Essay by Faisal
Essay by Faisal
Essay by Faisal
ESSAY WRITING
Introduction
A speech has two parts. You must state your case and you must prove it. You cannot
either state your case and omit to prove it, or prove it without first having stated it;
since any proof must be a proof of something and the only use of a preliminary
statement is the proof that follows it.
Aristotle
The word ESSAY is derived from the French word ‘essai’ meaning ‘attempt’ or
‘test’. The term was coined and used by Michel De Montaigne, a French
Philosopher, for the first time in the late 16th century. An Essay is a focused piece
of writing that develops an argument or narrative based on evidence, analysis and
interpretation. An essay is a piece of writing that develops a topic in five or more
paragraphs, including an introductory paragraph that states the thesis, three or more
supporting paragraphs that develop the topic, and a concluding paragraph.
What Aristotle has to say about a speech applies equally to a modern academic essay:
the introduction states your proposition or answer, and the body of the essay justifies
that answer.
An outline…..
Begins with the essay’s thesis statement.
Shows the organization of the essay.
Tells what ideas you will discuss and shows which ideas will come first,
second and so on.
Ends with the essay’s conclusion.
Imagine your selection: although you don’t see it, it supports your body. In the same
way, although a reader won’t see your outline. Making an outline in advance will
support your essay by providing its structure. In fact, adding more information to an
outline is called ‘fleshing it out’ (to provide more information).
1. The introductory paragraph is the first paragraph of the essay. The
introduction is best seen as a microcosm of the essay as a whole. The
introductory paragraph is the sum total of the entire essay. It is a like a trailer
of a movie. Its purpose is to lead the reader to the thesis statement in an inviting
and interesting way that will encourage the reader to continue reading. The
introductory paragraph of an essay should start with several sentences that attract
the reader’s interest. It should then advance the central idea, or thesis, that will be
developed in the essay. The thesis often includes a plan of development—a
“preview” of the major points that will support the thesis. These supporting points
should be listed in the order in which they will appear in the essay. Such a thesis
might assert, “Winter is my favorite season because I like the weather, the holidays,
and the sports,” leading to an essay that has a paragraph about weather, followed by
a paragraph about the holidays, and so forth.
Introductory Paragraph
Functions of the Introduction
A well-written introductory paragraph performs four important roles:
1. It attracts the reader’s interest, encouraging him or her to continue reading the
essay.
2. It supplies any background information that the reader may need to understand
the essay.
3. It presents a thesis statement. This clear, direct statement of the main idea of the
essay usually appears near the end of the introductory paragraph.
4. It indicates a plan of development. In this “preview,” the major supporting points
for the thesis are listed in the order in which they will be presented. In some cases,
the thesis and plan of development appear in the same sentence. However, writers
sometimes choose not to describe the plan of development.
THE MIDDLE
His knowledge is extensive, various, and profound. His mind is equally distinguished
by the amplitude of its grasp, and by the delicacy of its tact.
Macaulay, of Hallam’s Constitutional History of England
The middle of your essay is the introduction writ large. But there is in the middle a
major shift of emphasis away from bald propositions and conclusions towards the
careful working-out of arguments and the balancing of interpretations with the
evidence you call upon to support them. To justify the case presented in your
introduction is to develop arguments, to deploy evidence, to evaluate the strength of
counterarguments and apparent counterevidence, and to demonstrate their relevance
to the question with which you began. In all this your aim is to show not so much
that the answer you have decided on is the right answer, but that it is a reasonable
point of view to hold.
THE ENDING
[In the Epilogue] you must make the audience well-disposed towards yourself . . .
Aristotle
3. The concluding paragraph is the final paragraph of the essay. Its purpose is to
give the reader a sense that the essay has come to a satisfying conclusion. By this
point, the reader should have the feeling that everything the essay needed to say has
been said.
The concluding paragraph often summarizes the essay by briefly restating the thesis
and, at times, the main supporting points. In addition, the writer often presents a
concluding thought about the subject of the paper.
WHAT IS A THESIS STATEMENT?
A thesis statement gives the main idea of an essay. In thesis statement, we discuss
two important things: an issue and approach towards that issue.
The thesis statement of an essay tells what the writer intends to prove, defend, or
explain about the topic. It may show the writer’s viewpoint toward the topic or show
how the writer intends to treat the topic. We say that the thesis has a controlling idea.
This most important sentence is usually placed in the penultimate line or at the end
of the introductory paragraph. Every essay addresses a broad general topic, such as
writing. A thesis statement, however a full sentence that narrows the topic
specifically to what the essay is about, such as the beginning stage of writing. It also
makes clear the writer’s position on or claim about that topic. Often the thesis
statement gives a preview of the subdivisions or subtopics to be developed in the
body of the essay. Develop your central argument (your argument, evidence, detail
(examples) and statistical facts) must support your Thesis Argument.
This central idea is usually presented as a thesis statement in an essay’s
introductory paragraph. A good thesis statement does two things. First, it
tells readers an essay’s topic. Second, it presents the writer’s attitude,
opinion, idea, or point about that topic. For example, look at the following
thesis statement:
Owning a pet has several important benefits.
In this thesis statement, the topic is owning a pet; the writer’s main point
is that owning a pet has several important benefits.
Do not confuse a thesis statement with a title or a simple fact. A title is usually a
phrase, not a complete sentence.
A writer decides to write something about swimming, but the topic swimming seems
too general for an interesting essay, so the writer thinks about how to limit or qualify
that topic.
To limit the topic, the writer chooses a different term that covers a smaller part of
the topic and thus narrows the scope.
To qualify the topic, the writer adds a descriptive word or phrase to the general
topic. This change will also result in narrowing the scope of the topic.
Now look at the thesis sentence again and analyze its parts.
General topic: studying
Qualified topic: studying in a group (contrasted to studying alone)
Controlling idea: more helpful
Strategy of development: contrast
Here the writer has not used the word contrast in the thesis, but it is clear that a
contrast will be made between studying alone and studying in a group.