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A students writing guide how to plan and write successful essays by gordon taylor

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  • Cover

  • Half-title

  • Title

  • Copyright

  • Dedication

  • Contents

  • Preface

    • Preface to the original 1989 edition of The Student’s Writing Guide for the Arts and Social Sciences

  • Sources of extracts used in the text

  • 1 Introduction

    • 1 The main elements in academic writing

    • 2 You and your writing task

    • 3 You and your subject matter

    • 4 You and your reader

    • 5 Your language: form and structure

  • Part I Reflection and Research

    • 2 Reflection: asking questions and proposing answers

      • 1 Speculative thinking and writing

      • 2 Choosing a topic

        • Devising your own topic for a research paper

      • 3 Kinds of question

        • What

        • Who, whom

        • Where, when

        • How

        • Why

        • To what extent, how much, how far, how significant

        • Which

      • 4 Coming to terms with an essay topic

        • 4.1 Making up your mind

        • 4.2 Problems of meaning and knowledge

          • Clarifying the meaning of terms

          • The meaning of an essay topic as a whole

          • Essay topics that contain a number of questions

          • Background knowledge

        • 4.3 Formal meaning: the logical shape of possible answers

          • An example

        • 4.4 Evaluative criteria

      • 5 Summary

    • 3 Interpretation: reading and taking notes

      • 1 The 'problem’ of reading

        • 1.1 Common difficulties

        • 1.2 The importance of background reading

      • 2 Evidence, interpretation and fact

        • 2.1 Primary, secondary and tertiary sources

        • 2.2 The consequences of this distinction for essay-writing

        • 2.3 Authoritative opinion and the internet

      • 3 What an author does

      • 4 An author’s major motives

      • 5 Modes of analysis

      • 6 An author’s structural intentions

        • Summary

      • 7 Interpreting a difficult text

  • Part II The Dynamics of an Essay

    • 4 Introductions

      • 1 The constituents of an essay

      • 2 The constituents of an introduction

      • 3 The use and misuse of introductory material

      • 4 Setting out your case

        • The core of a 'discussion’: debating your answer

      • 5 Writing an introduction to a research paper

    • 5 Middles

      • 1 Some common problems

        • 1.1 Changing your mind about the answer

        • 1.2 Grinding to a halt

        • 1.3 Writing too much

        • 1.4 Writing too little

      • 2 The uses of outlines

      • 3 Expanding a case

        • 3.1 Extending your answer

        • 3.2 Elaborating a point

        • 3.3 Enhancing the value of your information

        • 3.4 A note on the use of sources

      • 4 Summary

    • 6 Endings

      • 1 Recapitulation

      • 2 Mood: suggestion and implication

      • 3 Variations on a theme

  • Part III Language

    • 7 You, your language and your material

      • 1 Subjective and objective: the uses of 'I’ and 'we’

      • 2 Confusing yourself with your material

        • 2.1 Dangling modifiers

        • 2.2 Passives

        • 2.3 Time and tense

        • 2.4 Your own text and others’ texts

      • 3 Quoting – and not quoting

      • 4 Some verbs of enquiry: how to use them

        • Uninterested/disinterested

        • Imply/infer

        • Feel

        • Speculate, conjecture

        • Imagine

        • Wish, hope

    • 8 Analytical language 1: sentences

      • 1 Discrimination and confusion

      • 2 Elements of sentence structure

        • 2.1 Referrig and predicating

        • 2.2 Sentences without finite verbs

        • 2.3 Conjoining clauses into complex sentences

          • Conjunctions and sentence adverbials

          • Punctuation: colons and semi-colons

      • 3 Participants, processes and circumstances

        • 3.1 Clarifying participants, human and non-human

        • 3.2 Concrete and abstract

          • Processes expressed in abstract nouns

          • Noun–verb agreement

        • 3.3 Texts, words and things

          • The function of quotation marks and italics

          • Object-language and meta-language

        • 3.4 Singular and plural

    • 9 Analytical language 2: rhetorical strategies

      • 1 Analysing versus describing

      • 2 Defining

        • 2.1 The dynamics of definition

        • 2.2 Defining and non-defining relative clauses

      • 3 Comparing and contrasting

        • 3.1 The dynamics of comparison

        • 3.2 Comparative structures

    • 10 Cohesion and texture

      • 1 Determinants of cohesion and texture

        • 1.1 Sentence adverbials (linking terms)

        • 1.2 Referring expressions

        • 1.3 Coordinating structures

        • 1.4 Vocabulary

      • 2 Revising and improving text

    • 11 Conventions of academic writing

      • 1 Academic culture

      • 2 A skeleton key to stylistic conventions

        • 2.1 Formal and informal language

          • Contracted speech forms

          • You, we, I

          • Abbreviations

        • 2.2 Technical vocabulary

        • 2.3 Layout

          • Headings and sub-headings

          • Tables and figures

          • Indenting of paragraphs

        • 2.4 Quotations

        • 2.5 Notes

        • 2.6 References and bibliographies

  • Appendix 1 Writing book reviews

  • Appendix 2 Sample analyses of essay topics

    • 1 Film studies

      • 1.1 The meanings of terms

      • 1.2 Relationships of meaning between terms

      • 1.3 The shapes of some possible answers

        • All

        • None

        • Some

    • 2 Physical geography

      • 2.1 The meanings of terms

      • 2.2 Relationships of meaning between terms

      • 2.3 The shapes of some possible answers

        • All

        • None

        • Some

    • 3 Media studies

      • 3.1 The meanings of terms

      • 3.2 Relationships of meaning between terms

      • 3.3 The shapes of some possible answers

        • All

        • None

        • Some

  • Appendix 3 A revised manuscript

  • Index

Nội dung

This page intentionally left blank A Student’s Writing Guide Are you struggling to meet your coursework deadlines? Finding it hard to get to grips with your essay topics? Does your writing sometimes lack structure and style? Would you like to improve your grades? This text covers everything a student needs to know about writing essays and papers in the humanities and social sciences Starting from the common difficulties students face, it gives practical examples of all the stages necessary to produce a good piece of academic work: r interpreting assignment topics r drawing on your own experience and background r reading analytically and taking efficient notes r developing your argument through introductions, middles and conclusions r evaluating and using online resources r understanding the conventions of academic culture r honing your ideas into clear, vigorous English This book will provide you with all the tools and insights you need to write confident, convincing essays and coursework papers g o r d o n t a y l o r is Honorary Research Associate at Monash University; before his retirement he was Associate Professor and Director of the Language and Learning Unit in the Faculty of Arts there He was a pioneer in the development of content- and discipline-specific writing programmes for students in higher education His many publications include The Student’s Writing Guide for the Arts and Social Sciences (1989) A Student’s Writing Guide How to Plan and Write Successful Essays GORDON TAYLOR CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town, Singapore, São Paulo Cambridge University Press The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CB2 8RU, UK Published in the United States of America by Cambridge University Press, New York www.cambridge.org Information on this title: www.cambridge.org/9780521729796 © Cambridge University Press 2009 This publication is in copyright Subject to statutory exception and to the provision of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press First published in print format 2009 ISBN-13 978-0-511-54002-8 eBook (EBL) ISBN-13 978-0-521-72979-6 paperback Cambridge University Press has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of urls for external or third-party internet websites referred to in this publication, and does not guarantee that any content on such websites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate For Kasonde, Susan and Jeremy Contents Preface xi Sources of extracts used in the text 1 xv Introduction The main elements in academic writing You and your writing task You and your subject matter You and your reader 12 Your language: form and structure 15 Part I Reflection and Research 19 2 Reflection: asking questions and proposing answers 21 Speculative thinking and writing 22 Choosing a topic 24 Kinds of question 27 Coming to terms with an essay topic 35 Summary 51 3 Interpretation: reading and taking notes 53 The ‘problem’ of reading 54 Evidence, interpretation and fact 57 What an author does 65 An author’s major motives 69 Modes of analysis 77 An author’s structural intentions 79 Interpreting a difficult text 82 viii – Contents Part II The Dynamics of an Essay 89 4 Introductions 91 The constituents of an essay 92 The constituents of an introduction 94 The use and misuse of introductory material 95 Setting out your case 98 Writing an introduction to a research paper 107 Middles 111 Some common problems 112 The uses of outlines 116 Expanding a case 117 Summary 133 Endings 134 Recapitulation 134 Mood: suggestion and implication Variations on a theme 140 136 Part III Language 145 You, your language and your material 147 Subjective and objective: the uses of ‘I’ and ‘we’ Confusing yourself with your material 151 Quoting – and not quoting 161 Some verbs of enquiry: how to use them 163 Analytical language 1: sentences 167 Discrimination and confusion 168 Elements of sentence structure 169 Participants, processes and circumstances Analytical language 2: rhetorical strategies Analysing versus describing 194 Defining 199 Comparing and contrasting 207 177 194 148 ... and Social Sciences (1989) A Student’s Writing Guide How to Plan and Write Successful Essays GORDON TAYLOR CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town, Singapore,... think about how you fit in to the broad culture of academe and the kind of writing it asks for It is about r how to avoid procrastinating and how to discover a real desire or ‘itch’ to write r how. .. interpretation, and paraphrase; note-taking, use of own language in participants in processes actors, agents and affected, 28, 160 clarifying human and non-human, 179–82 see also choosing, between participants,

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