

Writing 10 - Literary Analysis
Presentation
•
English
•
10th Grade
•
Easy
+2
Standards-aligned
Yousef Tapiador
Used 8+ times
FREE Resource
5 Slides • 1 Question
1
Writing 10 - Literary Analysis
LC. page 134

2
Literary Analysis
INTRODUCTION
BODY PARAGRAPHS
CONCLUSION
3
Introduction
the first paragraph in your essay. It begins creatively in order to catch your reader’s interest, provides essential background about the literary work, and prepares the reader for your major thesis. The introduction must include the author and title of the work as well as an explanation of the theme to be discussed. Other essential background may include setting, an introduction of main characters, etc. The major thesis goes in this paragraph usually at the end. Because the major thesis sometimes sounds tacked on, make special attempts to link it to the sentence that precedes it by building on a key word or idea.
4
Body Paragraphs
the support paragraphs of your essay. These paragraphs contain supporting Example: (concrete detail) and analysis/explanation (commentary) for your topic sentences. Each paragraph in the body includes
(1) a topic sentence, (2) textual evidence (a.k.a. quotes from your reading) and commentary (a.k.a. explanation), and (3) a concluding sentence. In its simplest form, each body paragraph is organized as follows:
1. topic sentence
2. lead-in to textual evidence 1
3. textual evidence 1
4. commentary
5. transition and lead-in to textual evidence 2 6. textual evidence 2
7. commentary
8. concluding or clincher sentence
5
Conclusion
last paragraph in your essay. This paragraph should begin by echoing your major thesis without repeating the words exactly. Then, the conclusion should broaden from the thesis statements to answer the “so what?” question your reader may have after reading your essay. The conclusion should do one or more of the following:
1) Reflect on how your essay topic relates to the book as a whole
2) Evaluate how successful the author is in achieving his or her goal or message
3) Give a personal statement about the topic
4) Make predictions
5) Connect back to your creative opening
6) Give your opinion of the novel’s value or significance
6
Open Ended
Writing Activity (15 points)
Write a literary analysis essay of the poem "Elephant in the Dark". The essay should have 3 paragraphs: introduction, body, and conclusion.
Note: 100-150 words
Writing 10 - Literary Analysis
LC. page 134

Show answer
Auto Play
Slide 1 / 6
SLIDE
Similar Resources on Wayground
6 questions
practice vs practise
Presentation
•
10th Grade
6 questions
Latin root splend
Presentation
•
10th Grade
6 questions
RAIN ON THE ROOF
Presentation
•
10th Grade
6 questions
Vocabulary M6/SC - Choose the incorrect answer
Presentation
•
10th Grade
7 questions
Lessons 5–6 Solar cars
Presentation
•
10th Grade
1 questions
May 2 - onomatopoeia
Presentation
•
10th Grade
3 questions
Present Simple - Maybe You Know Her
Presentation
•
10th Grade
2 questions
Предпросмотровой этап
Presentation
•
10th Grade
Popular Resources on Wayground
19 questions
Naming Polygons
Quiz
•
3rd Grade
10 questions
Prime Factorization
Quiz
•
6th Grade
20 questions
Math Review
Quiz
•
3rd Grade
15 questions
Fast food
Quiz
•
7th Grade
20 questions
Main Idea and Details
Quiz
•
5th Grade
20 questions
Context Clues
Quiz
•
6th Grade
20 questions
Inferences
Quiz
•
4th Grade
19 questions
Classifying Quadrilaterals
Quiz
•
3rd Grade
Discover more resources for English
50 questions
ELA EOG Prep 7th Grade
Quiz
•
KG - University
20 questions
Figurative Language Review
Quiz
•
10th Grade
45 questions
LOTF Chapters 1-12 Quiz
Quiz
•
8th - 11th Grade
37 questions
Hunger Games 1-27
Quiz
•
5th - 12th Grade
19 questions
The Giver 1-23
Quiz
•
10th Grade
10 questions
Mastering the 50 States and Their Capitals
Interactive video
•
6th - 10th Grade
50 questions
Romeo and Juliet Prologue & Acts 1-5 Test
Quiz
•
9th - 12th Grade
15 questions
Romeo and Juliet Act 3
Quiz
•
10th Grade