[Loyola University Chicago]

CLST 389-01W / CATH 300-01W / HIST 300B-01W / MSTU 398-01W
Classical Backgrounds: Augustine - Writing Intensive

Spring Semester 2012
Dr. Jacqueline Long

MWF 10:25am-11:15am
Mundelein 308
Brescia casket, 3rd quarter 4th century


Writing Exercise 3


Goals


The approach:

  1. Read Augustine, Sermon 341, and compare and contrast Augustine's explication of Biblical texts within the sermon to the techniques of analysis he outlines in On Christian Teaching, Books 1-3. Identify specific passages of both texts, the sermon and the treatise, that are relevant to your analysis. The system we used for passage-references in Sermon360C will be good for citations in your essay. (Paraphrases as well as direct quotations should be cited in an essay, wherever you refer to the evidence on which your ideas draw.)
  2. Consider the results of your analysis and refine them to a single, defensible, interesting thesis. Try to go beyond the prima facie results of your analysis, "Augustine does/doesn't use the techniques in the sermon he describes in the treatise," to consider why the way Augustine does or doesn't apply the same techniques matters: what does Augustine's use/nonuse of techniques we know he was aware of, tell us about his work?
  3. Review your analysis and identify how specific items of evidence in the primary texts of the sermon and the treatise relate to your thesis.
  4. Organize your evidence and the analysis with which you process it, so as to construct a persuasive argument demonstrating your thesis. You will need to take all relevant evidence into account for your argument to do its job:
    • Identify supporting evidence and explain how it helps prove your case.
    • Identify non-supporting evidence and explain how it doesn't undermine your case.
    • Write up your argument.
  5. Introduce your thesis and argument concisely in an opening paragraph that identifies the problem your thesis will solve, and why it is worth solving.
  6. Conclude your argument with a paragraph that indicates what your solution to the problem you have been considering will do to improve your reader's larger understanding of Augustine, his work, and his world.
  7. Aim for approximately 4 full pages' worth of essay. Cite the primary source-texts to which you refer whenever they figure in your argument, whether you are quoting or paraphrasing them - quote or paraphrase so as to make your points adequately but as concisely as possible. A parenthetical reference with an abbreviated title and the section number should be plenty. Use grammatically correct, complete, sentences. Proofread. Print out in double-spaced, 12-point Times Roman.
  8. Doublecheck Strunk and White and make sure you are writing clearly and correctly.
  9. Proofread again. Fix errors and re-print.
  10. Come to class Monday 19 March with your essay in hand, ready to participate in peer review and collaborative discussion of your essays.

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Revised 16 March 2012 by jlong1@luc.edu
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