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Tips for Writing Literary Analysis Essays
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| Short story and short poem titles are put in quotes; long poem, novel, and drama titles are underlined (or placed in italics). | |
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State your thesis
within the first paragraph: |
| Not this: | This paper will discuss the main characters of "A Rose for Emily," by William Faulkner, and "The Yellow Wallpaper," by Charlotte Perkins Gilman. |
| But this: | Both "A Rose for Emily," by William Faulkner, and "The Yellow Wallpaper," by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, have protagonists who are victims of family and society. |
A good thesis statement introduces the topic--the protagonists of the Faulkner and Gilman stories—and indicates what the author of the essay wishes to prove within the paper—the protagonists are victims of family and society.
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In general, use present tense verbs to discuss works of literature. |
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In general, avoid second person pronouns (you). |
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When using a short
quote (four lines or fewer) in your essay, you must follow the four
steps to avoid plagiarism: |
| Example: | At the end of the story, the protagonist of "I Stand Here Ironing" seems resigned to the limitations fate has placed upon her daughter when she says, "Let her be. So all that is in her will not bloom . . ." (625). |
Note the use of ellipses (. . .) when you leave out words in a quote and note the punctuation of the page citation.
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Quote accurately and without distorting the context of the quote. |
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When using a long
quote (five lines or more), your form is different than for a
short quote. |
| Example: |
Near the end of the story, the protagonist of "I Stand Here Ironing" summarizes all that seems to have gone wrong with Emily's life:
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In this example, the quotation is indented, no quotation marks appear, and the page citation comes after the terminal punctuation.
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After using any quote, you must be sure you explain
the significance of what it says. You cannot assume that everyone
will read the quote the same way you do; you must interpret it the way
you wish it to be understood by your audience. |
| Example: | At the end of the story, the protagonist of "I Stand Here Ironing" seems resigned to the limitations fate has placed upon her daughter when she says, "Let her be. So all that is in her will not bloom-but in how many does it? There is still enough left to live by. Only help her to know-help make it so there is cause for her to know-that she is more than this dress on the ironing board, helpless before the iron" (625). From this conclusion to the story, we know that the mother is resigned to the idea that Emily will never live up to her full potential as a human being. But at the same time, she is concerned that Emily not feel she is a helpless victim of life, as helpless as a dress before an iron. |
When you quote dialogue or any material which occurs within quotes within the original text, you must use double quotes.
| Example: | At the climax of "Young Goodman Brown," Goodman Brown tries to save his wife, "'Faith! Faith!' cried the husband. 'Look up to Heaven, and resist the Wicked one!'" (205). |
When you summarize or refer to a passage of a story without quoting it directly, you still must provide a page citation.
| Example: | At the start of "The Chrysanthemums," the author establishes that Elisa's world does not challenge her strength, abilities, or energy (220-221). |
Your paper should conclude with a bibliographic citation for each work you cite within the essay. This will be a separate page entitled Works Cited. Use MLA form:
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Punctuation:
One of the most common grammatical errors I encounter is the
comma splice. A comma splice occurs when two independent clauses
(i.e., complete sentences) are spliced together with a comma. E.g.,
"Emily was the victim of her father, he always chased all the young men
away from her." Commas are not strong enough to fill this function.
To correct a comma splice, use a semicolon, insert a dash (but sparingly), create two separate sentences by using a period, or revise the sentence's structure altogether.
| Examples: | Emily was the victim of her father; he always chased all the young men away from her. (semicolon) |
| Emily was the victim of her father—he always chased all the young men away from her. (dash) | |
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Emily was the victim of her father. He always chased all the young men away from her. (two sentences) |
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| Emily was the victim of her father who chased all the young men away from her. (relative clause) |
This page Adapted with permission from d.s. koelling's online handout