Annotated Bibliography

User Generated

ChcclOnex

Humanities

EWRT 2

De Anza College

Description

This assignment asks you to synthesize and reflect critically on at least 8 relevant sources that you are

planning on using for your Essay #3 (Note: more than 8 sources will help you write a stronger paper if all the sources are relevant). Writing the bibliography before your thesis will help you determine what you want to argue because the research will ensure that your essay is successful.

SOURCES

Your bibliography should contain 8 entries, and should meet the following criteria:

  • 4 academic, peer-reviewed journal articles about a Monsters
  • A popular newspaper or newsmagazine article about a Monster
  • A credible website (one that fulfills the CARS test) with information about the Monster
  • A primary source about the Monster (including but not limited to movement organization website, print or online interviews with movement activists, movement documents or art, activist generated writing, documentaries featuring living movement activists, etc.)
  • 2 Choice sources

FORMAT

For each of your sources, you should include an entry with relevant publication information in MLA format.

ANNOTATIONS Directions:

Your annotations for each of your 8 sources should do the following

o summarize the source (chapter, book, article, or the like).

o identify the piece's argument (or main point)

o rely primarily on your own words and phrasing--use summary and paraphrase.

o discuss the source's strengths and weaknesses. For instance, does the item offer a good introduction to the issue? Does the item deal with a particular aspect of the issue that is especially relevant to the problem you plan to address in your proposal? Do you find the piece accessible or is it geared to a more specialized audience?

o describe how this piece will contribute to your research project.

o Each annotation should be a ½ page to 1-page, single-spaced.


Connection to Essay #3:

All the sources used in the annotated bibliography MUST be used in essay #3. Failing to include one of the

sources may result in a failing grade.

Example:

Lamott, Anne. Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life. New

York: Anchor Books, 1995.

Lamott's book offers honest advice on the nature of a writing life, complete with its insecurities and failures. Taking a humorous approach to the realities of being a writer, the chapters in Lamott's book are wry and anecdotal and offer advice on everything from plot development to jealousy, from perfectionism to struggling with one's own internal critic. In the process, Lamott includes writing exercises designed to be both productive and fun. Lamott offers sane advice for those struggling with the anxieties of writing, but her main project seems to be offering the reader a reality check regarding writing, publishing and struggling with one's own imperfect humanity in the process. Rather than a practical handbook for producing and/or publishing, this text is indispensable because of its honest perspective, its down-to-earth humor, and its encouraging approach. Chapters in this text could easily be included in the curriculum for a writing class. Several of the chapters in Part 1 address the writing process and would serve to generate discussion on students' own drafting and revising processes. Some of the writing exercises would also be appropriate for generating classroom writing exercises. Students should find Lamott's style both engaging and enjoyable.

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Explanation & Answer

Attached.

Surname 1
Name
Professor
Course
Date
Annotated Bibliography on Monsters
Farrant, Finola. "Ghosts, Monsters and Hulk." Crime, Prisons and Viscous Culture. Palgrave
Macmillan, London, 2016. 125-145.
This book chapter focuses on the definition of monsters in real-life. The author focuses
on offenders and inmates in prisons and how they are portrayed by popular culture as
real-life monsters. Primarily, the author collects episodes of people who were seen as
monsters by the society and how their actions qualified them to be these monsters that
people saw in them. Essentially, the author attempts to show how normal people who
commit heinous offenses are seen as monsters due to the publicity they receive from the
media. The main claim of this chapter is that people who commit crimes such as murders
and those behind bars for the same are considered real-life monsters.
The chapter provides a good opportunity to view America’s most publicized monster
stories by providing the details of each of the cases in reference. Further, the chapter
allows the audience to understand the common perceptions of crime and criminals in the
U.S. However, the author fails to come up with an explanation of how this social
construct affects the monsters themselves and how it can be changed. Therefore, the
limited look at the description of monsters does not achieve an interventional approach to
the issue of monsters in the society. This chapter is very useful in the research about
monsters in the society. Referring to the chapter will inform on how the public perceives
monsters and hence help in developing a social construction of what monsters are to
different people. That way, this resource will be used in research to understand the
various examples of monsters in the society and how they affect the perceptions of people
towards various crimes and prison life in general. I will use this resource by looking at
the examples of people who have been said to be monsters and hence apply their stories
in informing the common social constructs of the term.
Gawronski, Sarah M. "Tarnished Heroes, Charming Villains and Modern Monsters: Science
Fiction in Shades of Gray on 21st Century Television. Lynette Porter. Jefferson, NC:
McFarland & Company, 2010. 308 pp. $35.00 paper." (2015): Journal of Popular
Culture, 48, 617–620. doi:10.1111/jpcu.12292
In this article, Lynette Porter approaches the depiction of heroes and villains in popular
films in the 21st century from a critical point of view. The author shows how common
heroes in the modern science fiction depiction are shown as villains and their apparent
evil traits are amplified through the media. Essentially, she criticizes this presentation and
claims that the depiction is flawed because it portrays the monsters in films as heroes in
the society. She traces several heroes and villains in television shows such as Batman and
how they have evolved to portray the dark side of the monsters as relatable to the society.
Her central claim is that the depiction of heroes and villains in the 21st Century medi...


Anonymous
Excellent resource! Really helped me get the gist of things.

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