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Humanities Research Papers

Table of Contents

1. Humanities Research Papers and Steps in Writing a Research Paper

2. Primary and Secondary Sources

3. Narrowing down your Topic

4. Proposal Letters, Annotated Bibliographies, and Abstracts

5. Organizing a Research Paper

Introduction

Body

Conclusion

6. Plagiarism

7. Evidence and Citation

8. Additional Parts of the Research Paper

Humanities Research Papers

Humanities Research Papers are Interpretive, not merely factual

Make an interpretive argument about the significance or impact of a specific primary source document

Careers Related to Research

Archaeologist

Cartographer

Operational Researcher

Patent Attorney

Politician’s Assistant

Research Scientist (math, medical, or physical sciences)

Harrison Ford as “Indiana Jones”

Steps to Writing a Research Paper

1. Identify your TOPIC and conduct preliminary research

2. Locate potential PRIMARY SOURCES

3. Perform in-depth RESEARCH

4. Evaluate sources and write an Annotated Bibliography

5. Collect Evidence

6. Write

7. Revise

8. Edit

Primary v Secondary Sources

Primary Sources are firsthand accounts of historical events

For example, Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech to analyze the U.S. Civil Rights Movement

Letters, diaries, speeches, works of art, government documents, published scientific studies, memoirs, etc.

Secondary Sources analyze primary sources

For example, scholarly articles you find in your library’s databases

Newspapers, magazine articles, biographies, encyclopedias, scholarly articles, book reviews, editorials, etc.

Primary Sources: Speeches

Socrates’ “The Apology” (399 B.C.E.)

Patrick Henry’s “Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death” (1775)

Frederick Douglass’ “The Hypocrisy of American Slavery” (1852)

Susan B. Anthony’s “Women’s Rights to the Suffrage” (1873)

President John F. Kennedy’s “Inaugural Address” (1961)

Susan B. Anthony

Primary Sources: Memoirs

Walden (1854) by Henry David Thoreau

The Moral Basis of Democracy (1940) by Eleanor Roosevelt

Night (1956) by Elie Wiesel

Borrowed Time: An AIDS Memoir (1988) by Paul Monette

Yes, Chef by Chef Marcus Samuelsson (2012)

Primary Sources: Scientific Studies

Henry Cavendish’s torsion bar experiment (1798)

Natural Selection by Charles Darwin (1859)

“Sickle Cell Anemia, a Molecular Disease” by Linus Pauling, et. All (1949)

Charles Darwin

Cavendish: measured gravity in a laboratory

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Identifying Primary and Secondary Sources

HISTORICAL EVENT OR TOPIC PRIMARY SOURCE DOCUMENT SECONDARY SOURCE DOCUMENT
The Revolutionary War “The Declaration of Independence” by Thomas Jefferson “Intertextuality and the Discourse Community” by James E. Porter, Rhetoric Review
Ancient Greek Rhetoric “Phaedrus” by Plato “Persuasion in Ancient Greece and Rome” by Jon Hall, ADR Bulletin
Ancient Greek Democracy “Politics” by Aristotle “Athenian Democracy in the Light of Greek Literature” by Abby Leach, American Journal of Philology

See “identifying Primary and Secondary Sources” for more examples.

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Research Paper Topics

The reflection of historical events in a piece of art or music

The social, political, religious, or historical significance of a particular piece of art or music, speech, or government document

Narrow Your Topic

1. Time Period

Consider a Significant Event in history or the present

2. Place

Consider various societies, political systems, languages, or values

3. Audience

Gender, sexuality, occupation, education, nationality, ethnicity, or age

4. Viewpoint

Legal, medical, ethical, philosophical, psychological, economic, scientific, literary, sociological, political, etc.

Narrowing a Topic Strategy

General Topic

Narrower Topic

Narrower Topic

Research Paper Topic

Narrower Topic

Narrowing a Topic Strategy

1980s Pop Music

1980s German Pop Music

German 1980s Pop Musician David Hasselhoff

The social significance of David Hasselhoff’s 1989 “Looking for Freedom”

The social significance of the 1980s Pop singer David Hasselhoff

Narrowing a Topic Strategy

Edgar Allan Poe

Social impact of Edgar Allan Poe

Social impact of Edgar Allan Poe in the 1800s

Legal and Social impact of Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Mask of Red Death” in the 1800s

Legal and Social impact of Edgar Allan Poe in the 1800s

Narrowing a Topic Strategy

Police Brutality

Police Brutality in the United States

Police Brutality in the U.S. today

How can we use psychology to retrain police in order to reduce police brutality in the U.S. today?

How can we retrain police to reduce police brutality in the U.S. today?

Narrowing a Topic Strategy

Prisons

Prisons in the United States

U.S. prisons today

How can we reform U.S. prisons today to focus on job and skill training?

How can we reform U.S. prisons today?

How to Generate a Humanities Research Paper Topic

1. Choose an artist or writer that interests you

2. Research that artist or writer

3. In your research, did you find a possible primary source?

4. If so, that may be a good research paper idea

Rick and Carl from “The Walking Dead”

Dr. Seuss

During World War II, Dr. Seuss worked for the U.S. Military creating propaganda films like “Your Job in Germany” (1945), “Our Job in Japan,” “Private Snafu,” and “Gerald McBoing-Boing” (1950)

Topic: Analyzing Dr. Seuss’ role in generating U.S. propaganda during WWII

“Gerald McBoing-Boing” won the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film

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Walt Disney

Topic 1: Many of Walt Disney’s stories were based on Aesop’s Fables, so a comparative analysis of specific stories would work

Topic 2: Analyze the significance of “The Three Little Pigs” (film) during the Great Depression

George Lucas

Famous for Star Wars, George Lucas also wrote and directed “American Graffiti” (1973), an award-winning portrayal of life in Modesto, California in the early 1960s

Topic: One could use the film as a primary source to study Modesto, California in the early 1960s

George Lucas and J.J. Abrams

Francis Ford Coppola

Winner of two Academy Awards “Apocalypse Now” (1979) provides a portrayal of the Vietnam War, while is also parallels Joseph Conrad’s novel the Heart of Darkness (1899)

Topic 1: Using the film as a primary source, what does “Apocalypse Now” tell a modern audience about the Vietnam War?

Topic 2: Do a comparative analysis of “Apocalypse Now” and Heart of Darkness

Primary Source: “Apocalypse Now”

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Jennifer Lawrence

Winner of three Academy Awards, Jennifer Lawerence wrote an article about the gender wage gap, titled “Why Do I Make Less Than My Male Co-Stars?,” which would be a primary source to study the issue of wage inequality

Sir Peter Jackson

Using the films and novels as primary sources, a comparative study of “The Lord of the Rings” or “The Hobbit,” when one looks at the novel and the film would make for a good paper

RZA

Wu-Tang Clan producer and rapper RZA wrote a New York Times bestseller called The Tao of WU, a memoir about the Staten Island projects. This or any of the work of RZA could be a primary source

The Prohibition Era

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

Studs Lonigan novels by James T. Farrell

The Man with the Golden Arm by Nelson Algren

“The Whiskey Speech” by Judge Noah S. Sweat

Parts to the Research Paper

The Research Paper Has 5 Components:

1. Proposal Letter

This is a brief 1-2 page letter stating your proposed thesis and preliminary research

2. Annotated Bibliography

This is a detailed 2-3 page annotation of 5 sources you intend to cite in your research paper

3. Multi-Modal Project (extra-credit)

This is an extra-credit project that supplements your research paper with visuals, media, pictures, music, and so on

4. Abstract (extra-credit)

This is a ½ page paragraph that provides an overview of your paper

5. Research Paper

This is a 10-12 page college-level research paper

Proposal Letter: 5-Paragraph Model

1. Explain how you became interested in the topic

2. State your preliminary thesis or propose a few different angles for your thesis. State some of your research questions.

3. Identify your PRIMARY SOURCE

4. Identify 3 of your SECONDARY SOURCES

5. Explain the next step in your research process

Annotated Bibliography: 5 Sentence Strategy

1. Establish the Author’s Ethos, credentials, thesis, and provide a summary of their work

2. Identify the Medium and Genre

3. List the Types of Evidence the author uses. For example, statistics, data, quotes from authorities, narratives, etc.

4. Identify the Audience and Purpose of the text. Be as specific as possible

5. Explain how you will use this source in your research paper

Author’s Ethos

1. Degrees

2. School

3. Field(s) of Study

4. Major Publications

5. Major Professional Experience

American Horror Author Stephen King

Summary

Who?

What?

Why?

Where?

When?

How?

Types of Mediums

Article

Book

Film

Newspaper

Magazine

Brief List of Textual Genres

Speech or Debate

Short Story

Personal or Autobiographical Essay

Journal Entries

Personal Letter

Poetry and Song Lyrics

Play

Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, Globe Theatre, London, 2010

For a rhetorical analysis essay, any of these genres are appropriate.

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Audience

Examples of an audience for an annotated bibliography include:

Undergraduates in Health

Graduate students in Ecology

Doctoral Students in Political Science

Author’s Purpose

Author’s purpose is an author’s reason for writing

P.I.E. is an easy acronym for author’s purpose

Persuade

Inform

Entertain

5-Step Abstract

1. Why did you do this study or project?

2. What did you do?

3. What type of evidence do you provide?

4. How does your study vary from past studies on the subject?

5. What do your findings mean?

Note: Avoid “I” or “we.”

Organizing the Research Paper

I. Introduction

Hook

Background

Essay Map

Concise Thesis

II. Modern History of the Topic

III. Research Questions (6-8 questions)

Organizing the Research Paper

IV. Analysis of Primary Source (part 1)

Analysis of Related Secondary Sources

V. Analysis of Primary Source (part 2)

Analysis of Related Secondary Sources

VI. Analysis of Primary Source (part 3)

Analysis of Related Secondary Sources

This section can have as many parts as are needed.

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Organizing the Research Paper

VII. Counter-Argument (if appropriate)

VIII. Conclusion

1. Synthesize your Argument

2. Propose a Solution or Compromise (if appropriate)

3. Address Limitations of your Study

4. Address Avenues for Future Studies

5. Final Reflection

Wisdom of Another

I.

II.

III.

IV.

V.

VI.

VII.

VIII

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Write a sample outline of your research paper. Then, share these outlines with a partner or group. Offer suggestions to each other.

Introduction

In addition to model provided, consider framing the discussion by identifying:

1. The Agent: a person, organization that is acting in a particular manner

2. The Action: what is being done by the agent

3. The Goal: why the agent carried out the action

4. The Result: what is the outcome of the action?

Introduction

Your introduction may also include:

The Topic

The Context

Defining a Problem

A Surprising Statement

A Question

A Story or personal experience

Drawing a Contrast

Essay Map: Example

Initially, I will review the history of English colonialism in the Caribbean. Then, I will explain Sandra Paquet’s theory of Lamming’s work. Next, I will explore how Water with Berries shows the various affects colonization has on the colonized, through the main characters. Finally, I will employ the writings of Lamming himself in The Pleasures of Exile to explore the significance of Water with Berries as a parody of William Shakespeare’s The Tempest.

Research Questions

Research questions are a series of 6-8 analytical questions that a writer asks near the beginning of their research paper

Research questions must be arguable, timely, and they must engage a challenging topic

Your answers to these questions should make up the bulk of your research paper

Frequently, these are “how” and “why” questions or questions framed as a paradox

Research Questions

Topic: How Much the Greeks Taught Us about Rhetoric and How Little Modern Thought Has Advanced the Field

Research Questions: What were the major rhetorical contributions of Ancient Greece? How did the contributions of Aristotle and Cicero influence later generations? Why were Aristotle and Cicero studied more than Corax of Syracuse? How have modern theorists advanced rhetoric?

Research Questions Format

(Five spaces or one TAB) What were the major rhetorical contributions of Ancient Greece? How did the contributions of Aristotle and Cicero influence later generations? Why were Aristotle and Cicero studied more than Corax of Syracuse? How have modern theorists advanced rhetoric?

That is it. NO topic sentence, concluding sentence, evidence, bullet points, or answers in a research question paragraph

Organizing the Body Paragraphs

Consider which rhetorical modes best suit your topic:

Cause and Effect

Pro and Con

Comparison and Contrast

Strengths and Weaknesses

Costs and Benefits

Problems and Solutions

Types of Evidence

1. Direct Quotes: quoting a whole sentence

2. Integrated Quotes: quoting part of a sentence

3. Partial Quotes: quoting a word or phrase

4. Block Quotes: employing an extended quote

5. Modified Quotes: using [brackets] to change a quote

6. Paraphrase: putting a quote in your own words

7. Summary: identifying who, what, why, when, where, and how

Integrated Quotes

An integrated quote combines part of a quote and part of your own original sentence

In his final paragraph, Singer clarifies the purpose of his metaphors when he proclaims, “when Bob first grasped the dilemma that faced him as he stood by the railway switch, he must have thought how extraordinarily unlucky he was…But he was not unlucky…We are all in that situation” (“The Singer Solution to World Poverty”).

The three periods in a row (…) are called an ellipse; it signifies that the quote continues, but there is text missing.

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Block Quotes

A block quote is used when a quote is 5 or more lines

See the example on the next slide

Block Quotes

In the Huffington Post article “These 12 Awesome Schools Could Change the Way You Think of Public Education,” Rebecca Klein states:

In 2010, Clintondale High School became a ‘flipped classroom’ school, meaning that homework is done during the day, and instruction takes place at night in the home via online videos…Principal Greg Green says standardized test scores have improved since the change. (par. 7)

Ellipses (…), like we see in the above example, are used to show you have moved ahead in the passage, but you are still quoting from the same source and probably the same paragraph.

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Block Quotes

Note the Differences from a Normal Quote:

1. The clause before a block quote identifies author, source, and title

2. The clause before a block quote ends with a colon (:)

3. No quotation marks are needed

4. Indent block quotes 1 inch from the left margin (ten spaces or 2 tabs)

5. The period appears before the citation

Modified Quotes

A modified quote is when you use brackets to add a noun/pronoun, change verb tense, change a verb or noun for subject-verb agreement, etc.

Original Quote: “He argued we’ve perhaps figured out the structure of the way schools should be set up” (par. 8).

Modified Quote: “[Principal Green] argue[s] we’ve perhaps figured out the structure of the way schools should be set up” (par. 8).

Conclusion: Synthesis

Synthesis occurs when you combine new information with prior knowledge and form a new perspective or insight

5 Steps to Synthesis

1. Describe your research

Review and summarize your sources

2. Note shared similarities between different sources

3. Note any important differences between your sources

4. Assessment or evaluation of your sources

5. Draw a conclusion about what you have learned

Address the Limitations of the Study

How should readers interpret your results in the bigger picture? What are their limits? Where are these results applicable? Under what circumstances?

Future Studies

1. What questions should future scholars in this field answer?

2. What research or studies should future scholars in this field conduct?

Final Reflection

Select ONE of These Modes:

Additional Analysis

Speculate about the Future

Close with a Quotation that offers deeper insight

Close with a Story or a Question

Call Your Readers to Action

Avoiding Plagiarism

TYPES OF PLAGIARISM

The un-cited use of passages from two or more sources

Creating fake citations to mislead a reader

Copying or closely paraphrasing extended passages and passing it off as one’s own work

Copying an entire document and passing it off as one’s own work

Purchasing a document and passing it off as one’s own work

Avoiding Plagiarism

HOW TO AVOID PLAGIARISM

1. Use a Bibliography (in M.L.A. format)

2. Identify and Cite each quotation, paraphrase, and summary

3. Use correct M.L.A. in-text citation

4. Cite each source that you utilize within your paper

5. Check your Essay for Style Changes, which may indicate a passage you neglected to quote and cite

Evidence and Citation

There are 2 parts to MLA citation:

1. In-text citations within your essay

2. A Works Cited Page

*See The St. Martin’s Guide, The Bedford Handbook, the Purdue OWL website, or The MLA Handbook for more information

In-text Citations

In-text citations appear after quotes or paraphrases to show the reader where the quote, statistic, etc. came from

For example, “At least 80% of humanity lives on less than $10 a day” (“Poverty Facts and Stats”).

“And what is one month’s dining out, compared to a child’s life? There’s the rub” (Cohen 382).

Works Cited Page

A works cited page should appear as the last page(s) of ALL of your essays. They are in alphabetical order. It is not in bold; that is only used for emphasis in this lecture.

For example:

“Poverty Facts and Stats.” Global Issues. Anup Shah. 7 Jan. 2013. Web. 3 Mar. 2014.

Singer, Peter. “The Singer Solution to World Poverty.” 50 Essays. Ed. Samuel Cohen. 4th ed. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2014. 378-384. Print.

MLA Title Page

Appendix

Appendices contain detailed information like:

Mathematical proofs

Lists of words

Interview, research, or survey questions

A detailed description of the apparatus used in the research

Transcripts

Check MLA Appendix Format.

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Multi-Modal Projects

“Multimodal” “means more than one mode”

Modalities are “visual, audio, gestural, spatial, or linguistic means of creating meaning”

This project is non-traditional, has an audience, and helps you practice real-world skills

Sources:

www.rhetoric.olemiss.edu

www.kcwritingcenter.weebly.com

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Multi-Modal Projects: Modes

Visual: color, repetition, visual coherence, etc.

Audio: sound effects, music, etc.

Gestural: facial expressions and body language

Spatial: visual organization, transitions, etc.

Linguistic: text or spoken word

Multi-Modal Projects: Types of Media

PowerPoint

Prezi

Movie (iMovie)

Website

Podcast

Poster

Montage

Photo Essay

Advertisement

Infographic

Collage

Revising the Research Paper

By Dr. Dave Nelson and Robert DeFrance

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Revising the Research Paper: Conceptual

1. Factual, conceptual errors: avoid misinterpretations of the text

2. Absence of evidence: an essay with few textual references cannot demonstrate knowledge of the readings

Revising the Research Paper: Rhetorical

3. Make sure that your Essay Map and Research Questions establish your overall purpose

4. Identifying genres: avoid genre mistakes like calling essays books or like calling Gandhi’s Hind Swaraj a novel (it is a non-fiction book)

Revising the Research Paper: Thesis

5. Avoid grammatical mistakes: edit your essay map and research questions several times

6. Avoid passive language: Generally, try to avoid using passive voice (like “Polynices was buried by Antigone”)

Revising the Research Paper: Development and Support

7. Proper use of evidence: edit your quotes according to MLA format

8. Use warrants: whenever there is evidence, there must be analysis

9. Support your claims and ideas: revise to make sure all your claims are supported by textual evidence

Revising the Research Paper: Structuring

10. Revise for topic sentences: use clear, arguable, definitive topic sentences

11. Paper must follow your thesis: after finishing your paper, return to your essay map and research questions

12. Use transitions: use topic sentences, concluding sentences, transitional phrases, words, and expressions

Revising the Research Paper: Language

13. Contractions: Do not use contractions (can’t is written cannot)

14. Ambiguous pronouns: Within each sentence or two, clarify the noun or subject

15. Subject-verb agreement: edit your paper for subject-verb agreement

16. Verb tense: avoid awkward shifts in verb tense

17. Colloquial phrases: avoid colloquial (sad not blue), slang (“the down low”), and cliché phrases (“the rest is history”)

Revising the Research Paper

Almost without exception, all body paragraphs need topic sentences, evidence, and analysis

Use sub-sections or sub-headings to improve transitions

If you use graphics, use captions

RADaR Revision Strategy

R—Replace words that are not specific, words that are overused, and sentences that are unclear

A—Add new information, descriptive adjectives and adverbs, rhetorical or literary devices

D—Delete unrelated ideas, sentences that sound good but create unity problems, unwanted repetition, and unnecessary details

and

R—Reorder to make better sense or flow better and so details support main ideas

Kelly Gallagher’s Write Like This: Teaching Real-World Writing Through Modeling and Mentor Texts

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Submitting your Research Paper

When you turn in your research paper organize it thusly:

1. Title Page

2. Abstract

3. Research Paper (Final Draft only)

4. Bibliography

5. Appendix and/or Graphics

6. Proposal Letter (copy or original)

7. Annotated Bibliography (copy or original)

*Late Research papers will not be accepted via email or after the final day of class

References

A Student Guide to Writing at UC Irvine. 13th edition.

The Anteater’s Guide to Writing and Rhetoric. 1st edition.

The Bedford Researcher. 4th edition.