Critical Essay
Introduction
Assignment 2 contributes 15% toward your final grade. Although you're not required to follow the suggested schedule in the Course Guide, it's a good idea to complete Assignment 2 by the end of Module 4 or roughly at the end of week five of the course.
Please refer to "Preparing Your Assignments" found in the "Assignments and Submission Instructions" section of your course Home Page.
Essay Topic
This essay of a minimum of 500 to a maximum of 700 words requires you to choose any one of the seven stories assigned in Modules 1, 2, and 3. You may not, however, choose the same story that you used for your diagnostic assignment. Perhaps just by reviewing the
list of stories, you can identify which story you'd like to write about.
"Royal Beatings" by Alice Munro
"The Yellow Wallpaper" by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
"Sonny's Blues" by James Baldwin
"Rules of the Game" by Amy Tan
"Paul's Case" by Willa Cather
"Death by Landscape" by Margaret Atwood
"To Room Nineteen" by Doris Lessing
Choose just one of the following:
To what extent is the protagonist of the story you've chosen responsible for the conflict or predicament he or she faces?
How does the antagonist in the story you've chosen contribute to the story's overall meaning?
To what extent is the protagonist conditioned by his or her physical and social environments?
How do the physical and social settings in the story you've chosen contribute to the story's overall meaning?
Instructions
Your essay should have three parts: an introductory paragraph, a body containing fully developed paragraphs, and a concluding
paragraph. Below is a general guide for what to include in each section of your essay.
Your introductory paragraph should:
Provide the complete title of the story you've chosen and the author's complete name.
Identify clearly your essay topic.
Include a strong thesis statement on your topic.
Forecast the main stages of your essay.
Your analysis in the body of your essay should:
Make effective use of topic sentences to identify the main ideas in your analysis.
Support your comments with evidence (paraphrase and direct quotations) from your chosen story.
Explain the significance of each piece of evidence you present.
Contribute to our understanding of the story as a whole.
Your concluding paragraph should:
Summarize how your analysis supports your thesis.
Restate your thesis in different words.