Questions and Topics We Can Help to Answer
Paper Instructions;
Develop a "hook" that will draw your reader's attention. (Do not begin with "In Tennessee Williams's A Streetcar Named Desire . . . . ) Provide a three-to-four sentence summary in the introduction, and make certain to introduce the title of the play and its playwright and the title of the short story and its author.
Use at least TWO sources outside the playbook to support your views. These sources should reflect the views of critics of literature as well as the informative views of expert opinion. (NOTE: Wikipedia, answer.com, or the like are not credible, academic sources.) Research needs to be conducted. A composition submitted without any research will receive a grade no higher than a D. If some research is incorporated yet does not fulfill the required amount of sources, a grade no higher than a C will be given.
Make sure that the sources relate to your thesis – and that you simply don't use them to fulfill a requirement. Do not use other plays, and, despite the temptation, avoid any biographical material about any of the playwrights. Integrate these sources smoothly into your text, and comment on them.
Cite your sources with the standard in-text and works cited MLA format. (Make certain to cite the play and playwright and the story and its writer, if necessary.) Remember that you are writing an argument. In doing this, you will use analysis and interpretation. Toward the end of the essay, you can also feel free to evaluate the plays, making certain to maintain third-person point of view. Merely summarizing any of the plays will earn you a D at best. Rather, I want a consistent, convincing argument that draws parallels between your subject and the plays you introduce.
Proofread your essay. Grammar and spelling do count. Submit a copy of your final draft to SafeAssignments by the final due date. No more than 15% of your essay should appear in direct quotations.