A Guide To Writing The Literary Analysis Essay
A Guide To Writing The Literary Analysis Essay
A Guide To Writing The Literary Analysis Essay
B) Thesis: a statement that provides the subject and overall opinion of your essay. For a
literary analysis your major thesis must
(1) relate to the theme of the work and
(2) suggest how this theme is revealed by the author. A good thesis may also
suggest the organization of the paper.
Example: Through Pauls experience behind the lines, at a Russian prisoner of
war camp, and especially under bombardment in the trenches, Erich Maria
Remarque realistically shows how war dehumanizes a man.
Sometimes a thesis becomes too cumbersome to fit into one sentence. In such cases, you
may express the major thesis as two sentences.
Example: In a Tale of Two Cities, Charles Dickens shows the process by which
a wasted life can be redeemed. Sidney Carton, through his love for Lucie Manette,
is transformed from a hopeless, bitter man into a hero whose life and death have
meaning.
1) Topic Sentence: the first sentence of a body or support paragraph. It identifies one
aspect of the major thesis and states a primary reason why the major thesis is true.
Example: When he first appears in the novel, Sidney Carton is a loveless outcast
who sees little worth in himself or in others.
2) Textual Evidence: a specific example from the work used to provide evidence for
your topic sentence. Textual evidence can be a combination of paraphrase and direct
quotation from the work.
Example: When Carlton and Darnay first meet at the tavern, Carlton tells him, I
care for no man on this earth, and no man cares for me (Dickens 105).
4) Transitions: words or phrases that connect or hook one idea to the next, both
between and within paragraphs. Transition devices include using connecting words as
well as repeating key words or using synonyms.
Examples: Finally, in the climax Another example:
Later in the story In contrast to this behavior
Not onlybut also Furthermore
5) Lead-In: phrase or sentence that prepares the reader for textual evidence by
introducing the speaker, setting, and/or situation.
Example: Later, however, when the confident Sidney Carton returns alone to his
home, his alienation and unhappiness become apparent: Climbing into a high
chamber in a well of houses, he threw himself down in his clothes on a neglected
bed, and its pillow was wet with wasted tears (Dickens 211).
6) Clincher/Concluding Sentence: last sentence of the body paragraph. It concludes the
paragraph by tying the textual evidence and commentary back to the thesis.
Example: Thus, before Carton experiences love, he is able to convince himself
that the world has no meaning.
III. CONCLUSION: last paragraph in your essay. This paragraph should begin by
echoing your major thesis without repeating the words exactly. Then, the conclusion
should broaden from the thesis statements to answer the so what? question your reader
may have after reading your essay. The conclusion should do one or more of the
following:
1) Reflect on how your essay topic relates to the book as a whole
2) Evaluate how successful the author is in achieving his or her goal or message
3) Give a personal statement about the topic
4) Make predictions
5) Connect back to your creative opening
6) Give your opinion of the novels value or significance
WORKS CITED: a separate page listing all the works cited in an essay. It
simplifies documentation because it permits you to make only brief references to
those works in the test (parenthetical documentation). A Works Cited page
differs from a Bibliography in that the latter includes sources researched but not
actually cited in the paper. All the entries on a Works Cited page are double spaced.
If you cite the author in the text of your paper, give only the page number in parentheses:
Example: According to Francis Guerin, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
reflects those same nightmarish shadows that even in our own time threaten to
obscure the American Dream (49).
If two works by the same author appear in your Works Cited, add the title or a
shortened version of it to distinguish your sources:
Example: He wouldnt rest until he had run a mile or more (Dickens, A Tale
78).
BLOCK QUOTATION: quotations that are set off from the rest of the paper.
Indent one-inch from the left margin only and double space. Do not use quotation
marks unless they appear in the original.
1) For a prose quotation of more than 4 typed lines, start the quotation after a colon and
indent each line of the quotation 10 spaces, placing the citation after the end punctuation.
Example:
Based on rumors and gossip, the children of Maycomb speculate about
Boo Radleys appearance:
Boo was about six-and-a-half feet tall, judging form his tracks; he dined on
raw squirrels and any cats he could catch, thats why his hands were
bloodstainedif you ate an animal raw, you could never wash the blood off.
There was a long jagged scar that ran across his face; what teeth he had were
yellow and rotten; his eyes popped, and he drooled most of the time. (Lee 13)
2) For any prose dialogue involving 2 or more speakers, start the quotation (dialogue)
after a colon and have each line of dialogue as its own paragraph (a 10-space
indentation), placing the citation information after the end punctuation.
Example:
During the trial scene, Bob Ewell immediately shows his disrespect
for both the court and his family:
Are you the father of Mayella Ewell? was the next question.
Well, if I aint I cant do nothing about it now, her mas dead, was the
answer. (Lee 172)
Goessling 2
be chief with the trumpet-thing (Golding 21). Because Ralph possesses the conch, a
symbol of power and authority, he is chosen chief. Thus, at first the conch is an
important object bringing civilizing influences to the boys as they work together to make
the best of a bad situation.
Gradually, however, the conch becomes less important to the boys, signifying
their gradual turn to evil. When the boys first start a fire on top of the mountain, Piggy
holds the conch and attempts to speak. But Jack rebukes him by saying, The conch
doesnt count on top of the mountain, so you shut up (Golding 39). Boys like Jack
begin to place limitations on the conch and lose respect for it and one another. Then one
day at an assembly, Jack places even less importance on the conch excluding more of the
boys and thus diminishing the democratic order and authority that the conch provides.
He says, We dont need the conch any more. We know who ought to say thinsIts
time some people knew theyve got to keep quiet and leave deciding things to the rest of
us (Golding 92). Jacks assertion here clearly connects the demise of the conch to a
change in the social order. Jack is slowly becoming a power-hungry dictator, and we wee
the orderly influence of the conch replaced by mans evil impulses.
In the end, the conch loses significance to all but Piggy, and most of the boys turn
into evil savages. Piggy tells Ralph to call an assembly, and Ralph only laughs. Finally,
after Piggy glasses are stolen, he tells Ralph, Blow the conch, blow as loud as you can.
The forest reechoed; and birds lifted, crying out of the treetops, as on that first morning
ages ago (Golding 154). Piggy believes that the authority of the conch will once again
Goessling 3
bring the boys together, but only four boys meet in this assembly. The rest have joined
Jacks savage tribe. The goal of their last assemble is to get Piggys glasses back form
Jack. Therefore, the assembly moves to Castle Rock where Roger, the torturer and
executioner of Jacks group, rolls a boulder off the mountain and puts an end to the conch
and its one true supporter:
The rock struck Piggy a glancing blow form chin to knee; the conch
exploded into a thousand white fragments and ceased to exist. Piggy,
saying nothing, with no time for even a grunt, traveled through the air
sideways form the rock, turning over as he wentPiggy fell forty feet and
landed on his back across the square red rock in the sea. His head opened
and stuff came out and turned red. (Golding 164-165)
It is fitting here that the destruction of the conch accompanies the boys first intentional
act of murder on the island. Thus their final descent into evil is complete. Now, with the
authority of the conch destroyed, Jacks group is given license to become total savages.
The next day, they would hut Ralph to kill him, thus leaving behind the civilizing
influences of the conch forever.
Golding uses the conch shell to show the slow slide of the boys into savagery,
thereby exemplifying the theme that humans have the capability to turn evil. At first, the
conch brings everyone together; then, as its power erodes, the group breaks into two.
Finally, the destruction of the conch signals the plunge into total savagery. By following
the role of the conch in the story, we see how Golding uses it to unify the central events
of the story around his theme of inevitable evil. Golding is an artist, not a philosopher,
Goessling 4
but through his art he answers the question debated for centuries by philosophers: Is man
innately evil? According to Lord of the Flies, he is.
Goessling 5
Works Cited
Golding, William. Lord of the Flies. New York: The Putnam Publishing Group, 1954.
**This guide has been adapted from A Guide to Writing the Literary Analysis Essay at:
http://powayusd.sdcoe.k12.ca.us/pusdrbhs/academics/english/curriculum/literaryguide.pdf