Title: The Essay: the 3 Levels of Composition
1The Essay the 3 Levels of Composition
2AN OVERVIEW OF THE 3 LEVELS
- I. LEVEL ONE MOST THEORETICAL (INCLUDES YOUR
THESIS) - II. LEVEL TWO DEFINED AND DEVELOPED
THEORETICAL IDEAS - III. LEVEL THREE EXAMPLES
3GENERAL PRINCIPLES
- 1. You need a thesis, which is the most abstract
idea in your paper. It can come at the end of
the first paragraph or elsewhere, but you need to
know it and know where it is in your paper. - 2. Two important points about a thesis 1. You
must know what it is at all times in the essay.
2. It is very helpful if your readers know it as
well.
4Your Thesis Presents an Abstract Idea
- The thesis contains an abstract idea (at level
one) with key elements that need to be fleshed
out at level two and level three. - It is your job to flesh out the thesis in a
paper. That is one way of understanding what an
essay is and what an essay does an essay
introduces an idea that needs to be developed in
more concrete terms. It introduces that idea in
its thesis.
5Let Your Thesis Guide Your Development
6The Thesis Presents an Abstract, Theoretical Idea
- As you know a theoretical idea must be explained
for your readers and you need to give examples
for your readers as well. - In other words, the thesis needs to be developed.
7Develop the thesis by breaking its key ideas into
segments
8Here is a literary-theoretical thesis for your
consideration
- While life seems to take place out there in
what we colloquially call the real world, in
fact human existence takes place in three
interrelated registers simultaneously. We live
at once in a material world of being, a
representational world of consciousness, and an
emotional world of feeling. In Richard
Mathesons novel, What Dreams May Come, Matheson
puts forth the proposition that the latter two
are far more important in influencing human
behavior than is commonly known. He insists
counterintuitively that the world of
consciousness and the emotional world of feeling
are not solely inside a person, but are
discursive in nature, formed through varying
inside-outside and outside-inside logics that,
when combined, form a powerful force that can
consign a person to his or her designated site
in the afterlife that is, to that persons
particular heaven or hell.
9Your Thesis Presents Various Points Part One
- Part One While life seems to take place out
there in what we colloquially call the real
world, in fact human existence takes place in
three interrelated registers simultaneously. We
live at once in a material world of being, a
representational world of consciousness, and an
emotional world of feeling.
10Your Thesis Presents Various Points Part Two
- 2. In Richard Mathesons novel, What Dreams May
Come, Matheson puts forth the proposition that
the latter two are far more important in
influencing human behavior than is commonly
known. He insists counterintuitively that the
world of consciousness and the emotional world of
feeling are not solely inside a person, but are
discursive in nature, formed through varying
inside-outside and outside-inside logics that,
when combined, form a powerful force that can
consign a person to his or her designated site
in the afterlife that is, to that persons
particular heaven or hell.
11If you are the author of this thesis, then Your
job is to develop these two sections in your paper
12You can divide your paper into two subsections to
make your task of developing your thesis easier.
13You can call subsection one the three registers
of existence
14You can call subsection two the two logics of
interrelational being
15Your Mission
- 1. Never lose consciousness of your thesis
- 2. Make certain that you are working on its
behalf when you are in a subsection, a paragraph
within that subsection, or a sentence within that
paragraph. - 3. In some way or another, you are always
developing your thesis, whether you are defining
a term, developing a term, or providing an
example of a term.
16Your Progression of Ideas and the Thesis
- This Thesis enables you to create two
subsectional headings so that your essay is more
manageable to you and to your readers. - Know that you are developing a SUBSECTIONAL
THESIS in each subsection. Let it control your
development of ideas. - Each subsectional thesis flows through the
subsection like a river. Build a canal through
the words and sentences and paragraphs as they
progress through the subsection. And make
certain that your progression of ideas stays
within the boundaries of the canal.
17Your Progression of Ideas and the Thesis
- By creating a canal through which your ideas
flow, you create a line of progression. This
line should be easy to follow as one idea flows
into the next idea into the next idea. - That is your intention to create a flowing
movement of prose that follows a line of
progression that your readers can follow without
getting lost. Always ask yourself three
questions -
- (1). where am I in my progression?
- (2) can my readers follow the point Im currently
making? - (3) can they relate this point to the point
before it and the point that will follow it?
18The 3 Ways to Develop your Thesis
19Define Your Term
20Define Your Term
- Since the thesis is abstract, it needs to be
brought into view (so to speak). - One of the ways of bringing a thesis into view is
to define your terms.
21Define Your Term
- Define your term by going to the text for a
quotation. - Let me say this again Define your term by going
to the text for a quotation.
22Define Your Term
- Find a quotation in the text that has some
substance and is worth explaining. - Before you present that quotation, introduce it.
- Once you present that definition, explain it.
23Define Your Term
- Before you explain a quotation, study it.
- Study its component parts or key elements.
- Then explain that quotation fully for your
readers so they know what you are talking about.
24Define Your Term
- Theory is difficult and you need to show your
readers some consideration. When they see a
theoretical quotation for the first time, they
need it explained. - A theoretical quotation does not explain itself
to the first time reader. - You need to explain it for that person.
25Define Your Term
- Because the definition is the most abstract
sequence besides a thesis, its key elements must
be explained. - Reflect Back Before Moving Forward always
reflect back and explain the key elements and
their relationship before moving forward in your
progression.
26Define Your Term
- The quotation you just presented existed in a
progression of ideas that is absent to your
readers. - You have placed it in another progression of
ideas your own, which is the one they are
following in your paper. - Therefore, you need to explain the definition you
just presented as it fits within your progression
of ideas as it relates to your thesis.
27Once you have introduced your definition, defined
it, and explained it you can continue with the
aim of developing your thesis
28Now you can develop your thesis by introducing
other parts of it level two development by
explanation or by providing examples level
three development through literary or filmic
examples
29Now you can develop your thesis by introducing
other parts of it level two development by
explanation
30Treat level two development in the same way as
you treated a definition
31Level two development offers a lesser level of
abstraction that is still somewhat abstract
- You have already defined your term, so that work
has been done. - By defining your term, you have presented
information about your topic. - Now is the time to present more theoretical
information about your topic. - Now is the time to introduce secondary points of
theory (secondary points of theoretical
elaboration) that need to be defined and
explained.
32Level two development offers a lesser level of
abstraction that is still somewhat abstract
- introduce secondary points of theory that need to
be defined and explained. - You can turn to the essays youve read for your
definitions or you can summarize your defined
point and explain it at length. - Always be thorough dont drive by your ideas and
dispense with them too quickly.
33Level two development offers a lesser level of
abstraction that is still somewhat abstract
- Dont get lost in the presentation of quotation
after quotation in this way you lose track of
your thesis, your subsectional thesis, and your
progression of ideas. - You also lose track of your voice and your
progression of ideas. - It is, after all, your essay.
34Level two development offers a lesser level of
abstraction that is still somewhat abstract
- On the other hand, present enough quotations from
the essays you study to give your readers a
grounding in the theory. - Too much summary and not enough quotation of
material will not give your readers enough
grounding in the material.
35Level two development offers a lesser level of
abstraction that is still somewhat abstract
- Too many quotations and no summary stops the
progression of ideas so that you cannot follow
the essays logic and clear movement from one
point to the next.
36Level two development offers a lesser level of
abstraction that is still somewhat abstract
- Maintain a delicate balance between summary and
quotation when you first introduce a point at
level two. - Always make certain, however, that you fully
develop the concept for your readers. - Always make certain, as well, that you link it to
the last concept and the one that you are about
to develop.
37Level three examples
38Level three examples
- Go to the literary or filmic text for your
examples and make certain that each example
presents a powerful illustration of your point.
39Level three examples
- Typically, this is the easiest part of the
writing process. You are finding that magical
(level 3) example in a literary text to present.
Have some fun with this. Go to the literature
(or to a film) and find that example you believe
will captivate your readers, but make certain it
is the most appropriate example to illustrate the
concept under consideration.
40Level three examples
- ONE MORE TIME Make certain it is the most
appropriate example to illustrate the concept
under consideration.
41Level three examples
- Your example is a level 3, concrete aspect of the
theory you are developing.
42Level three examples
- The thesis and your definitions and your
theoretical development and your examples
aspects of themselves.
43Level three examples
- BEINGASPECTS OF THEMSELVES MEANS THAT THE ONLY
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THEM IS THE LEVEL OF
ABSTRACTION.
44Level three examples
- YOUR EXAMPLE IS JUST THAT, AN EXAMPLE THAT IS A
MORE CONCRETE EXPRESSION OF THE IDEA UNDER
CONSIDERATION.
45Level three examples
- YOUR EXAMPLE IS MORE CONCRETE BECAUSE IT IS
CLOSER TO LIVED EXPERIENCE, SO PEOPLE CAN RELATE
TO IT. - THAT IS WHY WE NEED COMPELING EXAMPLES.
46FINALLY dont get lost in explicating the text
by giving example after example
47FINALLY let your example be powerful, but let
it act in the service of the ideas being
developed in the progression that follows from
the thesis.
48FINALLY let your development of ideas from one
paragraph to the next be powerful, but let them
act in the service of the ideas being developed
in the progression that follows from the thesis.
49FINALLY let your definitions be powerful and
useful, but they too serve to foster the
progression of those ideas emanating from the
thesis.
50AND REMEMBER what Ive presented here is a
logic the logic of the essay.
51AND REMEMBER any essay will be comprised of
these components. My intention was to make you
conscious of this logic.
52AND REMEMBER but writing an essay is a creative
act of intention, so you decide where to put an
example or when to define a term, or what order
of abstraction you want to introduce.
53ABOVE ALL study
54ABOVE ALL study the essays and study the novels
and films.
55ABOVE ALL really study them because that is
where the power is in your learning how to
read and to write. Those skills will teach you
how to think differently.
56ABOVE ALL really study the essays and spend
time a lot of time writing the essay.
57ABOVE ALL make it yours because otherwise the
entire process will fall upon deaf ears.
58ABOVE ALL the entire process will fall upon
your deaf ears.
59ABOVE ALL be creative
60ABOVE ALL be creative by recreating yourself in
the process