English 207: Appalachian Literature, Fall 2006 

 Paper Assignments

Dr. Tina L. Hanlon

Grading Criteria for English 207 Essays

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Paper 1 was due Oct. 15. If your grade was unsatisfactory, you should revise it by Nov. 14. This paper should have been 3 pages long.  If it was, you need to complete 9 more pages of formal writing to satisfy the college's writing requirements for English 207 (as well as several pages of writing on your tests).

Reminder: Review the general guidelines for writing and editing papers that are on the pages for Paper 1 and the Grading Criteria for English 207 Essays.

Paper 2 will be due Dec. 5.  It will be at least 5 pages discussing one issue of Appalachian literature, using at least two works of literature we have been studying. (Details on this assignment are given below). If you wish to use literature not in the Higgs anthology and not assigned for the course or recommended below, discuss your plan with the professor well in advance.

Options for remaining 4 or 5 pages of formal writing required in English 207:

Submit a paper of 4 or 5 pages on your project topic, due no later than Dec. 13.

Submit one to three short papers, of 1-3 pages each (see suggestions below).  If you are taking this option, at least one must be submitted no later than Nov. 16.


DO NOT PLAGIARIZE. IT IS NOT WORTH THE RISK OF FAILING THE ASSIGNMENT OR THE COURSE, OR WORSE.


Possible Short Paper Topics For Appalachian Literature

A short paper can be a summary of a work of literature or related event you have attended, with at least one paragraph of response, or it can be an analytical essay that supports a thesis throughout the essays.  Possible topics:

The Environmental Symposium (If you don't write a graded paper on it, write a few paragraphs that you submit through a discussion forum or on paper.)

The Ferrum Folklife Festival

The moonshine exhibit at the Blue Ridge Institute

Response to any work of literature we are studying

Look at the sculptures that contain pieces of corn in the current faculty art show in the art gallery (in the library building).  Pay attention especially to the piece by Mr. Jeff Dalton with a house and corn and a bowl (called Near Home?). Discuss the Cherokee "Selu" or  "corn mother"  myth in relation to this artwork. You can talk to Mr. Dalton about it or not if you want to pursue this suggestion. Selu, Marilou Awiakta's book, is on reserve.

Discuss any other piece of art or photograph that you can connect with a work of literature or folklore we are studying.  Be sure the professor has a copy or picture of the art or photo you are discussion.

Compare two Appalachian folktales with related content (see AppLit's Annotated Index of Appalachian Folktales for ideas)

Collect some folklore and write a short essay about where you got it, what type(s) of folklore you have collected, and any other observations


Paper Two (Same Assignment for Everyone):

Required length of paper: five double-spaced typed pages

• This short length means that as you choose your topic, you must refine the focus and develop a very specific thesis that can be supported adequately with only six to ten paragraphs of discussion. Your paper can be longer than the minimum requirement, but don’t pick a focus that would require eight or ten pages.

• Deadline: Thurs., Dec. 5. Turn in the essay on paper at the beginning of class. (Be sure it is printed, stapled, with pages numbered, before class begins.)

• Review the paragraph guide and general guidelines on literature papers before, during and after writing your paper (They have not been revised for this particular course but contain some useful general instructions). I would be glad to help with focusing topics, or developing outlines or drafts, any time before the paper is due. The Writing Center is also open for assistance with writing papers. Handbooks on writing about literature and samples of student essays are available in the Writing Center.

• Topic: Discuss one issue of Appalachian literature, using at least two works of literature we have been studying OR comparing two characters or scenes within the same novel. Consult the List of Themes in Appalachian Literature if you need help deciding on a focus, but you might limit any one of those themes more specifically than the general topics on that list.

• If you wish to use literature not in the Higgs anthology and not assigned for the course or suggested below, discuss your plan with the professor well in advance.

Examples of possible topics:

• Thesis: Be sure you have a precisely worded thesis in the introduction of your paper, and that each paragraph contains clear ideas and specific examples from the text to support the thesis.

Remember that a thesis must be more than an announcement of your topic. For example, if you are discussing Come a Tide and Mama is a Miner by George Ella Lyon, your introductory sentences will probably identify the author, titles and subject of the picture books. This sentence might appear in an introduction but it is NOT an acceptable thesis because it contains only obvious facts: “Come a Tide and Mama is a Miner by George Ella Lyon depict mountain families dealing with hard work.” Your thesis must state your main idea about the theme of the story or poem. This sentence would be an acceptable thesis for this assignment: “In both Come a Tide and Mama is a Miner, the poetic text and colorful illustrations show that hard work and togetherness can help families cope with difficulties of life in the mountains.”

Another example of a thesis statement: “The characters in poems 2 and 41 by Jo Carson reveal that traditional values of sharing food and valuing independence can conflict ironically in some situations.”

Be sure to develop your own precise thesis. Do not copy one of these examples.

• Editing: Follow the instructions for editing and proofreading your paper on the general guidelines on literature papers. Use spell check but use it carefully and do not expect a grammar or spell checker to catch all your errors, since only a human can read your sentences to make sure they have the structure you need and you have typed the right words in the right places. Leave yourself enough time to edit and proofread carefully after you have composed and printed the paper. If the paper is submitted with an excessive number of mechanical errors, I may not be able to read it all or grade it.

• Documentation: You are not required or encouraged to use secondary sources in this paper. Your primary source is the literature you are discussing. If you quote directly from the text, give the page number(s) in parentheses from the book (web sites and picture books often have no page numbers). If you discuss a poem that fits on one page, use line numbers instead of page numbers to identify quotations. At the end of the paper give complete citations for your primary sources, using MLA documentation style. If you do refer to any other sources, it is your responsibility to add complete documentation to them. If sources are misused or documentation is incomplete, I will not be able to grade the paper.

Be sure to read the Grading Criteria for English 207 Essays.

Don't turn in your paper without revising and editing it, asking yourself the following questions:


12/19/2006

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