20b Writing texts in the humanities

20bWriting texts in the humanities

Contents:

Understanding assignments

Developing a critical stance

Writing a literary analysis

As a writer in the humanities, you will use the findings from close examination of a text or artifact to develop an argument or to construct an analysis.

Understanding assignments

Common assignments that make use of the skills of close reading, analysis, and argument include summaries, response pieces, position papers, critical analyses of primary and secondary sources, and research-based projects. In philosophy, for example, you might need to summarize an argument, critique a text’s logic and effectiveness, or discuss a moral issue from a particular philosophical perspective. A literature assignment may ask you to look very closely at a particular text (“Examine the role of chocolate in Toni Morrison’s Tar Baby”) or to go well beyond a primary text (“Discuss the impact of agribusiness on modernist novels”). Other disciplines may ask you to write articles, primary source analyses, or research papers.

For texts in literature, modern languages, and philosophy, writers often use the documentation style of the Modern Language Association; see Chapter 32 for advice on using MLA style. For projects in history and other areas of the humanities, writers often use the documentation style of the University of Chicago Press; see Chapter 34 for advice on using Chicago style.

Developing a critical stance

To analyze a text, you need to develop a critical stance—the approach you will take to the work—that can help you develop a thesis or major claim (see 3c and 9d). To evaluate the text and present a critical response to it, you should look closely at the text itself, including its style; at the context in which it was produced; and at the audience the text aims to reach, which may or may not include yourself.

To look closely at the text itself, consider its genre, form, point of view, and themes, and look at the stylistic features, such as word choice, use of imagery, visuals, and design. Then consider context: ask why the text was created, note its original and current contexts, and think about how attitudes and ideas of its era may have influenced it. Consider who the intended audience might be, and think about how people outside this intended group might respond to the text. Finally, think about your personal response to the text as well. (See also Chapters 7 and 8.)

Carrying out these steps should provide you with plenty of material to work with as you begin to shape a critical thesis and write your analysis. You can begin by grounding your analysis in one or more important questions you have about the work.

Writing a literary analysis

When you analyze or interpret a literary work, think of your thesis as answering a question about some aspect of the work. The guiding question you bring to the literary work will help you decide on a critical stance toward the work. For example, a student writing about Shakespeare’s Macbeth might find her curiosity piqued by the many comic moments that appear in this tragedy. She might turn the question of why Shakespeare uses so much comedy in Macbeth into the following thesis statement, which proposes an answer to the question: “The many unexpected comic moments in Macbeth emphasize how disordered the world becomes for murderers like Macbeth and his wife.”