College Term Papers
Help Building Your Argument Part Two: Integrating Sources

The meat
and potatoes of your body paragraphs will be a mixture of textual summary and
your analysis of it.
Once you've done your close reading and structured your topic
sentence for a paragraph, go back and pull out the details you've
highlighted.
In putting these details into your paper, it is absolutely
imperative that you balance each one with YOUR analysis of their
significance. It might help, at least until you're used to the idea, to
maintain a mental ratio: three sentences of your interpretation for every one
concrete detail of the text.
The concrete detail - Paraphrase the gist of the actual
textual information as CONCISELY as possible. It is important for
your reader to understand what you're talking about, but only as an
illustration for your own ideas.
The interpretation - Go back
to the questions you've asked yourself during the close reading. What answers
have you found that you can explain here? As always, remember that good
interpretation avoids both summary and opinion - your arguments must be
original but crafted from actual evidence.
Example: "Coleridge opens his poem with an
immediate statement of locale: In Xanadu. This fable-like
invocation makes the reader immediately conscious of distance, as well as the
mystical connotations of the Orient in the context of Victorian imperialism. By
choosing a setting with such dual reverberations of reality and fantasy,
Coleridge creates a landscape parallel to his view of the imagination - vast in
breadth, yet potently accessible."
Note how very little textual detail was necessary to
come up with quite a bit of interpretation.
Keep an eye on the big picture - As tempting as it is
to fill space with any interesting idea you come up with, do not put a single
thought onto the page that you cannot relate directly to the proving of your
topic sentence.
Remember, your paper must act as the impetus for an idea,
not merely a description of your sources, however subtle that description might
be.
Integrating quotes - Sometimes the textual
details you include will necessarily take the form of direct quotation,
particularly when analyzing language. It is always best to do so as
inconspicuously as possible. The quotes should serve only to prove your ideas,
not to supplant them. Rather than using big block quotations, wherever possible
include only that which is specifically necessary to your point, within the
framework of your own sentence.
Bad Integration: Keats describes the Grecian
urn as follows: "Thou still unravish'd bride of quietness; Thou foster child
of silence and slow time; Sylvan historian who canst express; The flowery tale
more sweetly than can rhyme.".
Good Integration: Keats begins by personifying
the urn in terms of human innocence, as an "unravish'd bride" and a
"foster child of silence and slow time".
|