Critical analysis of Trifles

_ Length: Minimum of 1200 Words

_ Format:  10-12 point font, Times New Roman, Double-Spaced.

_ Assignment Objectives:

+ For this essay, you will need to select a playwright and write a research paper that offers some insight into the playwrights background and/or career AND ALSO analyzes one of his or her plays.  

+ Your goal is to analyze or apply a critical strategy to a work and to develop and support a specific thesis.  Your essay should be unified, developed, organized, and coherent, and should use a sophisticated sentence style while meeting the demands of standard English. 

+ Introduction:  Introduce the history about the origin of this story 

+ Body: You should include the background information about the playwright in the first part of your paper.  In the second part, you should analyze a particular piece of work from the playwright.  Your thesis should clear, focused, and clearly identifiable in the first or second paragraph of the paper.  It can be explanatory, interpretative, or evaluative, but it should include literary techniques such as theme, symbolism, point of view, setting, character, etc.  Textual support in the form of concrete, specific examples should be provided in the body of your paper in order to support your claim.

Remember, a thesis is comprised of the following components:

TOPIC + CLAIM + POINTS OF SUPPORT

The topic would be the play, the claim is whatever specific conclusion youve come to about the playwright and the work, and for points of support, you will have to analyze elements of the play using one of the critical approaches we’ve studied this semester. 

* About the papers content:

Like your other papers, you are simply trying to explain to the reader a way of understanding or interpreting the play. To a degree, you are arguing that your way of seeing the work is a more reasonable way than some other. Unlike your previous papers, however, you will also be using your research (incorporating secondary sources) to further support your claim or analysis of the work.

** For analyzeTrifles: There are many options.  You could examine how the play reflects addressed issues of gender or gender inequality, and use the formalist method (analyzing the playwright’s use of literary devices) to support the claim.  (MUST USE LITERARY DEVICES TO ANALYZE)

*** Must Haves:  In any good research paper, you must pull from reliable, creditable sources in order to support your thesis.  You should use at least 4 references from appropriate print sources.  The play you are analyzing will count as one of these print sourcesthe other three should be from appropriate academic secondary sources.  The main place you should use to find print sources online is our librarys database, Galileo.  There are plenty of sources available online at http://www.galileo.usg.edu.   Always click the full text to access complete sources.  The databases you want are under the letter “L.”  Both “LION” and the “Literary Reference Center” will give you plenty of sources.  Type in the author’s last name for a number of sources.  You can also type in the author’s last name and a critical perspective as well.  For instance, “Glaspell” and “Feminism.”

_ Note:  Whatever approach you take, remember that the research should be used

  1. to provide additional authoritative support for your ideas/thesis
  2. to provide a context or background for your ideas/thesis.

_ Also, make sure to work on your quotations smoothly, rather than dropping them into the text without any introductory material.  For instance, use transitional phrases, such as In Emily Dickinson, Harold Bloom argues that…. and Unlike other critics, Bloom in Emily Dickinson suggests. Remember to help your reader see where someone elses ideas begin by using these transitional phrases and where someone elses ideas end by including a page number or other indicator at the end.  Heres a complete sentence quoted and cited: Literary critic Harold Bloom asserts, The image here of a woman and her escort, Death, meditating on the prospect of eternity, is neither one of despair nor loss nor outrage, but of resignation (37).  Then always make sure to follow a quote by discussing, or reiterating, its relevance to your claim or what youre discussing.