Body Paragraph Focus Tips for Literary Essays STEP 1 Be 100 sure you understand the topic Use the dictionary to help you break down the topic question Remember to think of context when determining which definition best suits the topic question Many times essay topics deal with the human co ID: 259365
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Slide1
Literary Essay REVIEW
Body Paragraph FocusSlide2Slide3
Tips for Literary Essays
STEP 1Be 100% sure you understand the topic
Use the dictionary to help you break down the topic question
Remember to think of context when determining which definition best suits the topic question. Many times, essay topics deal with the human condition and/or experience.
Before you ask me for help, I need to see evidence that you have attempted to understand the question ON YOUR OWNSlide4
Tips for Literary Essays
STEP 2Develop your thesis and blueprint
Remember that the thesis MUST answer the question specifically & explicitly
Consider double checking your thesis with me BEFORE you plan the rest of your essaySlide5
Tips for Literary Essays
STEP 3Plan the body paragraphs
Think of points/examples to prove your thesis
Look for quotations to support your claims
Think about the possible implications you can address or make regarding the reasons WHY characters act a certain way
Think about possible symbols/literary devices that the author uses to help supplement or emphasize certain aspects Slide6
IntroductionSlide7
Introduction
The introduction of a literary essay has three sections to it. This paragraph is responsible for introducing the topic of the essay, the specific details the essay will develop and the thesis, or central idea the essay will focus on. Slide8Slide9
The Body ParagraphsSlide10Slide11
Ophelia initially clings to the hope that Hamlet’s noble mind is not compromised. She sees and has faith in Hamlet’s
honour
.
“My lord, he hath importuned me with love/In
honourable
fashion...and hath given countenance to his speech, my lord,/ With almost all the holy vows of heaven.”(I.iii.115-119
)
Where
Laertes
and Polonius have doubts in Hamlet’s sincerity, Ophelia defends his advances as honest and good intentioned. Ophelia particularly
emphasises
the coupling of Hamlet’s vows of love with “holy vows of heaven.” To her, deception is not possible in the face of God. Her view may be naive, but it reveals her confidence in the truth and purity of life.
Later, when Ophelia is confronted with Hamlet’s mad act, she appeals to the heavens to return him, to erase the blemishes from his mind
.
“O heavenly powers, restore him!” (III.i.153)
At this point, she still believes in justice, the ability to right wrongs and save the noble at heart. Hope remains in her mind because of her faith in the inherent goodness of heaven and earth.
By the end of Ophelia and Hamlet’s exchange, her resolve begins to show signs of wear.
“And I, of ladies most deject and wretched,/That sucked the honey of his music vows,/Now see that noble and most sovereign reason,/Like sweet bells jangled, out of tune and harsh,/That unmatched form and feature of blown youth/Blasted with ecstasy.”(
III.i.168-172)This is the beginning of Ophelia’s crisis of faith. The contrasting images of the “sweet bells” with their discordant song and the “noble and most sovereign reason” suddenly “blasted with ecstasy” juxtapose Hamlet’s dark madness with Ophelia’s pure perception. Ophelia finds it difficult to accept Hamlet’s fall from grace, but neither can she believe that he would deceive her.
Fissures of doubt begin their spider-like spread through her mind as she tries to reconcile her beliefs with “reality”.Slide12
ConclusionSlide13
ConclusionSlide14
REQUIREMENTS
a) no slangb) no contractionsc) present tense
d) quotations and paraphrasing
e) effective title
f) required paragraph number and structure