paragraph, you should include a Works Cited section. Since you are going to be referring to several sources from the same anthology, and since secondary sources are not required, the section will look like this (also double-spaced):
Baym, Nina, et al. The Norton Anthology of American Literature. 6th ed. 2 vols. New York: Norton, 2003.
Bradstreet, Anne. "The Prologue." Baym 239-240.
Whenever
you quote prose, cite the quotation; that is, offer the page number(s) from which
the quote is taken. For
example,
Antonia’s health is clearly evidenced by brown skin and the “glow of rich dark color” in her cheeks (959).
If
you quote from the same page or two pages more than once, cite the page(s)
only once, after the final quotation.
If you’re quoting poetry, give the line number(s) of quotations. If you quote three lines or less, integrate them into your on-going text, but be careful to preserve the line breaks and the poet’s capitalization:
Like the speaker in Frost’s “Birches,” most of us have at times found experiences “too much like a pathless wood / Where your face burns and tickles with the cobwebs / Broken across it” (44-46).
But if you’re quoting four lines or more, indent and do not use quotations marks around the lines themselves (and continue to double space the long quotation):
In the latter part of “Birches,” the speaker eloquently articulates what it is about experience that sometimes causes him to wish that he could flee the world that so harasses and overwhelms him:
It’s when I’m weary of considerations,
And life is too much like a pathless wood
Where your face burns and tickles with the cobwebs
Broken across it, and one eye is weeping
From a twig’s having lashed across it open. (42-47)
Other Conventions When Writing About Literature:
As
much as possible, use the present tense when referring to action that takes
place in a literary text’s dramatized present—e.g. Edna’s instability
is emphatically revealed when she writes to her husband.
Underline
or italicize the title of any work
long enough to be printed separate: a novel, a play, a collection.
Put
"quotation marks" around the titles of poems, short stories, essays, and other
works not of book length.
Refer
to the author by his or her full name when you first mention him or her;
then by his or her last name only.
Identify
clearly in the opening paragraph the author(s) and title(s) of the work(s)
you are discussing, even if your title does so.
Insert
the author’s name into a citation if there is any doubt about who the
author is--e.g., I profoundly disagree with the claim that the ending of the
novel “asks the reader to accept a different and diminished Edna from the
one developed so impressively before” (Spangler 187).
If
you interject your words into a quotation, indicate this by enclosing your
words with brackets [ ], not parentheses ( ).
If you omit words from a quotation, indicate this with ellipses . . . (spaced periods).
Other Writing Strategies:
Think
of your reader as a classmate who is familiar with the text(s), so that you don’t
need to summarize the plot, but also as someone who has not put the time on
the subject you’re confronting that you have.
If
you must summarize the plot, try to blend interpretation with summary.
Think of your essay as an argument. You
need to state what you think and then explain why you think the way you do.
Use
textual evidence--references to plot elements, paraphrases, and
quotations--to support your points, particularly when they are arguable, so
that the reader can tell why you draw the conclusions you do.
CHECK
your claims against the facts of the text(s). The assertion of what you think should be in a text without checking
to see if it’s really there is the single greatest cause of bad grades in
literature analysis papers.
Use
a balanced tone, avoiding flippancy, excessive anger, or praise, as well as
pretension. Don’t strain to
be eloquent. If you’re deeply
involved with a work, your paper will show it. It is fine to use the first person singular (“I”) occasionally,
especially if it avoids clumsy passive constructions.
Try to write in your own voice.
Edit
and proofread carefully, looking for and correcting errors:
sentence
fragments, run-on sentences, comma spliced sentences, spelling errors, and
errors in grammar and usage. It’s
fine to make small, last-minute corrections of typos with pen or pencil.
SAVE
the paper on your hard drive (and a disk) and make an extra copy.
They can get lost.
Finally:
Begin by choosing works which you enjoyed reading. Reread them, take notes, and give yourself time to plan your essay. I encourage you to call, email, or set up a meeting with me at any time if you have questions about your paper. I can try to offer some direction based on your topic, and we could even brainstorm ideas together if needed.
Your essay will be evaluated based on (1) the clarity of your argument, (2) the clarity of your main ideas, (3) the strength of your explanations and evidence, (4) the structure, and (5) the use of language with respect to grammar, punctuation, spelling, and mechanics.