i need you to read the informations below and then make a summary in the right informative way described below ... the summary should be on the file that i will link down!! i need it in 7hrs...
Your annotated bibliography will list a minimum of
six items
.
Four
of them must be from credible, academic, peer-reviewed sources that you find as you do research for the final essay.
The remaining two
sources must be credible, but they can come from sources other than academic journals if you wish. When you write, use standard MLA typographic and citation format, and then extend each Works Cited entry with a summary of the major arguments in the essay you have read. Each summary must contain
a minimum of 100 words
.
If desired, append a list of “Works Consulted” for sources used that are
not
peer-reviewed.
Basic MLA Style Format for an Annotated Bibliography
Format your page and list of citations in the same way you would a normal Works Cited page, then add your annotation at the end of it.
Title your bibliography “Works Cited” at the top of the page. Center it, but do not put it in bold face type.
Put entries in alphabetical order, not the order in which they have been assigned.
Use hanging indents
, as shown below. That is, the first line of the citation starts at the left margin. Subsequent lines are indented 5 spaces.
As with every other part of an MLA formatted essay, the bibliography is
double spaced
throughout.
The
annotation is a continuation of the citation
. Do not drop down to the next line to start the annotation.
The
right margin is the normal right margin
of your document.
There is a right way and a wrong way to write up these entries.
Don’t “report”
the arguments the author makes or tell readers the order in which those arguments are presented and count all of that reporting and listing as “summary” or annotation. Instead, restate in your own words the claims made by the writer in his/her essay.
Wrong way to do it
: "Marotti introduces his argument in the first section of the essay; then he moves on to talk about Petrarchan conventions. He ends the essay by talking about the political ramifications of Shakespeare's sonnets."
Right way to do it:
"Marotti’s argument here is that the sonnet genre must be understood in three ways: by examining the text itself, by examining the text in relation to others of its kind, and by exploring the social/historical environment in which it was published and circulated . . ."
Sample Annotations
NOTE:
These entries provide models of both format and content. They summarize—rather than “report”—the essay described.
Marotti, Arthur F. ""Love is Not Love": Elizabethan Sonnet Sequences and the Social Order."
ELH
2(1982): 396-428. Marotti’s argument here is that the sonnet genre must be understood in three ways: by examining the text itself, by examining the text in relation to others of its kind, and by exploring the social/historical environment in which it was published and cir.
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i need you to read the informations below and then make a summary in.docx
1. i need you to read the informations below and then make a
summary in the right informative way described below ... the
summary should be on the file that i will link down!! i need it in
7hrs...
Your annotated bibliography will list a minimum of
six items
.
Four
of them must be from credible, academic, peer-reviewed
sources that you find as you do research for the final essay.
The remaining two
sources must be credible, but they can come from sources other
than academic journals if you wish. When you write, use
standard MLA typographic and citation format, and then extend
each Works Cited entry with a summary of the major arguments
in the essay you have read. Each summary must contain
a minimum of 100 words
.
If desired, append a list of “Works Consulted” for sources used
that are
not
peer-reviewed.
Basic MLA Style Format for an Annotated Bibliography
Format your page and list of citations in the same way you
would a normal Works Cited page, then add your annotation at
the end of it.
Title your bibliography “Works Cited” at the top of the page.
Center it, but do not put it in bold face type.
Put entries in alphabetical order, not the order in which they
have been assigned.
Use hanging indents
, as shown below. That is, the first line of the citation starts at
the left margin. Subsequent lines are indented 5 spaces.
2. As with every other part of an MLA formatted essay, the
bibliography is
double spaced
throughout.
The
annotation is a continuation of the citation
. Do not drop down to the next line to start the annotation.
The
right margin is the normal right margin
of your document.
There is a right way and a wrong way to write up these entries.
Don’t “report”
the arguments the author makes or tell readers the order in
which those arguments are presented and count all of that
reporting and listing as “summary” or annotation. Instead,
restate in your own words the claims made by the writer in
his/her essay.
Wrong way to do it
: "Marotti introduces his argument in the first section of the
essay; then he moves on to talk about Petrarchan conventions.
He ends the essay by talking about the political ramifications of
Shakespeare's sonnets."
Right way to do it:
"Marotti’s argument here is that the sonnet genre must be
understood in three ways: by examining the text itself, by
examining the text in relation to others of its kind, and by
exploring the social/historical environment in which it was
published and circulated . . ."
Sample Annotations
NOTE:
These entries provide models of both format and content. They
3. summarize—rather than “report”—the essay described.
Marotti, Arthur F. ""Love is Not Love": Elizabethan Sonnet
Sequences and the Social Order."
ELH
2(1982): 396-428. Marotti’s argument here is that the sonnet
genre must be understood in three ways: by examining the text
itself, by examining the text in relation to others of its kind, and
by exploring the social/historical environment in which it was
published and circulated. Using those criteria, he argues that we
should understand sonnet sequences as more than just a
collected string of Petrarchan love poems. The 16
th
century sequences suddenly fell out of favor with the death of
Elizabeth, and Marotti asserts that explanations for this
extinction are inadequate or wrong. Early modern sonnets used
Petrarchan love conceits to express a different sort of passion:
ambition and envy. The ‘lovers’ addressing ladies in these
sonnets are not speaking only/simply/ever to real or imagined
women they personally love but rather are expressing their
discontent about failed successes at court. The premiere woman
whom they address is Queen Elizabeth, who had the power to
make or break courtiers’ careers. The idea of so-called courtly
love, then, (echoing Petrarch) is used here as a mechanism for
voicing other concerns; these poets use an accepted convention
to articulate complaints in code, as it were, that they otherwise
could not speak about. The premiere progenitor of the sonnet
sequence as political commentary is Phillip Sidney’s
Astrophil and Stella;
others followed, notably Shakespeare, who in his sequence
bitterly objects to the failure of his patron W.S. to support his
work (financially and/or socially) by rejecting Will for another
poet AND because his patron has apparently had an affair with a
woman Shakespeare has also had a relationship with. This helps
us better understand Shakespeare’s sonnets as they would have
been read in his own time, and it flies in the face of the benign
reification they have received in modern times. Moreover, if
4. the sonnets can be read politically—and Marotti’s argument is
persuasive—then we should apply that same lens to explore the
possibility of such readings in the plays themselves.
Miller, James S. “Introduction: How We Work.”
Acting Out Culture: Reading and Writing.
Ed. James S. Miller. Boston/New York: Bedford/St. Martin’s,
2008. 272-277. Print. The “Introduction” to the section:
How We Work
explains how there are written and unwritten rules in terms of
employment. We follow these rules so that we don’t lose our
job or get punished for doing something wrong. We follow the
rules in hopes for a promotion or another reward that we may
receive. The introduction also explores how some jobs are more
popular than others because of their earning potential. We learn
that we want these jobs more because they make us more
legitimate in the employment ring. But the author questions,
what is determined to be worthy or unworthy work? The answer
is stereotypes. Stereotypes perpetuated about what jobs are the
“best” to have, and that our work defines who we are, and it
places us in a category for the rest of our lives. The author
describes how the essays in the section exemplify the
connection between work and culture by going through each
essay and explicitly showing each author’s point of view and
what they believe in terms of their subject. The author also
explores how jobs get “hyped” when they are advertised to
make them appear more interesting than they actually are. How
else would you get someone to work for you? He uses the
example of Wal-Mart, and how they portray themselves as one,
big happy family, when it couldn’t be further from the
truth. He suggests that we rethink what we think we know
about work and the promises compared to the reality.
Evaluation Criteria:
·
5. Bibliography is typographically correct [A8]:
·
It uses hanging indents with subsequent lines indented 5 spaces.
·
The annotation is a continuation of the citation.
·
The right margin is the normal right margin of your document.
·
Bibliography follows MLA style guide for Works Cited entries.
[A8]
·
Entries are arranged in alphabetical order
·
Titles are either underlined/italicized or put inside quotation
marks according to the type of text identified.
·
6. Each entry summarizes the major arguments of the text listed.
The annotation does not “report” the arguments; instead, it
restates in the author’s own words the claims made by the writer
in his/her essay. [A2, A3, A4, A5]
·
The bibliography includes a minimum of four sources from
academic, peer-reviewed sources and two credible sources. [A,
B1, B2, B3]
·
Each entry contains a summary comprising a minimum of 100
words.
·
Surface features such as syntax, grammar, punctuation, and
spelling do not impede the reader’s use of the bibliography.
[A4]
·
The writer
has adopted an appropriate voice, tone, and level of formality.
[A5]
Course Goals Met:
This assignment most closely meets these course objectives:
7. A) Rhetorical Knowledge
By the end of ENG 101, students should have:
·
A4) Demonstrated an ability to control surface features such as
syntax, grammar, punctuation, and spelling;
·
A5) Demonstrated an ability to adopt appropriate voice, tone,
and level of formality appropriate to different rhetorical
situations and genres;
·
A8) Demonstrated an ability to document another writer’s
written work and ideas, in a manner appropriate to relevant
academic or professional disciplines.
B) Critical Thinking, Reading, and Writing
By the end of ENG 101, students should have
·
B1) Demonstrated an ability to use reading and writing for the
purposes of inquiry, learning, critical thinking, and
communicating;
·
8. B2) Demonstrated their practice of writing as a series of
process-oriented steps, including locating, evaluating,
analyzing, integrating, and synthesizing appropriate primary
and secondary sources;
·
B4) Demonstrated an ability to use instructional technology in
support of critical thinking, reading, research, and writing.