Introduction
When
you read for pleasure, your only goal is enjoyment. You might find yourself
reading to get caught up in an exciting story, to learn about an interesting
time or place, or just to pass time. Maybe you’re looking for inspiration,
guidance, or a reflection of your own life. There are as many different, valid
ways of reading a book as there are books in the world.
When
you read a work of literature in an English class, however, you’re being asked
to read in a special way: you’re being asked to perform literary analysis. To
analyze something means to break it down into smaller parts and then examine
how those parts work, both individually and together. Literary analysis
involves examining all the parts of a novel, play, short story, or
poem—elements such as character, setting, tone, and imagery—and thinking about
how the author uses those elements to create certain effects.
A literary essay isn’t
a book review: you’re not being asked whether or not you liked a book or
whether you’d recommend it to another reader. A literary essay also isn’t like
the kind of book report you wrote when you were younger, where your teacher
wanted you to summarize the book’s action. A high school- or college-level
literary essay asks, “How does this piece of literature actually work?” “How
does it do what it does?” and, “Why might the author have made the choices he
or she did?”
The Seven Steps
No one is born knowing how to
analyze literature; it’s a skill you learn and a process you can master. As you
gain more practice with this kind of thinking and writing, you’ll be able to
craft a method that works best for you. But until then, here are seven basic
steps to writing a well-constructed literary essay.
Ask Questions
When you’re assigned a literary
essay in class, your teacher will often provide you with a list of writing
prompts. Lucky you! Now all you have to do is choose one. Do yourself a favor
and pick a topic that interests you. You’ll have a much better (not to mention
easier) time if you start off with something you enjoy thinking about. If you
are asked to come up with a topic by yourself, though, you might start to feel
a little panicked. Maybe you have too many ideas—or none at all. Don’t worry.
Take a deep breath and start by asking yourself these questions:
Collect Evidence
Once you know what
question you want to answer, it’s time to scour the book for things that will
help you answer the question. Don’t worry if you don’t know what you want to
say yet—right now you’re just collecting ideas and material and letting it all
percolate. Keep track of passages, symbols, images, or scenes that deal with
your topic. Eventually, you’ll start making connections between these examples
and your thesis will emerge.
Elements of Style
These are the hows—how the characters speak, how the story is
constructed, and how language is used throughout the work.
Construct a
Thesis
When you’ve examined
all the evidence you’ve collected and know how you want to answer the question,
it’s time to write your thesis statement. A thesis is a claim about a work of literature that
needs to be supported by evidence and arguments. The thesis statement is the
heart of the literary essay, and the bulk of your paper will be spent trying to
prove this claim. A good thesis will be:
·
Arguable.
“The Great
Gatsby describes New York society in the 1920s”
isn’t a thesis—it’s a fact.
·
Provable through textual evidence.
“Hamlet is a confusing but
ultimately very well-written play” is a weak thesis because it offers the
writer’s personal opinion about the book. Yes, it’s arguable, but it’s not a
claim that can be proved or supported with examples taken from the play itself.
·
Surprising.
“Both George and Lenny change a great deal in Of Mice
and Men ” is a weak thesis because it’s obvious.
A really strong thesis will argue for a reading of the text that is not
immediately apparent.
·
Specific.
“Dr. Frankenstein’s monster tells us a lot about the human
condition” is almost a
really great thesis statement, but it’s still too vague. What does the writer
mean by “a lot”? How does the monster tell us so much about the human
condition?
Develop and Organize
Arguments
The reasons and examples that
support your thesis will form the middle paragraphs of your essay. Since you
can’t really write your thesis statement until you know how you’ll structure
your argument, you’ll probably end up working on steps 3 and 4 at the same
time.
There’s no single method of
argumentation that will work in every context. One essay prompt might ask you
to compare and contrast two characters, while another asks you to trace an
image through a given work of literature. These questions require different
kinds of answers and therefore different kinds of arguments. Below, we’ll
discuss three common kinds of essay prompts and some strategies for
constructing a solid, well-argued case.
Write the Introduction
Your introduction sets up the
entire essay. It’s where you present your topic and articulate the particular
issues and questions you’ll be addressing. It’s also where you, as the writer,
introduce yourself to your readers. A persuasive literary essay immediately establishes
its writer as a knowledgeable, authoritative figure.
An introduction can vary in
length depending on the overall length of the essay, but in a traditional
five-paragraph essay it should be no longer than one paragraph. However long it
is, your introduction needs to:
·
Provide any necessary context.
Your introduction should situate the reader and let him or her
know what to expect. What book are you discussing? Which characters? What topic
will you be addressing?
·
Answer the “So what?” question.
Why is this topic important, and why is your particular position
on the topic noteworthy? Ideally, your introduction should pique the reader’s
interest by suggesting how your argument is surprising or otherwise
counterintuitive. Literary essays make unexpected connections and reveal
less-than-obvious truths.
Write the Body
Paragraphs
Once you’ve written your
introduction, you’ll take the arguments you developed in step 4 and turn them
into your body paragraphs. The organization of this middle section of your
essay will largely be determined by the argumentative strategy you use, but no
matter how you arrange your thoughts, your body paragraphs need to do the
following:
·
Begin with a strong topic sentence.
Topic sentences are like signs on a highway: they tell the
reader where they are and where they’re going. A good topic sentence not only
alerts readers to what issue will be discussed in the following paragraph but
also gives them a sense of what argument will be made about that issue. “Rumor
and gossip play an important role in The
Crucible ” isn’t a strong topic sentence because
it doesn’t tell us very much. “The community’s constant gossiping creates an
environment that allows false accusations to flourish” is a much stronger topic
sentence— it not only tells us what the paragraph will discuss (gossip) but how
the paragraph will discuss the topic (by showing how gossip creates a set of
conditions that leads to the play’s climactic action).
·
Fully and completely develop a single thought.
Don’t skip around in your paragraph or try to stuff in too much
material. Body paragraphs are like bricks: each individual one needs to be
strong and sturdy or the entire structure will collapse. Make sure you have
really proven your point before moving on to the next one.
Write the Conclusion
Just as you used the introduction
to ground your readers in the topic before providing your thesis, you’ll use
the conclusion to quickly summarize the specifics learned thus far and then
hint at the broader implications of your topic. A good conclusion will:
·
Do more than simply restate the thesis.
If your thesis argued that The
Catcher in the Rye can be read as a Christian
allegory, don’t simply end your essay by saying, “And that is why The Catcher in the Rye can
be read as a Christian allegory.” If you’ve constructed your arguments well,
this kind of statement will just be redundant.
·
Synthesize the arguments, not summarize them.
Similarly, don’t repeat the details of your body paragraphs in
your conclusion. The reader has already read your essay, and chances are it’s
not so long that they’ve forgotten all your points by now.
source: www.sparknotes.com
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