Essay 2: Summary and Evaluation

“For there is nothing at all whimsical about such kinds of value-judgement: they have their roots in deeper structures of belief which are as apparently unshakeable as the Empire State building.”

Terry Eagleton, Literary Theory: An Introduction

My Writing Process:

  1. The first thing I did after receiving this assignment was to print out a hard copy of Eagleton’s article. This way, I would be able to physically highlight passages and make notes in the margins. I have found that this method of reading an article as complex as Eagleton’s is the best way to understand the material.
  2. After reading through the article once, I set it aside for a few hours in order to let the information sink in and to formulate questions before a second read-through. During my re-read, I read the parts I found confusing the first time a lot more carefully to make sure I understood what was going on. At the same time, I highlighted Eagleton’s main argument and the different definitions of literature he discussed throughout the article.
  3. Once I felt like I had a good handle on the information, I started to construct my outline. I put Eagleton’s thesis at the top of the outline and then organized the rest by the definitions he discussed in the text. I then submitted my outline for peer review. I really like that we did peer review on our outlines because it gave me a chance to make sure that I got all the information I needed out of the text by comparing my outline to my writing group’s outlines.
  4. During our class discussion on Eagleton’s text, I found that I had most of the key ideas I needed, but there were some aspects of his thesis that I missed. I found it really helpful that Dr. Pennington explicitly told us what the thesis was so that we didn’t write our essays entirely wrong. Having that foundation helped when I started to write my first draft.
  5. This first draft went a lot more smoothly than the first draft for the close reading essay, but I still struggled a bit with the evaluation part. I was worried that I didn’t have enough concrete details and that my argument wasn’t strong enough. Despite these concerns, I felt a lot more confident turning in this first draft.
  6. Dr. Pennington’s comments were very positive on my first draft. He said that I had an excellent first draft and that my evaluation was especially strong. I needed to add an overall thesis paragraph to the summary portion of my paper and polish a few aspects of my evaluation, but there weren’t any big ideas that needed changing.
  7. After my first revision, Dr. Pennington deemed my paper worthy of portfolio consideration, and there was much rejoicing!

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