Exercise 5: The Analysis
of
Adventures of Huckleberry
Finn
(The Course Final Exam) (Return
to the English 2328 Table of Contents)
(Return
to the Week 16 Schedule)
(Return
to the Exercise Page)
Due Date: Week 16
Instructions
Write a three-to-five page argumentative
essay on the question of whether or not Mark Twain's novel, Adventures
of Huckleberry Finn, should be banned.
Development
1) Your task is to take a stand one way
or the other, and your position should be stated as the thesis for your
paper at the end of the introductory paragraph.
2) Summarize both historical and contemporary
criticisms of the novel, both favorable and unfavorable. (You should
draw upon resources provided in the "Online
Resources" for Weeks 14, 15, or 16.
3) You must make liberal use of short
quotations from the novel.
Documentation
Document each reference from the novel,
other printed sources,
and all online sources
appropriately, using the MLA
(Modern Language Association) Style formats for internal documentation.
"Works Cited" Page
Provide a formal "Works
Cited" page at the end of the paper (as an additional page, not part
of the three-to-five pages of the body of the text).
Format of the Essay
The essay should be three to four pages
long, making use of short quotations from the literature in support of
your observations. Key-in the essay into the computer and save it
to your floppy disks. Each line should be double- spaced with only a single
double space between each paragraph. Block only those quotations longer
than four lines of your text.
Criteria for Grading
Your paper will be graded according to
the following standards:
1) Development - Does the essay satisfactorily
develop the thesis and meet the minimum page requirement?
2) Organization - Does the essay reflect
the thesis-support format?
3) Use of Source - Does the essay make
use of important supporting passages in the short story? Are all references
to the store correctly documented?
4) Style - Does the essay reflect diction
and syntax appropriate to a literary analysis?
5) Correctness - Does the essay reflect
mastery of basic writing conventions (spelling, punctuation, grammar, usage)?
Sample Essay
You will find in this site a sample essay
to give you a better idea about how to organize and develop your paper.
Click
here to go to the sample essay.
Submission Assignments
In addition to regular mail delivery,
distance-learning students may e-mail
papers as Word or WordPerfect attached files to Dr. Sink at
mds6420@dcccd.edu.
Submission Assignments through Regular
Mail
Mail papers to:
Dr. Mike Sink
Department of English
Mountain View College
4849 West Illinois Avenue
Dallas, TX 75211
Please include a stamped, self-addressed
envelope for returning your graded work.
Submitting Essays as E-Mail Attachments
It is absolutely essential to the security
of your work that you follow exactly these guidelines:
1) Heading on Assignments
Place a heading on the first page of your
essay in the upper left-hand corner. The heading must include the
following information:
First Name-Middle Initial-Last Name
DCCCD Student ID Number
Course-Course Number-Section Number
Month-Date-Year
Name of Assignment
Example:
John R. Pointer
ID 5555555
English 2326: 9543
February 20, 2001
Exercise 3
2) File Name
Save your file exactly according to this
model:
JPointer-Ex3
3) Sending Me E-mail Messages
You must include your name and identify
your message type in the subject line of each e-mail you send me.
For security reasons, if you fail to do so, I will delete your message
without responding.
In the subject line, include your name
and exercise number just as you saved your file above.
Example:
JPointer-Ex3
If you are sending me a message that needs
immediate attention, then include one of the following formats in the subject
line:
JPointer-Question
JPointer-Comment
JPointer-Urgent
Responding to Your E-mails
I always respond to your messages.
However, I always open "Question," "Comment," and "Urgent" messages
first and respond to them usually on the day I receive them.
I will respond to your assignment messages
within a day or two to let you know that I have received your work and
files and whether or not I can open them. To grade them, I open assignment
messages in the order in which I received them.
Length of Time Required to Grade Your
Work
It usually takes me from one to two weeks
to grade essay-length papers and to return them. Shorter papers I
can grade much quicker. I will return them as e-mail attachments
to my response messages.
This page was last modified
on January 16, 2006, and is maintained by Dr.
Geoffrey Grimes.
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