Department of English
Faculty of Arts, Chulalongkorn University
2202235
Reading and Analysis for the Study of English Literature
Puckpan Tipayamontri
Office: BRK 1106.1
Office Hours: M 1–3 and by appointment
Phone: 0-2218-4703
Section 2
T 1–3
(BRK 512), Th 1–2
(BRK 507)
Developing
an Argument
Here is an exercise in developing an argument that you can try. The same skills apply to coming up with an idea for a reading response, an exam essay, or a class paper. Study the text with your group, brainstorm ideas, and develop a thesis. Let's take sight as a topic.
The barbarians, who are pastoralists, nomads, tent-dwellers,
make no reference in their legends to a permanent settlement
near the lake. There are no human remains among the ruins. If
there is a cemetery we have not found it. The houses contain no
furniture. In a heap of ashes I have found fragments of
sun-dried clay-pottery and something brown which may once have
been a leather shoe or cap but which fell to pieces before my
eyes. I do not know where the wood came from to build these
houses. Perhaps in bygone days criminals, slaves, soldiers
trekked the twelve miles to the river, and cut down poplar
trees, and sawed and planed them, and transported the timbers
back to this barren place in carts, and built houses, and a fort
too, for all I know, and in the course of time died, so that
their masters, their prefects and magistrates and captains,
could climb the roofs and towers morning and evening to scan the
world from horizon to horizon for signs of the barbarians.
Perhaps in my digging I have only scratched the surface. Perhaps
ten feet below the floor lie the ruins of another fort, razed by
the barbarians, peopled with the bones of folk who thought they
would find safety behind high walls. Perhaps when I stand on the
floor of the courthouse, if that is what it is, I stand over the
head of a magistrate like myself, another grey-haired servant of
Empire who fell in the arena of his authority, face to face at
last with the barbarian. How will I ever know? By burrowing like
a rabbit? (16–17) |
a). Evidence suggesting a link between barbarians and other
characteristics b). Evidence suggesting a contradiction or conflict between different characteristics of people c). Things in the text that seem unrelated to barbarians/barbarism/being barbaric |
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March 8, 2012