WRITING ASSIGNMENTS
WRT 120-40
Assignment #1: Annotated Bibliography
Blog is rough draft. Final draft will include suggested
grammar revisions from your peers.
5 pages (double-spaced)
You are currently blogging about current events.
Step 1. Copy your blogs (including the ones on Balog and Shiva) into a word
document and format it correctly (according to the paper format subheading in
the syllabus). Step 2. Write a MLA-style citation for each website address
you’ve visited while writing these blog entries, citing the authors, title of
the articles, etc… (Sample: Harris, Robert. “Evaluating Internet Research
Sources.” VirtualSalt. 15 June 2008.
Web. 20 Apr. 2009. <http://www.virtualsalt.com/evalu8it.htm>.) Step 3.
Alphabetically order each of your
entries. (Author’s last name beginning with ‘A’ would be placed first, for
example; if no author exists, than the first letter of the title is the letter
to use). Step 4. Add summaries and opinions you’re your blog entry beneath the
corresponding alphabetical citation information; include at least one paragraph
of summary and one paragraph of opinion (which should take into account
whatever rhetorical analysis you may have performed).
Assignment #2: Cultural Analysis
Rough Draft, Peer Review, Final Draft Required
5 pages (double-spaced)
Step 1. Using your annotated bibliography and the articles
you’ve begun to analyze, study the articles and your responses to them for cultural
information. Come up with a list of observations and another list of the
inferences you draw from these observations. Step 2. Chose one particular
article and look for the same news, but reported upon from a different cultural
perspective; for instance, you might have initially found an article on Syria
in The New York Times, but then you look
for a very similar article reported from a very different cultural context published
on the same day or during the same week in Al
Jazeera. Or, to give another example, you might find mainstream news about
the new Miss America of Indian origin, and then find a paper that is published
in India that is also reporting about this event. Or, perhaps you might compare
something you read in a predominantly black publication and compare it to a
more white publication reporting on the same issue. Or perhaps one article is
written by a man, and you find another about the same topic written by a woman
that’s noticeably different… Etc… Step 3. Ask yourself in both cases rhetorical
questions: what contexts made the various interpretations of this news item possible?
Who are the publishers of this news and who are their audiences? What values,
beliefs, or ideologies are reinforced
or reflected or hidden within the
articles? What values, beliefs, or ideologies are disrupted or resisted by them?
What values, beliefs, or ideologies are produced
as a result of the publication of this news? Really, what you are trying to
pinpoint is how each article interprets the same news differently and how and
why. Freewrite your responses to these questions. Step 4. How does your culture
effect how you read these texts? Interrogate your own cultural blind spots,
privileges, etc... Step 5. Come up with a strong thesis, such as “Although the
context surrounding the murder of [name of victim in article] in [title of article #1] is undeniably
outrageous, [name of author] chooses to veil questions of racial and sexual
identity, yet hints at these things through the quoted dialect and by
describing the victim in a sexually explicit way. Whereas in [title of article
#2] the author plainly reveals the [name of victim]’s race and gender and then offers
an in-depth analysis of the relevance of victim’s culture to the crime
committed. [Title of article #2] holds my attention, because I am a white woman
who has survived such a crime. I believe that [author #1] is purposely
withholding information because [whatever reason].” Remember: your analysis
(close reading of the article in question) will be focused and incisive, thus
also opening up space for your larger philosophical/cultural/ideological
reflections. Please include your cultural background, but don’t make the essay
about you. It is an essay about how you’ve analyzed and interpreted two news
articles with differing takes on the same item of concern. Step 6. Back up your
claim with supporting information and analysis. Synthesize multiple critical
viewpoints into a new interpretation of the issue at hand. Step 7. Restate your
thesis and make sure it is complicated by a summary of all the supporting
evidence you’ve gathered and included, and then offer your new look at the news
item to conclude. You are welcome to conclude with a question, as not all
theses are 100% defendable.
Assignment #3: Write Your Own News Story
Rough Draft, Final Draft Required.
4 pages (double-spaced), option to include your own
photographs (two at most).
Assignment #4: Fictionalize
Your News Story by Writing from an “Opposing” or Radically Different Viewpoint
Rough Draft, Peer Review, Final Draft Required
3 pages (double-spaced)
Final Exam (Letter
to me about what you’ve taken away from this course about the process of
analyzing, writing, and producing news, not to mention how cultural and
structural discrepancies and inequalities, not to mention understandings of genre impacts the “truth” as reported to
and by us.)
3 pages
This is all due when?
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