- Only MSWord files will be accepted. All submitted assignments must be in correct MLA format with any source used properly cited for credit. Any uncited source material is plagiarism. Familiarize yourself with the Purdue OWL; it and other useful resources are available via links on my page on the Learning Web.
- Be aware that the matter of MLA requirements (the header, the first page information, the title, and the work cited entry list) do not count towards the required length for any assignment.
- The Purdue OWLs section regarding MLA is available at .
- Each submission must be an original, unique, previously unsubmitted work on the part of the student author.
- Each submission must be a minimum of 600 words in length, responding clearly, effectively, and directly with the prompt in the form of a brief essay.
- Remember to both be sure that the submission has an overarching, provable thesis, claims to build its case, and support and explication for the various claims. Repeating the prompt is not making a thesis statement.
- Do not forget to proofread and edit carefully and effectively. While these journals are not formal essays, getting in the practice before the final essay and developing useful and effective writing habits starts with the small stuff.
Assignment question
From the Renaissance to the Age of Enlightenment: Literature as Both Creating and Commenting upon Cultural Values
For this journal, you need to respond, citing textual moments from all three texts thus far, effectively and clearly to the prompt:
These texts take you from the Renaissance to the beginnings of Romanticism, but each uses strategies of storytelling that game an audience to teach something to that audience. Briefly teach me, from each author, about the Game Chaucers seeming, Shakespeares tiered con game as social commentary, Miltons idea of Sin and knowledge, and Blakes tension between innocence and experience.
As with all journals, Im not interested in what I wrote in the lectures; I literally know that stuff. Im interested in how you engage with those texts you read / watched and how you think about them.