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Analytical Writing
How to develop and write an
analytic essay
Argument: Writing an analytic essay requires that you make some sort of argument. The
core of this argument is called a thesis. It is your claim, succinctly stated in a single
sentence. What do budding literary critics such as yourselves argue about? You make a
pervasive, persistent case that a certain thing is true about a piece of literature. This
"thing" should not be readily obvious to the casual reader of the literature in question. It
is what you draw out of the book or essay, how you interpret it. It is a claim that must be
supported by specific evidence from the text.
Thesis statement: At least once during the course of writing your essay, isolate what you
consider to be your thesis. Is your proposition both arguable and reasonable? If it is
obvious (i.e. Mary Rowlandson used the Bible for comfort during her captivity) you don’t
have an argument. Argument requires analysis (i.e. taking things apart and explaining
them). One test that may help is asking yourself what the opposite "side" of your
argument would be. A good, complicated thesis (which was proposed by one of your
classmates) is that "Although Mary Rowlandson says she often used the Bible as a source
of comfort during her captivity, a closer reading of her narrative suggests her faith may
have been more troubled by her experience than she lets on." One useful structure for
writing thesis statements is the "although" form used above: "Although x seems to be
true about this piece of literature, y is in fact more true (or makes our thinking about x
more complex)." In this form you present both sides of your argument at once and show
which side you’re on. Your job in the paper is to convince your reader to join you.
Another way to write an effective thesis statement is to use the form "If we look closely
at x (e.g. how Bradford defines freedom) we discover y (that ).
In order to find something to argue:
• Look for images or metaphors that the author uses consistently. What other sort
of pattern can you identify in the text? How do you interpret this pattern so that
your reader will understand the book, essay, poem, speech, etc. better?
• What philosophical, moral, ethical, etc. ideas is the author advocating or
opposing? What are the consequences of accepting the author's argument?
• Explain how the work functions as a piece of rhetoric--how does the author
attempt to convince his or her reader of something? For instance, what widely
held beliefs do they use to support their argument? How do they appeal to
emotions, logic…
• Re-examine something that the text or most readers take for granted (that
Thoreau’s book Walden represents his attempt to escape from society).
Question this major premise and see where it takes you
• Ask yourself if an author’s literary argument is inconsistent with itself or is in
some way philosophically "dangerous," inadequate, unethical, or misleading.
• Examine how characters are presented in a story. How do they help the main
character to develop? Which characters are trustworthy? Which are not? Why
are they presented this way?
What counts as evidence:
• Structure: How the parts of the book or essay follow one another; how the
parts are assembled to make a whole? Why does the author start where they
start, end where they end? What is the logical progression of thought? How
might that progression be intended to affect the reader What effect might this
progression of ideas have on a generic reader or on a reader from the time
period in which the work was written? Does the piece move from the general
to the specific or vice versa? If you could divide the book/essay into sections,
units of meaning, what would those sections be? How are they related to each
other? Note that chapters, while they form obvious sections can themselves be
grouped.
• Referring to the text: In writing analytic papers that address any kind of
literature, it is necessary to refer to the text (the specific words on the page of
the book) in order to support your argument. This means that you must
quote and interpret passages that demonstrate or support your argument.
Quotation is usually stronger than paraphrase. Remember also that your
purpose in writing an essay is not merely to paraphrase or summarize (repeat)
what the author has said, but to make an argument about how the make their
point, or how they have said what they have said.
• Language: includes the way an author phrases his or her sentences, the key
metaphors used (it’s up to you to explain how these metaphors are used, why
these metaphors are appropriate, effective, ineffective, or ambiguous). Is the
way a sentence is phrased particularly revealing of the author’s meaning?
Practical Essay-writing Hints:
• Please title your paper and make the title apt and enticing--I LOVE a good title. It puts me
in a good mood before I start reading.
• Be clear about whether you’re writing about a book, an essay (non-fiction, short prose), a
story (short fiction) a poem, a novel (book-length fiction), an autobiography, a narrative (as
in Captivity Narratives) etc. Walden is a book comprised of chapters. Each of these
chapters could also be called an essay. Within these essays, Thoreau sometimes tells
stories. The book itself is not a story, but closer to a narrative, which is non-fiction.
• Always go through at least two drafts of you paper. Let your paper sit, preferably for 24
hours between drafts sometime during the process of your writing.
• Eliminate first person pronoun ("I") in your final draft (it’s OK for rough drafts and may help
you write).
• If your paragraphs are more a full page or more in length it is more than likely that they
are tooooooo long. Probably you have too many ideas "in the air" at once. Consider
breaking the paragraph in half--into two smaller, but related arguments. Your reader needs
a break, needs more structure in order to be able to follow your meaning.
• If several of your paragraphs are exceedingly short (4-5 lines), it is likely that you are not
developing your ideas thoroughly enough--that you are writing notes rather than analysis.
Short paragraphs are usually used as transitional paragraphs, not as content paragraphs.
(Short paragraphs can be used in the rhetorical devise of reversal where you lead your
reader down a certain path (to show them one side of the argument, the one you are
going to oppose) and then turn away from that argument to state the true argument of
your paper.)
• Employ quotation often. One quotation per argumentative paragraph is usually necessary. Depending
upon the length and complexity of the passage or topic you're dealing with, more quotations may be
useful to prevent you from getting too far away from the text. Your quotations combined with your
interpretations are your proof. Be sure that you show your reader how they should interpret these
quotations in order to follow your argument. (Almost every quotation should be followed by an
interpretation, a deeper reading of what is being said and how its being said. This interpretation
demonstrates how the quotation supports the claim you're making about it). Pay attention to
metaphor, phrasing, tone, alliteration, etc. How is the author saying what they are saying--what does
that teach us about the text?
• Remember to write directive (sometimes called "topic") sentences for your paragraphs. The first
sentence of any paragraph should give your reader an idea of what the paragraph is going to say and
how the paragraph will connect to the larger argument. It should have more to do with
what you have to say about the materials than what the author him or herself has said.
• Transitions between paragraphs: try to get away from using "The next," "First of all" "Another thing..."
to connect your paragraphs. This is the "list" method of structuring a paper--not an integrated, logical
approach. A really strong transition makes the logical connection between paragraphs or sections of a
paper and gives the reader a sense that you’re building an argument. To make sure you are making a
well-connected argument, ask yourself how the last sentence of each paragraph and the first
sentence of the next are connected. Each of the sentences within your paragraphs should be related
somehow (follow from, refer to, etc.) the one that precedes it, and the one which follows it. This will
help the reader follow the flow of your ideas. The order of your paragraphs should reveal a
developing argument.
• On the most basic level, you should be able to consciously justify the presence and
placement of every word in every sentence, every sentence in every paragraph, every
paragraph in every essay. To repeat: in revising your papers after the first draft (which
is always, inevitably to some degree confused because you are involved in the process
of working your ideas out), you should be highly conscious of what you are doing and
why you are doing it.

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Analytical Writing

  • 1. Analytical Writing How to develop and write an analytic essay
  • 2. Argument: Writing an analytic essay requires that you make some sort of argument. The core of this argument is called a thesis. It is your claim, succinctly stated in a single sentence. What do budding literary critics such as yourselves argue about? You make a pervasive, persistent case that a certain thing is true about a piece of literature. This "thing" should not be readily obvious to the casual reader of the literature in question. It is what you draw out of the book or essay, how you interpret it. It is a claim that must be supported by specific evidence from the text. Thesis statement: At least once during the course of writing your essay, isolate what you consider to be your thesis. Is your proposition both arguable and reasonable? If it is obvious (i.e. Mary Rowlandson used the Bible for comfort during her captivity) you don’t have an argument. Argument requires analysis (i.e. taking things apart and explaining them). One test that may help is asking yourself what the opposite "side" of your argument would be. A good, complicated thesis (which was proposed by one of your classmates) is that "Although Mary Rowlandson says she often used the Bible as a source of comfort during her captivity, a closer reading of her narrative suggests her faith may have been more troubled by her experience than she lets on." One useful structure for writing thesis statements is the "although" form used above: "Although x seems to be true about this piece of literature, y is in fact more true (or makes our thinking about x more complex)." In this form you present both sides of your argument at once and show which side you’re on. Your job in the paper is to convince your reader to join you. Another way to write an effective thesis statement is to use the form "If we look closely at x (e.g. how Bradford defines freedom) we discover y (that ).
  • 3. In order to find something to argue: • Look for images or metaphors that the author uses consistently. What other sort of pattern can you identify in the text? How do you interpret this pattern so that your reader will understand the book, essay, poem, speech, etc. better? • What philosophical, moral, ethical, etc. ideas is the author advocating or opposing? What are the consequences of accepting the author's argument? • Explain how the work functions as a piece of rhetoric--how does the author attempt to convince his or her reader of something? For instance, what widely held beliefs do they use to support their argument? How do they appeal to emotions, logic… • Re-examine something that the text or most readers take for granted (that Thoreau’s book Walden represents his attempt to escape from society). Question this major premise and see where it takes you • Ask yourself if an author’s literary argument is inconsistent with itself or is in some way philosophically "dangerous," inadequate, unethical, or misleading. • Examine how characters are presented in a story. How do they help the main character to develop? Which characters are trustworthy? Which are not? Why are they presented this way?
  • 4. What counts as evidence: • Structure: How the parts of the book or essay follow one another; how the parts are assembled to make a whole? Why does the author start where they start, end where they end? What is the logical progression of thought? How might that progression be intended to affect the reader What effect might this progression of ideas have on a generic reader or on a reader from the time period in which the work was written? Does the piece move from the general to the specific or vice versa? If you could divide the book/essay into sections, units of meaning, what would those sections be? How are they related to each other? Note that chapters, while they form obvious sections can themselves be grouped. • Referring to the text: In writing analytic papers that address any kind of literature, it is necessary to refer to the text (the specific words on the page of the book) in order to support your argument. This means that you must quote and interpret passages that demonstrate or support your argument. Quotation is usually stronger than paraphrase. Remember also that your purpose in writing an essay is not merely to paraphrase or summarize (repeat) what the author has said, but to make an argument about how the make their point, or how they have said what they have said. • Language: includes the way an author phrases his or her sentences, the key metaphors used (it’s up to you to explain how these metaphors are used, why these metaphors are appropriate, effective, ineffective, or ambiguous). Is the way a sentence is phrased particularly revealing of the author’s meaning?
  • 5. Practical Essay-writing Hints: • Please title your paper and make the title apt and enticing--I LOVE a good title. It puts me in a good mood before I start reading. • Be clear about whether you’re writing about a book, an essay (non-fiction, short prose), a story (short fiction) a poem, a novel (book-length fiction), an autobiography, a narrative (as in Captivity Narratives) etc. Walden is a book comprised of chapters. Each of these chapters could also be called an essay. Within these essays, Thoreau sometimes tells stories. The book itself is not a story, but closer to a narrative, which is non-fiction. • Always go through at least two drafts of you paper. Let your paper sit, preferably for 24 hours between drafts sometime during the process of your writing. • Eliminate first person pronoun ("I") in your final draft (it’s OK for rough drafts and may help you write). • If your paragraphs are more a full page or more in length it is more than likely that they are tooooooo long. Probably you have too many ideas "in the air" at once. Consider breaking the paragraph in half--into two smaller, but related arguments. Your reader needs a break, needs more structure in order to be able to follow your meaning. • If several of your paragraphs are exceedingly short (4-5 lines), it is likely that you are not developing your ideas thoroughly enough--that you are writing notes rather than analysis. Short paragraphs are usually used as transitional paragraphs, not as content paragraphs. (Short paragraphs can be used in the rhetorical devise of reversal where you lead your reader down a certain path (to show them one side of the argument, the one you are going to oppose) and then turn away from that argument to state the true argument of your paper.)
  • 6. • Employ quotation often. One quotation per argumentative paragraph is usually necessary. Depending upon the length and complexity of the passage or topic you're dealing with, more quotations may be useful to prevent you from getting too far away from the text. Your quotations combined with your interpretations are your proof. Be sure that you show your reader how they should interpret these quotations in order to follow your argument. (Almost every quotation should be followed by an interpretation, a deeper reading of what is being said and how its being said. This interpretation demonstrates how the quotation supports the claim you're making about it). Pay attention to metaphor, phrasing, tone, alliteration, etc. How is the author saying what they are saying--what does that teach us about the text? • Remember to write directive (sometimes called "topic") sentences for your paragraphs. The first sentence of any paragraph should give your reader an idea of what the paragraph is going to say and how the paragraph will connect to the larger argument. It should have more to do with what you have to say about the materials than what the author him or herself has said. • Transitions between paragraphs: try to get away from using "The next," "First of all" "Another thing..." to connect your paragraphs. This is the "list" method of structuring a paper--not an integrated, logical approach. A really strong transition makes the logical connection between paragraphs or sections of a paper and gives the reader a sense that you’re building an argument. To make sure you are making a well-connected argument, ask yourself how the last sentence of each paragraph and the first sentence of the next are connected. Each of the sentences within your paragraphs should be related somehow (follow from, refer to, etc.) the one that precedes it, and the one which follows it. This will help the reader follow the flow of your ideas. The order of your paragraphs should reveal a developing argument.
  • 7. • On the most basic level, you should be able to consciously justify the presence and placement of every word in every sentence, every sentence in every paragraph, every paragraph in every essay. To repeat: in revising your papers after the first draft (which is always, inevitably to some degree confused because you are involved in the process of working your ideas out), you should be highly conscious of what you are doing and why you are doing it.