Copy of Theory Paper


 

Eng 298: “Theory” Paper

 

 

Your final paper is due in class Wednesday, Dec 14th (and I mean this).  No email.  It should be 4-5 pages and develop an argument about the meaning of a literary work (poetry, short fiction, or drama) using the theoretical approach you worked on for your presentation.

 

That is, in developing your argument, I ask that you use (and identify for your reader) one of the theoretical approaches that are the subject of our presentations (New Criticism; feminism/gender; deconstruction; cultural studies).  These do not have to be “full-blown” theoretical readings, but you must present your argument as a response to a central critical question associated with one of the theories we have worked with.  You may choose to build such a critical question into your thesis statement or opening paragraph, or you may leave the question implicit (for a review of generic questions, see the ends of the various Bressler chapters--including the ones we didn't read on "Postmodernism" (deconstruction) and "Cultural Poetics"--and the bullet points at the end of the Dobie handouts.

 

You will use the approach you presented, but you may not write about the primary text that you interpreted in your own presentation. You may use another text I suggested, any of the texts the other groups presented on (or were suggested), or a text that we have read as a class.  But do not use a text you've written one of the first two papers on.

 

An example that employs a possible formula: 1) A claim about the apparent meaning of a text; 2) A turn to the emphases or questions of a particular critical method; 3) A re-evaluation of the text based on the critical method, which proposes an answer or outcome.  (In other words, don’t simply ask your critical question, such as “let’s see what happens when we look for paradox, or apply the facts of an author’s biography; make sure you tell us in your introduction what will come of finding paradox or thinking about an author’s life.)  For example:

 

Andrew Marvell’s “Coy Mistress” seemingly confronts a universal problem: how do we face the stark inevitability of our deaths?  The critical method of cultural poetics, however, tells us that texts invariably engage the values of their particular cultures.  At the time Marvell was writing, for example, critical debates were taking place over the nature and uses of persuasive rhetoric.  In that context, Marvell’s poem functions as a critique of the Renaissance humanist emphasis on the “art of rhetoric.”

 

Be sure your paper:

 

 

Other bullet points (these should be more than familiar by now):