1 / 19

Introduction to Quotations

Introduction to Quotations. You need to choose quotations that are:. Logical: They should support your argument. Rich: They should be interesting enough to allow you to explain something important. Quick Check: Which of these quotations from “Just Lather” would you choose?.

elom
Download Presentation

Introduction to Quotations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to Quotations

  2. You need to choose quotationsthat are: Logical: They should support your argument. Rich: They should be interesting enough to allow you to explain something important.

  3. Quick Check:Which of these quotations from “Just Lather” would you choose? “I still had to put the sheet on him.” “And this four-days’ growth of beard was a fitting challenge.” “My destiny depends on the edge of this blade.”

  4. Quick Check:Which of these quotations from “Just Lather” would you choose? “I still had to put the sheet on him.” “And this four-days’ growth of beard was a fitting challenge.” “My destiny depends on the edge of this blade.”

  5. Quotations should allow you to show off analytical skills Quotations should not prove plot! Comparing Quotations • “My destiny depends on the edge of this blade.” “I still had to put the sheet on him.” • Interesting language • Offers insight into character’s conflict • Language is basic • Just reveals plot

  6. Quotations Should NotBe Alone The barber feels torn between his duties as a barber and a revolutionary. “My destiny depends on the edge of this blade.” Why is this a problem?

  7. How to Incorporate Quotations When you want to quote a complete sentence • Use a colonto separate your idea from the quotation. Example: The barber feels torn between his duties as a barber and a revolutionary: “My destiny depends on the edge of this blade.”

  8. How to Incorporate Quotations When you want to quote a complete sentence • Tell us who is saying the quotation. Example: The barber feels torn between his duties as a barber and a revolutionary. He thinks, “My destiny depends on the edge of this blade.”

  9. How to Incorporate Quotations When you want the quotation to flow • Work the quotation into your own sentence. Example: Torn between his duties as a barber and a revolutionary, the barber knows his “destiny depends on the edge of this blade.”

  10. Citing Quotations • Page number goes in parentheses after the end of the quotation (but before the final punctuation mark) • No “pg.” or “page” needed Example: The barber feels torn between his duties as a barber and a revolutionary. He thinks, “My destiny depends on the edge of this blade” (3).

  11. Quick Check:Which of these is punctuated correctly? The barber is nervous as he passes “the best of my razors back and forth (pg. 1)”. The barber is nervous as he passes “the best of my razors back and forth” (1). The barber is nervous. “I was passing the best of my razors back and forth” (1).

  12. Quick Check:Which of these is punctuated correctly? The barber is nervous as he passes “the best of my razors back and forth (pg. 1)”. The barber is nervous as he passes “the best of my razors back and forth” (1). The barber is nervous. “I was passing the best of my razors back and forth” (1).

  13. So what is analysis? • Taking something apart to explain how it works • Explaining how you interpret the text a certain way

  14. The Rules • TRY TO TRY NOT TO • Use only the words in the quotation that you need • Explain how the quotation works by saying how the author communicates a feeling or idea • Cite correctly • Say “this quotation shows” • Refer to the quotation as a “quotation” • End a paragraph with a quotation • Fill your entire paragraph with quotations (no more than 1/3) • Leave the quotation alone

  15. The Quotation Sandwich

  16. The Quotation Sandwich • 1 | The Bun • This is the point you are trying to make. • 2 | The Filling • This is how you introduce the quotation. • 3 | The Meat (or Tofu ) • This is the quotation itself. • 4 | The Bottom Bun • This is your analysis – and the most important part of the sandwich!

  17. Example of a Quotation Sandwich • 1 | The Bun • This is the point you are trying to make. • 2 | The Filling • This is how you introduce the quotation. • 3 | The Meat (or Tofu ) • This is the quotation itself. • 4 | The Bottom Bun • This is your analysis – and the most important part of the sandwich! In “Just Lather ,That’s All,” Téllez builds suspense by drawing out the details of the shave. The narrator explains how he“took the razor, opened up the two protective arms, exposed the blade and began the job” (2). Listing each detail makes the reader have to keep reading to find out what the barber does. The verbs, such as “opened up” and “exposed,” also remind the reader of the barber’s dilemma: should he cut the Captain’s throat?

  18. Your Turn Explain what makes up a quotation sandwich:

  19. Practice The point: Even though Odysseus ruthlessly massacres the suitors, Homer still presents him as justified in this action. The quotation: “

More Related