assignment 2 - textual and cultural analysis

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  • 7/31/2019 Assignment 2 - Textual and Cultural Analysis

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    L. Martin \ English 101 172, 193 \ Fall 2008 \ University of Arizona 1 | P a g e

    Unit 2, Essay 2

    Writing Our ConflictsAn Interpretive Textual & Cultural Analysis (4-5 pages)

    History may be a solution if we remember, witness, and mourn our traumatic past. The

    recognition of the problem of memorythat our seemingly most personal, individualmemories are not only connected to the collective past but are also shaped by itis the

    necessary first step toward our being able to say that, indeed, we heal from memory. The

    tremendous hope of these writers visions, then, comes from their courage in remembering the

    enormous horror of their pasts. To create from horror, to regain the power of hope; these are

    the promises that arise when we heal from memory.

    Cassie Premo Steele

    We Heal From Memory: Sexton, Lorde, Anzalda,

    and the Poetry of Witness

    Important Dates

    10.17 In class, sign up for Essay #1 text

    10.20-10.24 Conference Week: Bring a 2 page discovery draft and your Invention Worksheet

    10.27 4 page rough draft due for Peer Response (Bring 1 paper copy to class.)

    10.29 Writing Workshop #2 (If you signed up for this workshop, bring 13 copies of your rough draft to class.)

    10.31 Happy Halloween! Final draft of Essay #2 is due in class

    Selected Texts for Essay #2

    For Essay #2, I ask that you select one text for analysis from the following list. Try to select a text that

    resonates with you:

    Persepolis (film version) by Marjane Satrapi (streaming on D2L) The Homeland,Aztln/El Otro Mexico by Gloria Anzalda, pp. 466-476 in WAR Four Women by Nina Simone and For Women by Talib Kweli (streaming on D2L) Address to a Joint Session of Congress and the American People by George W. Bush, pp. 727-

    733 in WAR and online athttp://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2001/09/20010920-8.html

    The Algebra of Infinite Justice by Arundhati Roy, pp. 749-756 in WAR A Litany for Survival by Audre Lorde, pp. 642-643 in WAR

    We will discuss each of these texts in class, but I encourage you to browse through all of them soon. In

    class on October 17, I will invite you to select one text on which to focus your attention as you compose

    Essay #2.

    Purpose and Audience

    Essay #2 builds on the analytical framework we used during Unit 1. Therefore, the purpose of Essay #2

    is very similar to the purpose of Essay #1: select one text, conduct several close readings of it, and

    compose an engaging, academic essay that examines how the text workshow its words, structure,

    style, tone, ideas, metaphors, or other textual strategies work together to elicit meaningful responses

    from readers. Furthermore, we will continue to explore the extent to which our diverse personal

    experiences shape the way we read and analyze texts. In this respect, your job is the same: help your

    readers thoughtfully consider the perspective through which you are analyzing a specific text by

    http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2001/09/20010920-8.htmlhttp://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2001/09/20010920-8.htmlhttp://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2001/09/20010920-8.htmlhttp://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2001/09/20010920-8.html
  • 7/31/2019 Assignment 2 - Textual and Cultural Analysis

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    L. Martin \ English 101 172, 193 \ Fall 2008 \ University of Arizona 2 | P a g e

    including a brief but meaningful personal anecdote or story that begins to shed some light on youyour

    personality and your ways of seeing the world and the text.

    In Essay #2, however, we will include culture as an analytical lens. Your copy ofA Students Guide to

    First-Year Writing articulates the purpose of Essay #2 very well:

    While writing this essay, you will be looking for ways in which texts and culture are

    intricately connected, the ways that culture affects audiences readings of a text, and/orthe value that is placed on cultural texts. You need to also consider whether the text

    youre analyzing challenges or accommodates dominant beliefswho is being

    empowered/disempowered and how? (192, emphasis added)

    As you compose your essay, please keep your readers in mind. For this assignment, your readersyour

    audienceincludes your classmates, yourself, and me (L. Martin).

    Planning and Drafting

    The composing process for Essay #2 will mirror our efforts during Unit 1: invention, a series of rough

    drafts, peer response sessions, and writing workshops. Below, I provide a very general map that charts

    more specific goals for Unit 2 and Essay #2:

    Writing Process Goals and Actions Resources fromA Students

    Guide

    Invention Conduct multiple readings of your text. Read deeply,

    searching for moments of cognitive dissonance that can

    lead to essay topics.

    pp. 65-70, Invention

    Strategies and Invention and

    the Imagination

    Textual Analysis Identify textual strategies at work in your text. Begin

    explaining how the author is using these strategies to

    achieve a purpose with respect to an audience.

    pp. 154-156, Analysis and

    pp. 160-164, Textual

    Analysis

    Cultural Analysis Describe the ways in which certain aspects of a culture

    are influencing writers and readers. Focus your cultural

    analysis on at least one of the terms identified on pp.

    189-191 inA Students Guide: ideology, cultural biases,

    assumptions, rhetoric, semiotics, power & institutional

    structures, inequalities, or sameness.

    pp. 188-196, Culture: Another

    Kind of Text and Culture as

    Text

    At this point, I think an example might be helpful. Lets take a look atAldo LeopoldsEscudilla. In

    class, we identified several textual strategies that Leopold uses to move his audience. For example, he

    uses symbolism and metaphor to draw parallels between the bear and environmental tragedy. For

    Essay #2, however, we would need to go a step furtherby considering the cultural context of Escudilla.

    For example, I might try to unearth some of the assumptionsthat are operating in Escudilla: Does

    Leopold assume that all progress is necessarily bad? How do we know? Or, I might analyze

    inequalitiesin Escudilla: To what extent are the many relationships depicted in Escudilla founded

    on inequality? For example, the relationships between animal and human, between men and women,

    between indigenous people and pioneers? Our goal, then, is to: (1) identify and analyze textual

    strategies, (2) identify and analyze cultural influences, and (3) articulate how text and cultureare

    working together to influence readers.