Closereadingandanalysis
Closereadingandanalysis
ENG 1003
2
Close Reading & Analysis
Analysis of Paragraphing and Transitions
Before you begin this section, read pp. 548-552, and 555-560 of the St. Martins Guide. Youll need to
understand the following concepts: paragraph indentation vs. paragraph spacing, announcement topic sentences,
transitional topic sentences, concluding topic sentences, topic sentences covering more than one paragraph, logical
transitions, temporal transitions, spatial transitions, headings and subheadings.
Once youre ready, outline the article using the approach described below:
List, in the order they appear in the article, all of the topic sentences in the article, as well as
any transitions, any headings, any subheadings, and any orienting statements (thesis
statements and/or forecasting statements).
Label each one, like so:
o THESIS: All dogs should go to heaven.
o FORECASTING STATEMENT: There are three reasons for my position: theyve
earned it, theyre needed upstairs, and St. Peter is lonely.
o TOPIC: Dogs deserve it for faithful service on Earth.
o TRANSITION (Logical): Indeed, that faithful service is needed in Heaven.
o TOPIC: Dogs are needed for guard duty at the Pearly Gates.
o (etcetera)
Whenever possible, quote sentences directly from the article. Indicate you are quoting by
using quotation marks. If you paraphrase (and you may have to when thesis or topic
statements are implied), indicate you are paraphrasing by not using quotation marks. (In the
example above, the forecasting statement and transition are quoted; the rest are
paraphrased.)
3
Close Reading & Analysis
Overall Evaluation: How well overall does the writer use logic and evidence to make the
point you selected?
Analysis of Credibility
Before completing this section, read the following passages from the St. Martins Guide: pp. 542-543,
Judging the Writers Credibility, and pp. 617-620, Responding to Objections and Alternatives.
Understand the test of knowledge, test of fairness, test of common ground, acknowledging, conceding, and refuting.
When youre ready, write a paragraph evaluating the writers credibility, using all three tests. When
you discuss the tests of fairness and common ground, tell us whether your writer uses
acknowledging, conceding, or refuting strategies. Does the writer use them effectively and fairly?
Analysis of Emotional Appeals
Before you complete this section, read pp. 537-538 (Looking for Patterns of Opposition), and pp.
541-542 (Recognizing Emotional Manipulation). This is the last section! :-)
When youre ready, answer the following questions:
List the patterns of opposition you find in your article, asterisking (as the textbook does on
page 538) those that the writer seems to prefer.
Identify any other aspects of the text that appear to appeal to emotion (loaded language,
anecdotes or stories meant to provoke an emotional reponse, etc.).
Evaluate the authors use of emotional appeals: Are any of them unfairly manipulative or
distortions of the truth? (Hint: You may have to fact-check to establish whether theyre
truthful.)
If you do not find any emotional appeals, evaluate the authors decision not to use them.
Why do you think the author decided not to use any, and why do you think it was (or was
not) a good decision?
Tips:
1. When you work on this, you dont have to complete all of the steps in order. If one is too
difficult, try skipping to another sectionits possible that when you come back to the
tough part, itll make more sense the second time.
2. You dont need to worry about having a thesis statement or conclusion that ties all of this
stuff together its okay just to respond to each section as though it were its own, separate
prompt.
ENG 1003