Intro Paragraph - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Intro Paragraph

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Intro Paragraph Your introduction should: Catch reader s attention: (anecdote, quote, provocative statement, etc.) Set the stage for your reading audience by: – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Intro Paragraph


1
Intro Paragraph
  • Your introduction should
  • Catch readers attention (anecdote, quote,
    provocative statement, etc.)
  • Set the stage for your reading audience by
  • Establishing right away your central focus
    (power struggle, appeal to audiences from
    different social classes, gender dynamic, etc.)
  • Defining key terminology
  • Providing only necessary and relevant historical
    and social information
  • Move from this general introduction of central
    focus to specific and arguable thesis.

2
Thesis Building/Evaluation Tips
  • Your Thesis should
  • Make arguable claim about specific rhetorical
    features of the passage
  • Establish a specific connection to some larger
    theme/issue of the play
  • For example, the somewhat tense relationship
    between Titania and Oberon
  • Use qualifiers to add specificity (ex reluctant
    union)
  • Express Why it is important - an implicit or
    explicit because statement functions as the
    important so what element in your thesis
    statement
  • Begin with your interpretation of the TEXT and
    THEN (maybe) stage it - You may or may not choose
    to express HOW specific staging choices will make
    that interpretation clear in your thesis.

3
Things to Check/Avoid/Test
  • Is the thesis arguable (not making obvious claim)
  • Is the thesis descriptive, normative, or
    analytical/interpretive?
  • Is the thesis specific or does it refer to other
    characters or the play in general?
  • Underline the thesis subject and circle the
    thesis verb
  • If you see multiple subjects you have created a
    List Thesis (connection between list items
    becomes thesis list items become intermediate
    claims)
  • If you direct your focus to the author (W.S.) or
    the reader (we one) then you might be
    falling prey to a fallacy of intention
  • Is the verb active? Is it interpretive? (rate
    these)
  • What is the difference between is, shows,
    uses, demonstrates, underscores,
    undermines, implies

4
CEW Paragraphs Claims/Evidence/Warrants
  • Every paragraph should have a transitional bridge
  • Each body paragraph asserts a specific Claim
    (mini-thesis)
  • Introduce the Evidence (integrate rich bites of
    textual evidence stylistically into your writing)
  • The Warrant is the interpretive meat of your
    supporting paragraph. It connects the claim to
    the evidence through explication You explain
    HOW the words you quote SHOW your claim (in other
    wordsyou identify and explain the metaphor, how
    the diction functions elicits anger, reluctance)
  • HOW
  • Close read based on imagery (pay attention to
    words that evoke the senses or connote sensory
    experience)
  • Close read based on sound (pay attention to
    rhythm, rhyme and meter)
  • Close read based on figures of speech (how do
    similes function, what do metaphors represent)
  • Close read based on diction
  • Looking for more? On-line searchable AMSND
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