Paper #2
Close Reading / Literary Analysis
Van Noy
What: Provide a detailed close reading or literary
analysis of “Sonny’s Blues,” “Love Medicine,” “The Open Boat,” or another short
story in the Norton that you clear with me. In close reading, you provide a
careful, detailed examination of a text, paying particular attention to
language, structure, and theme.
Why:
A
close reading, or an explicacion de text, provides
the basis for virtually any type of critical analysis.
Mode: Analytical (but
not necessarily excluding the use of the first person)
Length: 3 – 5 pages
Due
Dates:
Sunday Sept 21 for First Draft. Peer
Review is 22-26. Final Draft is October
3.
Format: MLA-Style Layout and
Documentation. Please use the page # and par. # in your citation (Holst 2, par. 5). Short
form, (2, par. 5).
Getting
There:
Explications follow the traditional essay format, with introduction, thesis,
topic sentences, carefully developed paragraphs, etc. For a short story, you
need not examine every feature of the text; however, you must be careful to
attempt to account for all of the elements that are connected with your chosen
focus and provide sufficient textual examples to make your case. Do not feel
that you have to provide a complete, definitive reading. You should not need to
use secondary sources for this particular assignment, although you are
certainly welcome (and encouraged) to discuss the story with me and your
colleagues.
You will
want to choose some part of the text for some micro-level analysis, and show
interrelationships of parts to the whole. How are the elements of character,
setting, plot, point of view, theme interdependent on one another? Pay
attention to the sounds of words, their connotative/denotative meanings, the shape of sentences. Choose a paragraph, a
section, but no more than a page for this intensive reading. This analysis
should probably constitute about 30% of your paper.
More Tips on Paper #2
the Close Reading.
- Re-read
the assignment and re-think your
purpose: are you doing a close reading, focusing in on at least one
passage for micro-analysis and showing how it can illuminate the whole?
Showing how the text works, how
form and content, arrangement and theme work together.
- You’re
purpose isn’t really to do a
character analysis, unless that analysis is one of the keys to the
story’s overall theme.
- After
having discovered the theme in your first draft, re-read the story for more evidence. Re-read it again. Where
can we see this theme played out on a smaller scale?
- None of the that stuff about “life” or
“society”—New Critics kept it out. They focused more on how the text
was put together—what unifying principle? What patterns, irony, paradox,
ambiguity, tension?
- The
“what it teaches” school is the traditionalist approach (looks for moral
rather than theme).
- Check
out this web page
on close readings, especially item 1 on figurative language and 2 on
diction. These are the elements most missing from the papers—a close look at the language (especially
figurative) and diction. Here
is another
from the Purdue online Writing Center (OWL).
Criteria for Grading
The best papers:
- Not
only fulfill the assignment (a close reading, with micro-analysis) but do
so in a fresh and mature way.
Accommodate themselves well to the intended audience.
- Say
something: are precise, illustrate
generalizations fully and appropriately, define key terms, develop and
explore the implications of their own ideas, and are reasonably
sophisticated. Analyze and reflect
rather than merely describe.
- Are
well written: the prose is clear,
apt, and occasionally memorable.
Contain few errors by contemporary American Standard English
criteria.
- Are
well organized: are tightly unified
and develop a thesis and/or sustain a line of thought clearly and
logically, without unnecessary digressions. Paragraphs are fully developed, with
clear topic sentences, and follow naturally from what precedes them; the
conclusion reinforces the reader’s confidence in the writer’s control of
the argument.
- Are
formatted according to standard conventions. Use MLA notation
correctly. Have a heading in
the upper left and page numbers with the writer's name in the upper
right.
- Take
into consideration the process as well as the product: the draft was a
good faith effort; the writer was prepared and present for peer
review.