Exercise 2: Analysis
of the Tragic Hero
(Return to the Week 4 Schedule)
(Return to the ENGL 2343 Home
Page)
Instructions
Read "The Greek World View, Its Oral Tradition,
Notes on the Classical Hero." Discussions there anticipate the development
of a short essay on the Greek tragic hero.
Write a three-page typed essay analyzing one of
the following topics related to Oedipus, The King:
a) Oedipus as the Pawn of Fate
b) Oedipus and the Consequences of Undue Pride
c) Knowledge: An Active or Passive Agency in the Human Condition
Structure of the Essay
The paper should be organized as a traditional thesis-support essay.
The thesis should make a claim about the element you select from the list
above. Here's an example: As the ironic savior of Thebes, he is
destined to tragedy by his fate.
Content of the Essay
Assuming the familiarity of the reader with the story, the essay should
avoid a summary of the narrative line and focus on supporting the thesis.
Use short quotations worked into the text of your own analytical sentences
to provide support for the paragraphs. You may also bring into the discussion
any relevant
outside information as long as you cite the source within your paragraphs.
Each topic sentence should be a claim that adds support to your thesis.
For further information, see "Standards for Writing
and Evaluating Literary Essays."
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.
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)?
6) Timely submission - papers submitted past the weekend of the week
in which they are due may not be revised. Papers submitted on time
may be revised only at the discretion of the instructor.
Revision of Papers
At the discretion of the instructor, revisions on no more than two
essays will be accepted. The final grade on an exercise will be determined
by a simple average between the original grade and the revised grade.
Students should first request permission to submit a revision before completing
any revision on an exercise. Unsolicited revisions of any exercise
will be automatically deleted. No revisions will be accepted during
or after the last week of the semester.
Submission Assignments
Distance-learning students must
e-mail
papers as attached Microsoft Word files only to Dr. Grimes at ggrimes@dcccd.edu.
Essays are due by the end of the week in which they are posted (see the
Weekly Schedule).
Submission Assignments through Regular Mail
Mail papers to:
Dr. Geoffrey Grimes
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.
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This page was last modified on September 5, 2003,
and is maintained by Dr. Geoffrey Grimes.
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