The Movie TROY Assignment
HIS 101 Summer 2020
Americans love our history. From time to time, people like to alter or even make up stories in our past. One of the best descriptions of “altering the past” can be viewed in many of Hollywood’s historical films. While directors have the ability to keep films historically accurate, they typically enjoy adding drama or action when necessary. Historians also struggle with stories passed down through generations with no credible evidence (i.e. letters or documents) to support these stories.
For this assignment, you are required to use the film (TROY) and explain its accuracies and inaccuracies in a two-page paper. One-half of a page should be a summary of the movie. The remaining portion of your paper should focus on a minimum of two accuracies and two inaccuracies. Each accuracy and inaccuracy you discuss should have a legitimate source to prove the validity of your point. You can focus on the film as a whole or select a specific character or place described in the film, as long as the person or place actually exists or existed during that time. As an example, you could argue that in the movie Forest Gump, Tom Hanks (as Forest Gump) inaccurately portrays Paul “Bear” Bryant coaching the Alabama football team. After that statement, you would need to further explain the inaccuracies and incorporate (using actual evidence) what he actually did during this time in history. Remember that if you take information from any source word-for-word, it must be quoted and a footnote must be provided.
Prior to working on your paper, you must have your film selection approved! Selections must be submitted via email no later than Sunday, July 5 at 11:59 pm.
This is a two-page, double-spaced paper in 12-point font. The font must be Calibri or Times New Roman, not Comic Sans MS or Wingdings with one-inch margins on all sides. You are required to have a cover page with the title of your movie, your name and the date. This paper must be turned in by Sunday, July 12 at 11:59 pm on Canvas! There are no exceptions!
Citations and Bibliography
Any direct quote (three or more consecutive words) from any book, article, website or source must be placed in quotation marks and cited with a footnote or endnote with the specific page range. If you paraphrase a source, you should also cite it with a footnote or endnote and its corresponding page numbers.
Citations must follow the Turabian style, located below.
Please note that there are different styles of citing books, articles and websites for footnotes and bibliography.
Plagiarism will result in a failing grade. It is your responsibility to understand plagiarism and how to avoid it. If you are unsure, ask me and I will help you.
This paper is worth 15% of your final grade.
Sample footnotes
This list includes some of the more basic entries for notes. It does not cover every type of note. If you are unsure, consult Turabian’s A Manual for Writers of.
The Movie TROY AssignmentHIS 101 Summer 2020Americans lov.docx
1. The Movie TROY Assignment
HIS 101 Summer 2020
Americans love our history. From time to time, people like
to alter or even make up stories in our past. One of the best
descriptions of “altering the past” can be viewed in many of
Hollywood’s historical films. While directors have the ability to
keep films historically accurate, they typically enjoy adding
drama or action when necessary. Historians also struggle with
stories passed down through generations with no credible
evidence (i.e. letters or documents) to support these stories.
For this assignment, you are required to use the film
(TROY) and explain its accuracies and inaccuracies in a two-
page paper. One-half of a page should be a summary of the
movie. The remaining portion of your paper should focus on a
minimum of two accuracies and two inaccuracies. Each
accuracy and inaccuracy you discuss should have a legitimate
source to prove the validity of your point. You can focus on the
film as a whole or select a specific character or place described
in the film, as long as the person or place actually exists or
existed during that time. As an example, you could argue that in
the movie Forest Gump, Tom Hanks (as Forest Gump)
inaccurately portrays Paul “Bear” Bryant coaching the Alabama
football team. After that statement, you would need to further
explain the inaccuracies and incorporate (using actual evidence)
what he actually did during this time in history. Remember that
if you take information from any source word-for-word, it must
be quoted and a footnote must be provided.
Prior to working on your paper, you must have your film
2. selection approved! Selections must be submitted via email no
later than Sunday, July 5 at 11:59 pm.
This is a two-page, double-spaced paper in 12-point font.
The font must be Calibri or Times New Roman, not Comic Sans
MS or Wingdings with one-inch margins on all sides. You are
required to have a cover page with the title of your movie, your
name and the date. This paper must be turned in by Sunday, July
12 at 11:59 pm on Canvas! There are no exceptions!
Citations and Bibliography
Any direct quote (three or more consecutive words) from any
book, article, website or source must be placed in quotation
marks and cited with a footnote or endnote with the specific
page range. If you paraphrase a source, you should also cite it
with a footnote or endnote and its corresponding page numbers.
Citations must follow the Turabian style, located below.
Please note that there are different styles of citing books,
articles and websites for footnotes and bibliography.
Plagiarism will result in a failing grade. It is your responsibility
to understand plagiarism and how to avoid it. If you are unsure,
ask me and I will help you.
This paper is worth 15% of your final grade.
3. Sample footnotes
This list includes some of the more basic entries for notes. It
does not cover every type of note. If you are unsure, consult
Turabian’s A Manual for Writers of Term Papers, Theses, and
Dissertations, 6th Ed
Do not skip lines between footnotes.
Single author
1 John Hope Franklin, George Washington Williams: A
Biography (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1985), 54.
(The title may be underlined instead of italicized.)
Author’s work in another work
2 Homer, The Iliad, in Sources of the Western Tradition, 5th ed.
vol. 1 From Ancient Times to the Enlightenment, ed. Marvin
Perry, Joseph R. Peden and Theodore H. Von Lau (Boston:
Houghton Mifflin, 2003), 49.
Subsequent reference to an already cited work:
3 Franklin, 56. (Use author’s last name and page or last
name and shortened form of title if you are using more than one
work by the same author.)
Editor as author
4. 4 Robert von Hallberg, ed., Canons (Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 1984), 225.
Article in a journal
5 Richard Jackson, “Running down the Up-Escalator:
Regional Inequality in Papua New Guinea,” Australian
Geographer 14 (May 1979): 180.
Author’s works contained in collected works
6 The Complete Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, ed. W.
G. T. Shedd, vol. 1 Aids to Reflection (New York: Harper &
Bros., 1884), 18.
Component part by one author in a work by another
7 Mary Higdon Beech, “The Domestic Realm in the Lives
of Hindu Women in Calcutta,” in Separate Worlds: Studies of
Purdah in South Asia, ed. Hanna Papanek and Gail Minault
(Delhi: Chanakya, 1982), 115.
Generic format for source from the Internet
Author's first and last name, "Title of Short Work," Title of
Complete Work and publication data if available, Name of the
Internet site, date of site if given, (Date of access in
parentheses).
Example from Internet
5. 8 Michael W. Conner and Raymond A. Silverman, “African Art
the Internet,” African Arts 32(Summer 1999), H-Net, http://2.h-
net.msu/about/press/internet.html (accessed 9 February 2005).
SAMPLE BIBLIOGRAPHY
(This is what an actual bibliography would look like at the end
of a research paper.
Notice the hanging indentation, single-spacing, and arrangement
in Alphabetical order by author’s last name.)
SAMPLE BIBLIOGRAPHY
Beech, Mary Higdon. “The Domestic Realm in the Lives of
Hindu Women in Calcutta.” In Separate Worlds: Studies of
Purdah in South Asia, ed. Hanna Papanek and Gail Minault,
110-38. Delhi: Chanakya, 1982.
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. The Complete Works of Samuel
Taylor Coleridge. Edited by W. G. T. Shedd. Vol. 1, Aids to
Reflection. New York: Harper & Bros., 1884.
Franklin, John. George Washington Williams: A Biography.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1985.
Homer. The Iliad. In Sources of the Western Tradition, 5th ed.
Vol. 1, From Ancient Times to the Enlightenment. Edited by
6. Marvin Perry, Joseph R. Peden, and Theodore Von Lau Boston:
Houghton Mifflin, 2003.
Jackson, Richard. “Running down the Up-Escalator: Regional
Inequality in Papua New Guinea.” Australian Geographer
14 (May 1979): 110-138.
Generic format for bibliographic entry from Internet
Author's Last Name, First Name. "Title of Short Work." Title of
Complete Work publication data if available. Name of
Internet site, date of site if given. (Date of access in
parentheses).
Conner, Michael W, and Raymond A. Silverman. “African Art
the Internet.” African Arts 32(Summer 1999). H- Net,
http://2.h-net.msu/about/press/internet.html (9 February 2005).
von Hallberg, Robert, ed. Canons. Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1984.