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Composition
&Research
Style Guide
York Technical College
Rock Hill, SC
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction ………………………………………………………………………………………………………….….. 3
Plagiarism …………………………………………………………………………………………………………........... 4
The Academic Writing and Research Process …………………………………… ..……………………… 8
Checklist for Writers ………………………………………………………………………………………………… 10Modern Language Association (MLA) Format ……………………………………………………………. 11
Formatting a Paper
Internal Citations
Works Cited
Sample Research Paper …………………………………………………………………………………………….. 13
Composition Grading Rubric ……………………………………………………………………………….......... 21
Fundamentals of Grammar ………………………………………………………………………………………. 22
Parts of Speech …………………………………………………………………………………………………… 22
Nouns
Pronouns Adjectives
Verbs
Adverbs
Conjunctions
Prepositions
Interjections
Parts of a Sentence ………………………………………………………………………………………………. 24
Subjects
Verbs
Phrases and Clauses
Participles and Participial Phrases
Gerunds and Gerund Phrases
Infinitives and Infinitive Phrases
Punctuation ………………………………………………………………………………………………………... 26
Periods
Question Marks
Exclamation Points
Commas
Colons
Semicolons
Parentheses
Brackets
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Dashes
Diagonals
Quotation Marks
Ellipses
Bibliography …………………………………………………………………………………………………………….. 31
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INTRODUCTION
This is a general usage style guide. It is not meant to be exhaustive in that it is not
everything there is to know about the subjects presented. However, the material that
follows covers most of the commonly encountered style, research, and grammar issues.
Among other great reference sources, finer details can be found in works such as The GreggReference Manual: A Manual of Style, Grammar, Usage, and Formatting, The Chicago Manual
of Style, The Elements of Style (Strunk and White), or the MLA Handbook for Writers of
Research Papers.
Plagiarism as it relates to academic misconduct is the first topic. Plagiarism is more than
simply cheating; it is also stealing in that someone who plagiarizes is representing as his or
her own work someone else’s intellectual property. There is a very specific formal process
for handling a plagiarism incident with the least possible consequence being the instructor
assigning the product a lower grade. York Tech also keeps a formal record of the incident
in the student’s academic file.
Second, this manual addresses the common issues associated with the writing and research
process. Following is a very brief composition checklist: It will help you ask yourself the
most important questions about your composition process, progress, and product.
Next, there is an entire section on the basics of Modern Language Association (MLA)
formatting as well as an attached student product. Although there may be other
requirements this manual has not addressed for your specific paper, do not deviate from
the general guidelines. Your paper should have a very specific look to it. When it comes to
format, an academic paper is not the place to demonstrate individuality.
The York Tech standard grading rubric follows the student academic paper. York Tech is anaccredited institution of higher learning. Average work turned in on time will earn a grade
of C. Late work, regardless of its high quality, will not receive full credit. Please you’re yourinstructor for specific course requirements regarding late or missing work. Although we
expect your best effort, your compositions are not graded according to your effort; they are
graded according to a standard.
If your ideas are usually supported and clear; if t he essay’s organization ref lects a logical flow
of ideas; if there is a sense of purpose and a controlling idea is evident, even if not fully
sustained; if paragraphs are adequately developed, but transitions are not used consistently;
if most word choices are effective; and if here are occasional grammatical, mechanical,
and/or format errors, your paper will earn a C. This describes satisfactory/acceptable paper.Good (B) and superior papers (A) will demonstrate a higher standard of excellence than a
satisfactory paper and, therefore, will receive a higher grade.
After the rubric and before the annotated bibliography, there is a section on the
fundamentals of grammar and punctuation. Grammar and punctuation rules can be
complicated, but they are neither unknowable nor arbitrary. Moreover, if a writer does not
understand parts of speech and parts of a sentence, she/he will never understand the
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fundamentals of punctuation. Even if you do not remember every rule, you will at least
know there is a rule and be skillful and careful enough to look it up.
Disclaimer: There are no new ideas in this style manual. Everything contained here has been
liberally copied or paraphrased from other sources. The bibliography, as best as possible,
gives credit to the referenced sources.
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PLAGIARISM
I. Plagiarism defined:
A. Representing orally or in writing, in any academic assignment or exercise, the
words, ideas, or works of another as one’s own without customary and properacknowledgment of the source.
B. Basically, if they aren’t your words, even if you paraphrase, and it isn’t your idea,then it doesn’t belong to you.
C. You have to credit the author with a reference and/or a citation.
II. Examples and how to avoid plagiarism:
A. Submitting material or work for evaluation, in whole or in part, which has been
prepared by another individual(s) or commercial service. Which also means youcan’t pay someone (or have your mom write it) and represent it as your own.
B. Quoting another person, whether actual words, phrases, complete sentences or
paragraphs, or an entire piece of written work without acknowledgement of the
source through customary or proper citation.
C. But not only do you have to cite your sources, but you also have to do it correctly.
The purpose for citing sources:
Credit where credit is due
Others can verify your data
D. Using another person’s idea, opinion, or theory, even if it is completely paraphrasedin one’s own words without acknowledgement of the source.
If you got an idea, opinion, or theory from somewhere else, you must cite the
source.
E. Borrowing facts, statistics, or other illustrative materials that are not clearly
common knowledge without acknowledgement of the source.
Unless facts and stats are within the realm of common knowledge, then you have
to cite your sources.
Generally speaking, common knowledge facts are widely known. Examples:
President Clinton served two terms in office. Mount Washington in New
Hampshire is 6288 feet high.
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F. To avoid plagiarism, cite your sources correctly within the document (parenthetical
citations) and at the end of your paper in the Works Cited.
III. The sanction process and consequences for plagiarism and other academic misconduct:
(Condensed from the SC Technical College System Student Code & Local Procedures)
A. Academic misconduct includes, but is not limited to, cheating on tests and
assignments; plagiarism; collusion; falsification of information; forgery, alteration,
or misuse of college documents; and destruction of evidence (Student Code: Page 8).
B. An instructor who has reason to believe that a student enrolled in his/her class has
committed an act of academic misconduct must meet with the student to discuss
this matter. The instructor must advise the student of the alleged act of academic
misconduct and the information upon which it is based (Student Code: Page 11-12).
C. The student must be given an opportunity to refute the allegation.
D. If the instructor, after meeting with the student, determines that the student has
engaged in academic misconduct as alleged, the instructor should consult with
his/her direct supervisor to decide on the appropriate sanction (see below). If the
evidence of academic misconduct is inconclusive, the instructor should consult with
the Dean for Students Office as well in determining the sanction.
E. The instructor may impose one of the following academic sanctions:
1. Assign a lower grade or score to the paper, project, assignment, or examination
involved in the act of misconduct.
2. Require the student to repeat or resubmit the paper, project, assignment, or
examination involved in the act of misconduct.
3. Assign a failing grade for the course.
4. Require the student to withdraw from the course.
F. If the student is found responsible for the academic misconduct, the instructor will
submit within five working days of the meeting, a written report about the incident
and the sanction imposed to the Dean for Students.
G. The Dean for Students will send a letter to the student summarizing the incident, the
finding, the terms of the imposed sanction, and informing the student that he/she
may appeal the decision and/or the sanction by submitting a written request to the
Dean for Students within seven working days of the date of the letter.
H. If the student requests an appeal, the Dean for Students will schedule a time for the
meeting. Witnesses may be interviewed, if applicable. The Dean for Students may
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accept the sanction, impose a lesser sanction, or overturn the sanction. The student
is notified of the outcome in writing.
I. If the student does not accept the Dean for Students’ decision, he/she can appeal tothe President of the College. The President’s decision is final.
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THE ACADEMIC WRITING AND RESEARCH PROCESS
Although writing is a recursive process (circles back on itself) and seldom linear (step-by-
step), fundamentally, writing is about vision and revision. The vision comes from
understanding the assignment and then selecting an appropriate topic for the assignment
objective.
There are a few common student problems encountered in academic writing: 1) The
student does not understand the writing assignment; 2) Although the student understands
the assignment, the student does not follow the directions; 3) The topic selected is too
broad or too narrow; 4) The narrative point of view the student chooses is inappropriate or
inconsistent; and 5) Perhaps the most avoidable problem, the student waits too long to
begin planning, researching, and writing, which doesn’t leave enough time for revision.
Beyond oversimplifying the writing process by stating that academic writing can be
reduced to two steps--vision and revision--there are only a few substeps to successful
academic writing. The following is a summary of those substeps. Please refer to Keys toSuccessful Writing: A Handbook for College and Career for comprehensive specifics on the
process.
VISION:
1. Know your purpose: Determine the precise purpose for the writing assignment. If it is
not clear to you, ask your instructor for clarification. You will save yourself many
anxious moments and much wasted time if you are putting your efforts into the correct
assignment. The goal of your paper is to answer the question you posed as your topic.
Your question gives you a purpose. The most common purposes in academic writing
are to persuade, analyze/synthesize, and inform.
Persuasive purpose – In persuasive academic writing, the purpose is to get your
readers to adopt your answer to the question. So you will choose one answer to
your question, support your answer using reason and evidence, and try to change
the readers’ point of view about the topic. Persuasive writing assignments include
argumentative and position papers.
Analytical purpose – In analytical academic writing, the purpose is to explain and
evaluate possible answers to your question, choosing the best answer(s) based on
your own criteria. Analytical assignments often investigate causes, examine effects,
evaluate effectiveness, assess ways to solve problems, find the relationships
between various ideas, or analyze other people’s arguments. The “synthesis” part of the purpose comes in when you put together all the parts and come up with your
own answer to the question. Examples of these assignments include analysis papers
and critical analyses.
Informative purpose – In informative academic writing, the purpose is to explain
possible answers to your question, giving the readers new information about your
topic. This differs from an analytical topic in that you do not push your viewpoint
on the readers, but rather try to enlarge the readers’ view.
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2. Know the assessment tool: Become very familiar with the grading rubric. You should
neither wonder how you are being assessed nor be surprised by the grade.
3. Know your audience: Unless otherwise specified, assume your instructor is your
audience. Your audience will also determine your narrative point of view. Normally,for academic writing, you will be writing in the third person; however, as English
instructors, depending on the assignment, we have all seen successful examples of
students choosing a first and/or second person point of view.
4. Plan and prewrite: Generally speaking, the more time you spend planning and
organizing, the less time you spend flailing. The first step to planning and organizing a
paper is selecting a topic appropriate for the assignment. Always keep in mind that
there are few perfect topics, and, although the assignment is important, it is not your
life’s work. You have other things to do. It is always better to have a good topic and
enough time to research, write, and revise than to have a perfect topic and not enough
time to do the topic justice.
5. Draft your paper: This step is where good writers differ greatly. Some people write
pretty well in a first draft and may revise slightly as they compose. Others compose a
true first draft and revise the entire document at the end. It comes down to whatever
works best for you. But if you find that your system generally isn’t successful, it may be
time to try another method.
REVISION:
1. Edit your paper: Spell check, grammar check, then, if at all possible, let the paper sit for
a few days so you look at it again with fresh eyes. More importantly, find a goodproofreader, and be sure to give yourself enough time to make both major (substance
and organization) and minor (grammar and format) revisions.
2. Check your format: Most college papers require Modern Language Association (MLA)
or American Psychological Association (APA) format depending on the academic
discipline. Your instructor will guide you regarding format.
3. Use a rewrite opportunity to your advantage: If your instructor has looked at your
paper and offered corrections and suggestions, you would be wise incorporate the
offered help.
The only thing left to do is to turn your paper in on time. If you are a particularly fussy
writer, you will never be satisfied with the final product; nevertheless, a deadline is a
deadline. Whether you are submitting your paper electronically or printing it, don’t be late.Half of a successful academic experience is showing up for class; the other half is turning
papers and projects in on time. College instructors seldom accept late work for full credit,
regardless of the reason. You worked hard on your paper. Get full credit for your product.
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CHECKLIST FOR WRITERS
____ I planned my paper before writing.
____ I revised my paper to be sure that
• the introduction to my paper captures the reader’s at tention;
• my central idea is supported with specific information and examples that will
interest my reader;
• the content of my paper relates to my central idea;
• my writing is organized in a logical manner;
• my sentences are varied and read smoothly;
• my word choice develops my purpose and tone; and
• the conclusion brings my ideas together without restating.
____ I edited my paper to be sure that
• correct grammar is used;
• words are capitalized when appropriate;
• sentences are constructed and punctuated correctly; and
• words are spelled correctly.
____ I reviewed my paper to make sure that it accurately reflects my intentions.
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MODERN LANGUAGE ASSOCIATION (MLA) FORMAT
General guidelines:
1. Type your paper and print it out on standard-size white paper (8.5 X 11 inches).
2. Double-space your paper.3. Use only Times New Roman font size 12.
4. Set t he margins of your document to 1” on all sides.
5. Create a header that numbers all pages consecutively in the upper right-hand corner,
½” from the top and flush with the right 1” margin. You may omit the number on the
first page. Page numbers will be your last name and the page number (Example: Hill 2).
6. Center your title on the line below the header with your name, and begin your paper
immediately below the title.
7. Double-space the top left corner of the first page that lists your name, your instructor's
name, the course, and the date.
8. Use italics throughout your essay for highlighting the titles of longer works or for
providing emphasis.
Instructions for formatting a paper:
1. Open a Word document
2. Click Format
3. Click Document
4. Set the top, bottom, right, and left margins to 1”
5. Apply to the Whole Document
6. Click Format
7. Click Paragraph
8. Set Indentation and Spacing to 0 pt 9. Set Line Spacing to double
10. On the Toolbar, set the alignment for the body text to Align Text Left
11. When you are ready to title your paper, on the Toolbar, set the alignment for the title to
Align Center
Instructions for page numbers: Example: Davis 2
1. Click Insert
2. Click Page Numbers
3. Select Position Top of Page
4. Select Alignment Right 5. Uncheck Show Number On First Page
6. Click the mouse cursor in the header
7. Place the mouse cursor to the immediate left of the page number but inside the text box
of the page number.
8. Type your last name and put one space between your name and the page number.
9. Be sure the font size and type for both the page number and your name are Times New
Roman 12
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Instructions for the first page:
In the top left of your first page:
1. Your first and last name2. Your instructor’s name
3. Class and class number
4. Date
Parenthetical Citations
(http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/557/03/)
Author’s name mentioned in the sentence:
Wordsworth stated that Romantic poetry was marked by a "spontaneous
overflow of powerful feelings" (263).
Author’s name not mentioned in the sentence:
Romantic poetry is characterized by the "spontaneous overflow of powerful
feelings" (Wordsworth 263).
Paraphrase of the author’s words:
Wordsworth extensively explored the role of emotion in the creative process
(263).
Multiple authors:
Smith, Yang, and Moore argue that tougher gun control is not needed in the
United States (76).
The authors state "Tighter gun control in the United States erodes Second
Amendment rights" (Smith, Yang, and Moore 76).
Electronic sources:
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One online film critic stated that Fitzcarraldo is "...a beautiful and terrifying
critique of obsession and colonialism" (Garcia, "Herzog: a Life," par. 18).
Works Cited Format
Book by one author:
Last name, First name. Title of Book. Place of Publication: Publisher, Year of Publication.
Wordsworth, William. Lyrical Ballads. London: Oxford U.P., 1967.
Book by two authors:
Caper, Charles and Lawrence T. Teamos. How to Camp. Philadelphia: Doubleday, 1986.
Book by more than two authors:
Ellis, Doris et. al. History of Japan. New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, Inc., 1989.
Basic Electronic Source Format
Name of Site. Date of Posting/Revision. Name of institution/organization affiliated with the site
(sometimes found in copyright statements). Date you accessed the site [electronic
address].
Garcia, Elizabeth. "Herzog: a Life." Online Film Critics Corner. 8 May 2002. The Film School
of New Hampshire. 2 May 2008. <http://www.filmnewhampshire.edu/criticscorner>
Allende, Isabel. "Toad's Mouth." Trans. Margaret Sayers Peden. A Hammock Beneath the
Mangoes: Stories from Latin America. Ed. Thomas Colchie. New York: Plume, 1992.
83-88.
Hawthorne, Nathaniel. Twice-Told Tales. Ed. George Parsons Lathrop. Boston: Houghton, 1883.
12 Dec. 2010. <http://eldred.ne.mediaone.net/nh/ttt.html>.
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Anna Smith
Dr. Poliquin
English 102-001
May 3, 2013
Othello and Racism
In Shakespeare's day, African slavery was not yet widespread in the English-
speaking world, and prejudice based on race had not yet crystallized into the forms most
familiar to later audiences. However, one need look no further than the text of Othello itself
to demonstrate that prejudice against dark skin was already known. Blacks were most
familiar to Europeans as infidel Muslims. Black as a color was associated with evil and the
Devil. When blacks showed up in dramatic works, they were usually villains.
Shakespeare's decision to make a black man his tragedy's hero was highly unusual (Hall
14-15).
Othello's race has drawn varied reactions over the centuries. For instance, Thomas
Rymer, attacking the play in 1693, argued that one of the play’s defects is the implausibility
of a Moor leading the Venetian military and a high-born woman falling in love with such:
“With us a Black -amoor might rise to be a Trumpeter; but Shakespear would not have him
less than a Lieutenant-General. With us a Moor might marry some little drab, or Small-coal
Wench: Shakespear , would provide him the Daughter and Heir of some great Lord, or Privy-
Councellor...” (Heims 49). Charles Gildon makes a principled rebuttal: “'Tis granted, a
Negro here does seldom rise above a Trumpeter.... But then that proceeds from the Vice of
Mankind, which is the Poet's Duty...to correct, and to represent things as they should be,
not as they are. Now 'tis certain, there is no reason in the nature of things why a Negro of
Sample Research Paper (Courtesy of Anna, Eng 102)
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equal Birth and Merit should not be on an equal bottom with a German, Hollander,
French-man, &c” (Heims 77).
In the nineteenth century, as race became a more prominent issue, critics more
often focused on Othello's color (Heims 97). Charles Lamb wrote that while on the page,
Desdemona's “laying aside every consideration of kindred, and country, and color” for the
sake of love reflected well on her; nevertheless, on the stage the interracial relationship
came off as “revolting” (102). Coleridge, on the other hand, felt that a “beautiful Venetian
girl falling in love with a veritable Negro” would indicate “a disproportionateness, a want of
balance” in her, and that therefore Othello is merely a brown-skinned North African (114).
Iago used a similar argument when planting the seed of jealousy in Othello's mind: the fact
the Desdemona rejected men: “Of her own clime, complexion, and degree, / Whereto we
see, in all things nature tends” (3.3.236-237) implies that there is something wrong with
her, that she is not the chaste and virtuous woman she appears to be. John Quincy Adams
managed to view the whole play through the prism of race and nationality and concluded,
“[T]he moral of the tragedy is, that the intermarriage of black and white blood is a violation
of the law of nature” (125).
It is hard to argue that race is the central theme of the play. One might as well
accept Rymer's flippant conclusion that the moral of the tale is “a warning to all good
Wives, that they look well to their Linnen” (48). However, in the twentieth century,
changing attitudes toward many historically oppressed groups have led critics to pay more
attention to related issues in literary works, and some critics have more specifically
examined Shakespeare's treatment of race in the play. Some have argued that “the play
itself endorses racist stereotypes of the black man” (Hall 83). This, however, is more
Smith 2
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difficult to support than the contention that “Shakespeare introduces the standard
preconceptions about Africans through the racist discourse of Iago and Brabantio. . .but
that he does so only to explode these prejudices in the course of the play” (Hall 15).
The case that the play itself is racist rests on how Iago's accusations speedily
transform Othello from the dignified “noble Moor” of the first two acts into a man
consumed by jealousy, so emotionally overwrought that he suffers an epileptic fit, a man
who hits his wife and ultimately strangles her (Hall 15). Some see this as Othello
“revert[ing] to the expected image of 'black savage'” (Hall 15). In his last speech, Othello
identifies himself with the “base Indian” and “malignant” Turk, indicating that he has
forfeited his status as an “honorary white” by murdering Desdemona (Hall 15-16). Emilia,
furthermore, in the last scene when she would be expected to have the audience's
sympathy, reproaches Othello in racially colored language: he is “the blacker devil,” as
“ignorant as dirt,” and Desdemona “was too fond of her most filthy bargain.” Is the
audience “encouraged to become complicit in her views even though they are charged with
racial hatred” (Hall16)?
It seems that if Shakespeare had set out to depict a black savage reverting to type, he
could have made that point much more clearly. Skura, in “Reading Othello's Skin,” points
out that “no one ever says that [Othello] lapses into being a hot African, or a Moor . . .. They
are shocked because they never thought that he, of all people, was capable of such
behavior” (306). However, even if Shakespeare didn't intend to present Othello as a
stereotypical African, he could have done so unconsciously. As a consequence, critics have
had to “evoke external stereotypes” to prove Othello's racism. This technique is
problematic because critics cannot agree on the characteristics of the stereotype Othello is
Smith 3
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supposed to fulfill — “each critic's stereotype derives from his own arbitrary
selection from available pretexts” — and because Othello really doesn't have a lot in
common with the “typical stage Moor” of the day (305-306). For instance, Othello has more
in common with Titus in Titus Andronicus than the “barbarous Moor” (306). “It is Titus,”
Skura says, “who kills his own son and calls it piety, who is driven mad and ends more
barbaric than Othello” (306).
Even if the charge that Othello is a stereotypical depiction of an African is spurious,
there are other aspects of the play that fall uncomfortably upon modern ears. An example
is the way pretty much everyone in the play refers to Othello by his ethnicity, as “the Moor.”
It is right in the title (The Tragedy of Othello, the Moor of Venice) and even occasionally in
the stage directions: “Ex. Moor, Desdemona, and Attendants” (2.3.259). This seems
dehumanizing, reminiscent of the way Olaf in Richard Wright’s “Big Black Good Man” never
thinks of Jim by name, but usually as “the black giant.” And to Iago in particular, Othello is
almost always “the Moor” (Hall 83). Yet characters who clearly love and respect Othello
(Cassio, Desdemona) use the epithet as well, all emphasizing Othello's status as an exotic
outsider in Venice (Hall 103).
Also disquieting to moderns is the way blackness is clearly viewed as ugly and scary.
Brabantio asserts that Desdemona was afraid of Othello due to his appearance. He
questions the plausibility of whether a girl such as she would have “Run from her guardage
to the sooty bosom / Of such a thing as thou—to fear, not to delight” (1.2.70-71). It is
preposterous that she could “fall in love with what she fear'd to look on” (1.3.98).
Brabantio does not seem to be the best authority on Desdemona's feelings, but Othello later
agrees with Iago's statement that “when she seem'd to shake and fear your looks, / She
Smith 4
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lov'd them most” (3.3.207-208). Othello apparently buys into the general feeling
that black is unattractive, and suffers some insecurity on this account that makes it seem
more likely to him that Desdemona is unfaithful (Heims 191). When listing reasons she
might have cheated, his color tops the list: “Haply, for I am black,/ And have not those soft
parts of conversation/ That chamberers have . . .” (3.3.263-265). Even when the duke tells
Brabantio, “If virtue no delighted beauty lack./Your son-in-law is far more fair than black,”
he is not challenging the perception of black as ugly, but saying that virtue is more
important than outward appearance (Hall 82).
While Shakespeare lacked a twenty-first century sensitivity to that sort of thing, he's
clearly aware of race and racial prejudice. Indeed, between Iago, Roderigo, and Brabantio,
one can catalog many of the stereotypes and prejudices that were already thriving in
European brains. Act I is particularly interesting in this respect. Already black men are
believed to be oversexed (Hall 14). Roderigo informs Brabantio that his daughter has been
transported “to the gross clasps of a lascivious Moor” (1.1.126). Blacks are seen as beastly
(14). Twice Iago compares Othello to an animal, first when he tells Brabantio, “Even now,
now, very now, an old black ram / Is tupping your white ewe,” and more extensively when
he compares Othello to a “Barbary horse” and insinuates that Desdemona has married into
a family of horses: “[Y]ou'll have your daughter covered with a Barbary horse; you'll have
your nephews neigh to you; you'll have coursers for cousins and gennets for germans”
(1.1.88-89; 110-113). Blackness, and blacks by extension, is associated with the devil (Hall
14). Brabantio's speculations immediately turn to sorcery as an explanation of how Othello
won his daughter. “Practices of cunning hell” are the only possible explanation for a match
so “unnatural” (82).
Smith 5
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So in the first scene Shakespeare introduces all this racist discourse, this
image of Othello as “a marauding seducer,” and then Othello himself appears, “allowing the
audience to form some independent judgments on him” (Hall 82). Othello is calm in the
face of Brabantio's accusations, refuses to fight, and defends himself eloquently before the
Senators. Rather than showing himself the “lascivious Moor,” he supports Desdemona's
request to accompany him to Cyprus “not / To please the palate of my appetite.” The effect
is to emphasize the contrast between the black-on-the-outside hero and the black-on-the-
inside villain (Heims 190).
Overall, the evidence that Othello is itself a racist play is thin. Given the modern
heritage of slavery and imperialism justified by supposed white superiority, all of which
was mostly still in the future in 1600, twentieth and twenty-first century critics are
understandably uneasy when confronted with a play in which a black man in a jealous rage
murders his white wife. However, there is little in the play itself to indicate that Othello's
actions are meant to be characteristic of his race, and although historical reactions to the
play have sometimes betrayed racism, most critics have seen Othello as the victim of the
universal passion of jealousy. In fact, the insistence of some historical critics that Othello
was meant to be a tan North African suggests that they saw nothing characteristically black
in his behavior. Insofar as Othello's race has anything to do with his downfall, it is in the
way Iago exploits his sense of being an outsider and his sense of not being good enough for
Desdemona, if Desdemona is really as good as she seems (Hall 105). Racial prejudice in
Othello mainly functions as a signifier of fools and villains.
Smith 6
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Works Cited
Hall, Joan Lord. Othello: A Guide to the Play . Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1999.
Heims, Neil, ed. Othello. New York: Bloom's Literary Criticism, 2008.
Shakespeare, William. Ed. Tucker Brooke and Lawrence Mason. Othello. New Haven: Yale
University Press, 1947.
Skura, Meridith Anne. “Reading Othello's Skin: Contexts and Pretexts.” Philological
Quarterly 87.3-4 (2008): 299-334. MLA International Bibliography . Web. 2 May
2012.
Smith 7
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Standards for Graded Essays
Superior (100%-90%)
Ideas are clearly developed and supported. Ideas reflect a mature level of thought as
evidenced by originality and/or insight. The thesis is focused and developed throughout
the essay. The essay exhibits clear organization with a logical flow of ideas andincorporates effectively selected transitional words or phrases. Paragraphs are unified,
complete, and coherent. Sentence structure includes appropriate variety and emphasis,
and reflects logical relationships. Word choices are accurate and effective. Grammatical,
mechanical, and format errors are totally absent or rare. The “superior” paper
distinguishes itself from the “good” paper by a more assured prose style, more creativity inform and content, and more effective uses of writing strategies.
Good (89%-80%)
Ideas are supported, indicate a mature level of thought, and are consistently clear. The
thesis is clear and consistently developed. The essay exhibits clear organization and
presents a logical flow of ideas with appropriate transitional words or phrases. Paragraphsprovide adequate support and organization. Sentence structure is varied. Word choice is
accurate. There are very few grammatical, mechanical, or format errors.
Satisfactory (79%-70%)
Ideas are usually supported and clear. The essay’s organization reflects a logical flow of ideas. A sense of purpose and a controlling idea are evident, even if not fully sustained.
Paragraphs are adequately developed, but transitions are not used consistently. Most word
choices are effective. There are occasional grammatical, mechanical, and/or format errors.
Unsatisfactory (69%-60%)
Ideas are not supported systematically and are frequently unclear. The essay’sorganization is inadequate; the introduction and/or conclusion are absent or fail to
function properly. The middle section contains undeveloped paragraphs and/or lacks
patterns of effective development, while transitional words or phrases are inappropriate or
absent. A thesis, if present at all, lacks restriction and/or unity. There is little or no
sentence variety. Word choices are often inappropriate. Several serious grammatical,
mechanical, and/or format errors occur. Paper marginally addresses the assignment.
Failing (59%-0%)
Ideas lack support from specific details and are consistently unclear. Organization is
flawed. The introduction and/or conclusion may be absent or may not function. No thesis
is stated, or, if present, it is not sustained. Paragraphs lack full development and/or unity.Transitions are not used. Frequent errors in grammar, mechanics, and/or format occur.
Paper does not address the assignment. Paper submitted late or not at all.
* A paper may be marked down for serious flaws in content, mechanics, or format;
however, a paper may also be marked up for superior analysis or particular excellence in
originality or insight.
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FUNDAMENTALS OF GRAMMAR
I. Grammar: What is it?
A. The study of how words and their component parts combine to form sentences.
B. The study of structural relationships in language or in a language, sometimesincluding pronunciation, meaning, and linguistic history.
C. The system of inflections, syntax, and word formation of a language.
D. The system of rules implicit in a language, viewed as a mechanism for generating all
sentences possible in that language.
E. A descriptive/normative or prescriptive set of rules setting forth the current
standard of usage for pedagogical or reference purposes.
F. Grammar terms:
1. Diction – word choice (correct, clear, effective)
2. Syntax – the arrangement of words, phrases, and clauses
3. Inflection
a. Word or syllable emphasisb. The change of pitch or loudness of voice
4. Dialect
a. Regional accents or usage
b. A regional variety of language distinguished by features of vocabulary,
grammar, and pronunciation from other regional varieties and constituting
together with them a single language
5. Linguistics – the scientific study of language
II. Parts of Speech
A. Nouns1. Person, place, thing or idea
2. Types of nouns
a. Proper – a specific person, place, or thing. Always capitalized.
The names of days of the week, months, historical documents,
institutions, class subjects with a number, organizations, languages,
religions, their holy texts and their adherents are proper nouns.
Algebra II, Carlos, Queen Marguerite, Middle East, Jerusalem, Malaysia,
Presbyterianism, God, Spanish, Buddhism, the Republican Party
b. Common – everything else. Not capitalized unless it is the first word in a
sentence.
c. Concrete – words that represent objects one can see, hear, touch, smell, tastewith the senses.
d. Abstract – anything one cannot see, hear, touch, smell, or taste.
e. Compound – is made up of two or more words used together.
One word: shoelace, keyboard, flashlight, applesauce, notebook, bedroom
Hyphenated: editor-in-chief, great-grandfather
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Two words: police officer, seat belt, high school, word processor, post
office, book bag
B. Pronouns
1. Takes the place of a specific noun or pronoun
2. Types of pronouns
a. Personal Number – singular or plural
Person – 1st , 2nd, or 3rd
Gender – female, male, or neuter (she, he, it)
Case – nominative (subject of a verb) or objective (object of a verb or
preposition)
b. Demonstrative
This, that, these, and those are demonstrative pronouns that substitute
for nouns when the nouns they replace can be understood from the
context.
Also indicate whether they are replacing singular or plural words and
give the location of the object.c. Indefinite
Replace nouns without specifying which noun they replace.
Can be singular, plural, or both
d. Relative (From Purdue Online Learning Lab)
The most common relative pronouns are who/whom,
whoever/whomever, whose, that, and which.
Please note that in certain situations, "what," "when," and "where" can
function as relative pronouns.
Relative pronouns introduce relative clauses, which are a type of
dependent clause. Relative clauses modify a word, phrase, or idea in the main clause. The
word, phrase, or idea modified is called the antecedent.
e. Intensive
Consist of a personal pronoun plus self or selves and emphasize a specific
noun or pronoun
f. Reflexive
Have the same forms as the intensive pronouns and indicate that the
sentence subject also receives the action of the verb.
Made up words: theirself(s), theirselves, him self, her self, ourself
g. Interrogative
The interrogative pronouns (who/whom/whose/which/what) introducequestions.
C. Adjectives
1. Adjectives are words that describe or modify a noun.
2. The articles — a, an, and the — are adjectives.
D. Verbs
1. Shows action or a state of being
2. Action verbs
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a. Transitive – an action verb that requires an object
John hit the ball.
b. Intransitive – an action verb that does not require an object
John smiled.
3. Linking
a. Connects a subject and its complement, either a predicate nominative or apredicate adjective.
b. Are often forms of the verb to be, but are sometimes verbs related to the five
senses (look, sound, smell, feel, taste) and sometimes verbs that somehow
reflect a state of being (appear, seem, become, grow, turn, prove, remain).
Jenny was the prom queen. (Predicate nominative, renames the subject)
Jenny is intelligent. (Predicate adjective, describes the subject)
E. Adverbs
1. Modify/describe verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs
2. Answer the questions how, when, where, why, in what way, how much, how
often, under what condition, to what degree
3. The easiest adverbs to recognize are those that end in -ly.a. Some adjectives end with -ly also, but remember that adjectives can modify
only nouns and pronouns.
b. Adverbs modify everything else.
c. An adverb can be placed anywhere in a sentence.
F. Prepositions
1. A preposition links nouns, pronouns, and phrases to other words in a sentence.
2. The word or phrase that the preposition introduces is called the object of the
preposition.
3. A preposition always has an object.
G. Conjunctions
1. Conjunctions are used to link words, phrases, and clauses.2. Coordinating conjunctions – memorize them!!! (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so)
H. Interjections
1. An interjection is a word added to a sentence to convey emotion. It is not
grammatically related to any other part of the sentence.
2. Example: “Lions and tigers and bears! Oh, my!”
III. Parts of a Sentence
A. Subject and Predicate
1. The subject states whom or what the sentence is about.
John hit the ball
2. The predicate tells something about the subject.
Jim and Katie will go to the prom together.
3. To determine the subject, first determine the verb and then ask who or what
before the verb.
Who hit the ball?
What would taste good right now?
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B. Simple subject and simple predicate
1. Simple subject: The subject minus the words that modify it.
A slice of pizza would be good right now.
2. Simple predicate: The verbs or verbs that link up with the subject.
Mr. Tompkins is campaigning for mayor and will most likely win the election.
C. Phrases and clauses1. Phrase: a group of words without a verb
2. Clauses: a group of words with a subject and a verb
An independent clause has a subject and verb and can stand alone as a
sentence.
John hit the ball.
A dependent or subordinate clause has a subject and verb but cannot stand
alone as a sentence.
Although it was his first time at bat , John hit the ball.
D. Participles and Participial Phrases
A participle is used as an adjective and ends in various ways. A present participle always endswith ing as does the gerund, but remember that it is an adjective. A past participle ends with ed,n, or irregularly. Participles modify nouns and pronouns and can precede or follow the word
modified. (Do not confuse participles that end in ing with gerunds. Participles are used as
adjectives; gerunds are used as nouns.)
1. The bike had a broken spoke.
2. Her smiling face made everyone happy.3. The frightened child was crying loudly.
4. The people were frightened by the growling dog.
5. The squeaking wheel needs some grease.
A participial phrase is made up of a participle and any complements (direct objects, predicate
nominatives, predicate adjectives, or modifiers) like the gerund. A participial phrase that comesat the beginning of the sentence is always followed by a comma and modifies the subject of the
sentence.
1. Taking my time, I hit the basket.
2. Shouting angrily, the man chased the thief.
3. Exhausted from the hike, Jim dropped to the ground.
4. Grinning sheepishly, the boy asked for a date.
5. Trying to open the gate, I tore my coat.
E. Gerunds and Gerund Phrases
A gerund looks like a verb but functions like a noun. A gerund can be a subject (Eating is fun.);a direct object (I like eating.); a predicate nominative (A fun time is eating .); an appositive (A
fun time, eating, takes much time.); an indirect object (I give eating too much time.); or an objectof a preposition (I give much time to eating.)
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The gerund phrases in the following sentences are used as subject, direct object, predicate
nominative, appositive, indirect object, or object of the preposition.
1. My hobby is working with irises. (Predicate nominative)
2. I like pruning the fruit trees. (Direct object)
3. I had only one desire, leaving for home. (Appositive)4. Writing a good novel is hard work. (Subject)
5. With his snoring in his sleep, his wife couldn't get any rest. (Object of a preposition)
F. Infinitives and Infinitive Phrases
An infinitive is the present-tense form of a verb preceded by the word to. An infinitive may
be used as a noun, an adjective, or an adverb.
Examples:
1. To exercise is a healthful habit. (noun)
2. Here is laundry to wash. (adjective)3. The choir was ready to sing. (adverb)
An infinitive phrase consists of an infinitive and the related words that follow it.
Examples:
1. Sandra went to buy groceries.
2. Gilbert wanted to read the book .
IV. Punctuation Basics
A. End Marks1. Periods are used at the end of a sentence that makes a statement or expresses a
command.
Today is the first day of the school year.
2. Question marks indicate the end of a direct question.
Either way, how can we lose?
3. Exclamation points are used at the end of a sentence to indicate enthusiasm,
surprise, disbelief, urgency, or strong feeling.
No! I don’t believe you just said that!
Yessss!
B. Internal Punctuation
1. Commas use (The basic rules. There are more!)a. In a series
John hit two singles, a double, and a home run.
b. Before a coordinating conjunction that separates independent clauses. The
coordinating conjunctions are for, and, nor, but, or, yet, and so.
(FANBOYS) -- memorize them!!!
John hit a hard grounder, but he was thrown out at first.
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c. After an introductory dependent (subordinate) clause
Although John hit a hard grounder, he was thrown out at first.
d. To set off a nonessential element
Let’s get advice from John, who has a lot of experience with this kind of
problem.
They have sufficient knowledge, don’t they, to figure this problem out ontheir own.
We are convinced, nevertheless, that they can do this on their own.
e. In direct address
No, sir, we cannot give you a refund on that.
I can count on your vote, Susan.
f. To set off the year when it follows the month and day
On September 11, 2001, the world, as we know it, changed forever.
g. To set off the name of a state, a country, or the equivalent when it directly
follows the name of a city or county
Six years ago we moved to Charlotte, North Carolina, to be closer to
family.h. Between two consecutive adjectives that modify the same noun (If you can
put the “and” between the adjectives, separate the adjectives with a comma.
Tom is a generous, compassionate man.
2. Colons :
a. Before a list or an explanation that is preceded by a clause that can stand by
itself. Think of the colon as a gate, inviting one to go on:
There is only one thing left to do now: confess while you still have time.
The charter review committee now includes the following people: the
mayor, the chief of police, the fire chief, and the chair of the town council.
b. To separate an independent clause from a quotation (often of a rather formalnature) that the clause introduces:
The acting director often used her favorite quotation from Shakespeare's
Tempest: "We are such stuff as dreams are made on; and our little life is
rounded with a sleep."
c. After a salutation in a business letter . . .
Dear Senator Dodd:
3. Semicolons ;
a. In place of a period to separate two sentences where the conjunction has
been left out.
Call me tomorrow; I will give you my answer then.
I have paid my dues; therefore, I expect all the privileges listed in thecontract.
b. Before introductory words such as namely, however, therefore, that is, i.e.,
for example, e.g., or for instance when they introduce a complete sentence. It
is also preferable to use a comma after the introductory word.
You will want to bring many backpacking items; for example, sleeping
bags, pans, and warm clothing will make the trip better.
c. To separate units of a series when one or more of the units contain commas.
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This conference has people who have come from Boise, Idaho; Los
Angeles, California; and Nashville, Tennessee.
d. Between two sentences joined by a coordinating conjunction when one or
more commas appear in the first sentence.
When I finish here, I will be glad to help you; and that is a promise I will
keep. If she can, she will attempt that feat; and if her husband is able, he will be
there to see her.
4. Parenthesis ( )
a. To enclose explanatory material that is independent of the main thought of
the sentence.
By Saturday (or sooner if possible) we will complete the project.
b. To set off a nonessential element when dashes would be too emphatic and
commas might create confusion.
Production is up in our Springfield (Missouri) plant.
c. To set off references and directions.
When I wrote you last (see attached letter dated May 2), I explained thesituation as I understand it.
d. To enclose dates that accompany a person’s name.
William Shakespeare (1564-1616) is acknowledged by many experts as
the greatest playwright who ever lived.
e. To indicate page numbers for internal citations
Wordsworth weighed in on this debate (Seeley 712).
5. Brackets [ ] (from grammar.ccc.commnet.edu)
a. You can use them to include explanatory words or phrases within quoted
language:
Lew Perkins, the Director of Athletic Programs, said that Pumita
Espinoza, the new soccer coach [at Notre Dame Academy] is going to be a
real winner.
b. If you are quoting material and you've had to change the capitalization of a
word or change a pronoun to make the material fit into your sentence,
enclose that changed letter or word(s) within brackets:
Espinoza charged her former employer with "falsification of [her]
coaching record."
Also within quotations, you could enclose [sic] within brackets (we italicize
but never underline the word sic and we do not italicize the brackets
themselves) to show that misspelled words or inappropriately used wordsare not your own typos or blunders but are part of an accurately rendered
quotation:
Reporters found three mispelings [sic] in the report.
6. Dashes –
a. Although the dash has a few specific functions of its own, it most often serves
in place of the comma, the semicolon, the colon, or parenthesis.
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b. Use dashes in place of commas to set off a nonessential element that requires
special emphasis.
c. For a stronger but less formal break, use a dash in place of a semicolon
between closely related independent clauses.
d. For a stronger but less formal break, use a dash in place of a colon to
introduce explanatory words, phrases, or clauses.e. Use dashes in place of parentheses when you want to give the nonessential
element strong emphasis.
7. Diagonal /
a. Occurs (without space before or after) in certain abbreviations and
expressions of time.
c/o care of
Please check the figures for fiscal year 2002/03.
b. Used to express alternatives.
an on/off switch
a go/no go decision
c. May be used to indicate a person has two functions or a thing has twocomponents.
the owner/manager
zoned for commercial/industrial activities
C. Dialogue and Quotations
1. Quotation Marks “ ”
a. To set off direct quotations
I clearly told him, “Don’t touch my motorcycle.”
b. To set off words or phrases for special emphasis
Although the scientist was supposed to be an expert, he kept saying
“nucular” rather than “nuclear.”
c. To display the titles of certain literary and artistic works.
articles and feature columns in newspapers and magazines, titles of
essays, short poems, lectures, sermons, songs, short musical
compositions.
d. Quotation marks and other punctuation
Periods and commas always go inside the closing double or single
quotation mark.
-- The boss said, “Please forward to me every email labeled ‘Expedite.’”
-- “All he said to me was ‘We’re through,’” my brother told me.
Semicolons and colons always go outside the closing quotation mark.
Question marks and exclamation points go inside the closing quotationmark when it applies only to the quoted material.
-- The lawyer’s first question was, “How long have you known the
defendant?”
-- When will the boss ever say, “You did a great job on that”?
2. Ellipsis . . .
a. Used to indicate omissions in quoted material. (Example from Grammar Girl)
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Here's a quote from the book Our Mutual Friend by Charles Dickens: “I
cannot help it; reason has nothing to do with it; I love her against reason.”
Now far be it from me to edit Dickens, but if I were a journalist under a tight
word limit looking at that quotation, I'd be tempted to shorten it to this:
“I cannot help it . . . I love her against reason.”
That middle part —“reason has nothing to do with it”—seems redundant, and
taking it out doesn't change the meaning.
Most style guides don't call for an ellipsis when you omit something at the
beginning or end of a quotation, but occasionally you need one. For example,
if you leave out something at the beginning of a sentence, but your remaining
quotation starts with a capital letter, you need an ellipsis to show the reader
that the quotation is beginning in the middle of the original sentence.
Aardvark said, “. . . Squiggly never caught a fish.” [Perhaps the original
quotation was “Even though he was on the lake all day, Squiggly nevercaught a fish.”]
Ellipses with question marks and exclamation points:
“Where did he go? . . . Why did he go out again?” [Material is removed
between the two sentences]
“Where did he go . . . ? Why did he go out again?” [Material is removed
before the first question mark. Note the space between the last ellipsispoint and the question mark.]
Treat exclamation points as you would question marks.
Ellipses with commas and semicolons:
“Aardvark went home, . . . and Squiggly decided to meet him later.”
“Aardvark went home . . . ; Squiggly would meet him later.” [Note the
space between the ellipsis and the semicolon.]
b. If words are left off at the end of a sentence, and that is all that is omitted,
indicate the omission with ellipsis marks (preceded and followed by a space)
and then indicate the end of the sentence with a period … . If one or more
sentences are omitted, end the sentence before the ellipsis with a period and
then insert your ellipsis marks with a space on both sides. … As in this
example. A coded ellipsis (used in the construction of this page) will appear
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tighter (with less of a space between the dots) than the use of period-space-
period-space-period. (grammar.ccc.commnet.edu)
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Academic Writing Guide: A Step-by-Step Guide to Writing Academic Papers. City
University of Seattle, Sept. 2009. Web. 10 July 2012. <http://www.vsm.sk/
Curriculum/academicsupport/academicwritingguide.pdf>.