Writing an Analysis
This is a little bit more detail than the excellent advice from Foss, ch. 2.
(The suggested lengths are appropriate to the mini-analysis.)

Here is an example that is an article of mine. I don't expect you to read it, but to skim it to see how the format explained below is basically there.

Introduction (1)

Think of the introduction you learned in your public speaking(y) class

 

Description of the Artifact (1-2¶, not much more than a page)

The description here should be broad strokes. This is not the place for  play-by-play description of the artifact. The emphasis is on the context of the artifact and its place in society/history.  This may be

 


Description of the method (1-2¶, not much more than a page)

Tell us about your method, focusing heavily on how you will be using it (e.g., Don’t spend a lot of time talking about delivery and memory in neo-Aristotelian criticism or rhetorical visions in fantasy theme analysis, if that is not something you are focusing on). Make it clear what the tenets of the method and how those principles lead to the actual means of analysis. For some methods this is looser than others, so you need to explain how you have employed it (e.g., how you are doing feminist criticism).

 


Analysis (the bulk of your paper)

This is the really fun part! Arrange your findings by theme, chronologically, or whatever means makes sense. It is up to you to craft an analysis for us to easily follow. Use sub-headings as necessary, but be sure you still transition between the sections clearly.

 

In your writing, going after every example of a theme, trope, or whatever will become a grocery list. Choose examples that are representative and rich. When discussing your findings focus on a pattern much like this:


Conclusion (1
)

As you would with a speech’s conclusion, briefly touch on what you did in the paper. Additionally, reflect on why your study matters. It may be that we learn from your analysis about:

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C. Wesley Buerkle, Associate Professor PO Box 70667
Communication Department, East Tennessee State University Johnson City, TN 37614
buerkle@etsu.edu (423) 439-7579