Composition II
Professor
Karen Woods Weierman
THE
HISTORICAL RESEARCH PAPER
Inquiry
contract due: M 2/23/04 (see Assignments for details)
Working
bibliography/progress report due: F 3/12/04 (see Assignments for details)
Draft
due: F 4/2/04
Final
version due: F 4/23/04
TOPIC
- For
your paper, you will research the postwar historical event of your choice
from the years 1950-1985 (subject to my approval).
- Be
sure to choose a focused event with specific dates you can use to
begin your research. For example,
“The Civil Rights Movement” is too broad a topic, while the more specific
“March on Washington” might work well.
- Please
avoid “conspiracy” topics like the Kennedy or King assassinations and
topics relating to NASA and space.
- In
your research, you will explore the portrayal of your public event in the
popular media at the time it happened and the portrayal of the event from
a current, scholarly perspective.
For example, what did newspapers and magazines say about the “March
on Washington” in August 1963? What
are historians and other academics saying about the march in recent
scholarship?
HISTORIOGRAPHY
- Historiography
is a key element of the assignment.
You will find that historical interpretation changes over
time. As William McNeill notes,
“Historians are always at work reinterpreting the past, asking new
questions, searching new sources and finding new meanings in old documents
in order to bring the perspective of new knowledge and experience to bear
on the task of understanding the past.
This means, of course, that what we know and believe about history
is always changing” (105).
- In
the type of research paper you may have done in the past, you gathered the
available information into a linear narrative of “the facts.” Here your task
is more sophisticated: rather than writing about “what happened” you will
focus on how the event has been
represented. Your paper thus will be a “history of
interpretation” over time and across genres. This may be a difficult concept to grasp
at first; it will become clearer as you do your research.
LIBRARY
RESEARCH
- Research
is the foundation of this project.
Without adequate research, you won’t have anything to say. It is essential that you begin the
process early and keep up with the class.
- Library
research and print sources are essential.
The Internet is a great place to learn some basic information about
your topic, but, contrary to popular belief, everything is not on the web.
- With
the help of Reference Librarian Pam McKay, you will learn the difference
between popular and scholarly sources and learn how to find them in the
library.
- In
addition, you will need to visit other libraries for your research (here’s
where the ARC card will be useful), so please plan accordingly. You are required to access the “America:
History and Life” database, which is not available on our campus. The database can be found at Assumption,
Clark, Holy Cross, and Framingham State, as well as other campuses (check
library home pages).
- You
are required to find a minimum of 10 PRINT SOURCES (5 popular and 5
scholarly). Your popular sources
should include both newspaper and magazine articles. Please note that 10 is not a magic
number: your research is complete when you have all the information you
need.
SPUTNIK
CASE STUDY
- Confused? Be not afraid: We will be using Sputnik as a case study for class, modeling the
intellectual work expected of you in your paper.
- We
will first read articles from the New
York Times from October 1957.
After learning how America initially reacted to the Soviet launch,
we will read 1990s academic sources to see how today’s scholars interpret
the same event.
THE
FINAL PRODUCT
- Your
final product will be approximately 8-10 pages, with documented sources in
MLA format.
- Your
task is to analyze the portrayal of your event in the popular media (at
the time the event happened) and in recent scholarly journals/books (1990
or later). An “A” paper will go
beyond the “compare-and-contrast” task and suggest reasons for the change
over time.
- You
will need to use your evidence skillfully and develop a strong
thesis. We will discuss planning
and drafting strategies in detail when the time comes.
GRADING
CRITERIA
- Research:
Have you found relevant popular and scholarly sources and used your
evidence to support your argument?
Do you document your sources correctly in MLA format?
- Thesis/Analysis:
Is your argument clear, balanced, and persuasive? Is your analysis thoughtful and complex?
·
Audience Awareness: Does your paper have the
tone and format of an academic essay?
·
Organization: Is the organizational logic clear
and explicit?
·
Grammar and Style: Is your prose free of errors?
WHAT
YOU WILL LEARN
After
completing the paper, you will have gained the following skills:
- locating
scholarly and popular sources through library research
- reading
critically and evaluating sources
- understanding
historiography
- formulating
an analytical argument
- integrating
sources and documenting them in MLA format
- constructing
an academic text
- revising
research papers
Works
Cited
McNeill,
William H. “Why Study History? Three Historians Respond.” Historical Literacy: The Case for History in
American Education. Eds. Paul Gagnon
and The Bradley Commission on History in the Schools. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1989. 103-118.