How to: Move from
Assignment to
Topic
Moving from Assignment to Topic
At one point or other, the
academic essay manages to intimidate most student writers. Sometimes, we may
even experience what is commonly called writer's block—that awful experience of
staring at an assignment, reading it over and over, yet being unable to
proceed, to find a way into it. But the process of writing the academic essay
involves a series of manageable steps. Keeping this in mind can help you work
through the anxiety you may at first feel. If you find yourself "clueless"
about beginning an essay, it may be because you have skipped an important step.
You may be trying to come up with a thesis before finding and narrowing your
topic.
Entering the Conversation
Try to approach the writing of an
academic essay as a genuine opportunity to connect with the material, to think
in a concentrated and stimulating way about the texts you've chosen, to
articulate your own ideas. In short, think of the essay as a chance to
challenge yourself and to contribute to the on-going conversation among
scholars about the subject under discussion. What's at stake is your own
intellectual development.
Writing is not playing someone
else's game. Successful writing involves the creation and framing of your own
questions about the sources you've chosen. You want to attend to the assignment
at the same time that you locate and articulate your own, particular interest
in it.
Primary and Secondary Sources
If you were a lawyer and had to
present a case for your client, the worst thing you could do would be to face a
jury and spout out random beliefs and opinions. ("Trust me. This guy's
really honorable. He'd never do what he's accused of.") Instead, you would
want to look for evidence and clues about the situation, investigate suspects,
maybe head for the library to check out books on investment fraud or
lock-picking. Whatever the circumstance, you would need to do the appropriate
research in order to avoid looking foolish in the courtroom. Even if you knew
what you had to argue—that your client was not guilty—you still would need to
figure out how you were going to persuade the jury of it. You would need various
sources to bolster your case. Writing an academic essay is similar, because
essays are arguments that make use of primary and secondary sources.
Primary academic sources are
sources that have not yet been analyzed by someone else. These include but are
not limited to novels, poems, autobiographies, transcripts of court cases, and
data sources such as the census, diaries, and Congressional records.
Books or essays that analyze
another text are secondary sources. They are useful in supporting your argument
and bringing up counterarguments which, in an academic essay, it is your
responsibility to acknowledge and refute.
These are the basic rules that
determine whether a source is primary or secondary, but there is some
ambiguity. For instance, an essay that advances an original argument may serve
as your primary source if what you're doing is analyzing that essays argument.
But if the essay cites statistics that you decide to quote in support of your
argument about a different text, then its function is as a secondary source.
Therefore, always keep in mind that the academic essay advances an original
argument—your argument, not the argument of the author of your secondary
source. While secondary sources are helpful, you should focus your essay on one
or more primary sources.
Subjects to Topics
In the courtroom, the topic is
never a huge abstraction like "jurisprudence" or "the legal
system" or even "capital punishment" or "guilt and
innocence." All of those are subjects. A topic is particular: The Case of
So-and-So v. So-and-So. Academic arguments, too, have topics. But if you tried
to write an essay using "The Case of So-and-So v. So-and-So" as a
topic, you wouldn't know what to put in and what to leave out. You'd wind up
reproducing the court's own record of the case.
Narrowing the Topic
The topic of an academic essay
must be sufficiently focused and specific in order for a coherent argument to
be made about it. For instance, "The Role of Such-and-Such in the Case of
So-and-So v. So-and-So" is a topic that is somewhat narrowed. But if
"Such-and-Such" is extremely general, it too will require further
narrowing. "The Role of Societal Pressures in the Case of Jones v.
Smith" is an example—it's too general. "Alleged Jury Tampering in the
Case of Jones v. Smith" narrows those societal pressures, and begins to
suggest a persuasive argument. (Of course, even this topic could be further
narrowed.)
Going through the following steps
will help you focus your subject, find a topic, and narrow it.
- Carefully read your primary source(s) and then, with the assignment in mind, go through them again, searching for passages that relate directly to the assignment and to your own curiosities and interests. When you find a passage that interests you, write down the reason for its significance. If you don't, you might forget its importance later.
- Annotate some of the most intriguing passages—write down your ideas, opinions and notes about particular words, phrases, sentences. Don't censor your thoughts! Just write, even if you think that what you're writing doesn't add up to much. For now, get your impressions on paper; later, you'll begin to order and unify them.
- Group passages and ideas into categories. Try to eliminate ideas that don't fit anywhere. Ask yourself if any of the emerging categories relate to any others. Do any of the categories connect, contradict, echo, prove, disprove, any others? The category with the most connections to others is probably your topic.
- Look at some relevant secondary sources—at what other scholars have said—in order to get a sense of potential counterarguments to your developing topic. Remember: While taking notes, make sure to cite all information fully. This is a lot easier than having to go back later and figure out where you got a particular quote, or, worse, being unable to find it.
Copyright
1999, Maxine Rodburg and The Tutors of the Writing Center at Harvard University.
Available online for students at: https://writingcenter.fas.harvard.edu/pages/moving-assignment-topic.
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