our goal should be to think of your paper as a kind of argument in which you offer an interpretation or response to the text (or texts) and discuss—through careful, detailed analysis of the story’s language and form—how the writer has created the meaning and/or effects that have led you to your interpretation.
our goal should be to think of your paper as a kind of argument in which you offer an interpretation or response to the text (or texts) and discuss—through careful, detailed analysis of the story’s language and form—how the writer has created the meaning and/or effects that have led you to your interpretation. The simple structure of an argument is to make claims, provide evidence for them from the text’s detail and/or stylistic techniques, and discuss/explain/reason why this evidence substantiates your interpretation of the story. In other words, back up your interpretation, or support it, with details, direct quotation and examples of relevant passages from the fictional text, and then go on to explain or discuss how that evidence leads you to the conclusions you’re drawing. Here’s another way to explain what I mean: show and tell. Your paper should deal directly, as much as possible, with the literary story in advancing your interpretation of its meaning.
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