Pre-writing
assignments: Ancient History, Spring 2012
I.
Primary
source homework (see handout) [Tu Jan 24]
II.
Quotation
and Citation homework (see handout) [Tu
Jan 24]
III.
Database
Assignment (see handout) [Th Jan 26]
IV.
Article
Review (see handout) [Th
Feb 9]
V.
Annotated
Preliminary bibliography (at least 10 sources) [Th Mar 15]
A.
List
your primary sources for your topic (that is, sources written close to the time
of what you are studying) for this topic. Ideally about a quarter or a third of
your sources (two to four) will be primary sources.
B.
List
your secondary sources (late 20th-century or early 21st-century books or
articles). At least half of your secondary sources should be journal articles
(such as you found in the Database assignment). All of your secondary sources
should be well-documented works of scholarship.
C.
Try
to avoid using tertiary (third-hand sources) such as textbooks and reference
works. If you feel the need to do so, note that these should be IN ADDITION to
your 10 primary and secondary sources.
D.
For
each source in your Annotated Bibliography briefly indicate
1.
what
the source will add to your understanding of the topic
2.
what
biases or weaknesses might make it difficult to evaluate.
3.
For
example, "Martin Bernal has brought together mainly linguistic evidence for
Afro-Asiatic influence on Classical Greece; his work is controversial, however,
and very broad in scope"
VI.
Thesis
statement [Th Mar 29]
A.
State
the topic for your final paper. Be
sure to be specific as to (a) time, (b) place, (c) general topic. (For example,
"The effects of the Black Death on population in western Europe in the
fourteenth century.")
B.
What
scholarly problem surrounds the topic? That is, what do modern scholars studying
this topic disagree about among themselves? (For example, "Scholars
disagree about whether Herodotus is a reliable source for earlier
history.")
C.
Give
at least two views reached by modern scholars (secondary sources) on this issue.
(For example, "At one time scholars wrote as if Classical Greek culture was
entirely Indo-European in character. More
recently scholars have begun to consider other influences, though there is much
debate over the degree of influence and in what areas other influences were
strongest.”)
D.
Based
on the debate in B-C, what question do you hope to answer about the topic?
(For example, "What was the role of African and Asian influences in
Classical Greek religion?")
E.
Sum
up your answer to this question in one complete sentence. (For example,
"Some elements of Greek religion are clearly of Indo-European origin, such
as worship of a male sky-god, but others, including the earliest depictions of
Athena, show Asian and African influences.")
VII.
Outline
[optional, no extra credit; Th Apr 5]
A.
Write
a formal outline of your paper (this sheet is an example of what it would look
like)
B.
Your
first Roman number heading will be your introduction (with some indication of
what you will cover)
C.
Subtopics.
(Provide an outline number for each subtopic; for most papers you will
need at least 3 or 4 subtopics, in some cases several more.
Plan on writing at least one paragraph of about a half page on every
major heading and at least one sentence for every subheading).
1.
Identification
of subtopic
2.
Indication
of how it relates to your thesis statement and proof of your paper
3.
Examples
to support your argument for each subtopic (a capital letter for each major
group of examples, with specific examples indicated by Arabic numbers)
4.
Debates
about or qualifications of your conclusion (another capital letter heading)
5.
Conclusion
about the subtopic (the final capital letter division)
D.
Your
last Roman number heading will be your conclusion
VIII.
Sample
paragraphs [optional, no extra credit; Th Apr 5]
A.
First
paragraph (should include thesis statement)
B.
Evidentiary
paragraph (should give evidence, including citations, for one argument necessary
to support the thesis)