This morning, you will begin planning and drafting your analysis, your second major assignment for the semester. In class, you will receive a hard copy of the instructions, which are also included below.
Overview
A textual analysis aims to demonstrate how a text works, how it achieves its effects. The process of writing your analysis will include these steps:
- Summarizing the text precisely so the reader can envision it. Note that your analysis is not a summary but will begin with one that will serve as a lead-in to your thesis or main claim: what you think the text achieves or what it means and how it conveys its meaning.
- Paying close attention to details, what they imply, and how they relate to each other and the whole
- Explaining what the text means or what it achieves
Directions for Planning and Drafting
- Review the texts that you have read for class, and determine which one interests you most as a subject of analysis. You are not permitted to read any of the texts on screen during your drafting period today. (Yesterday’s class notes specify that if you were missing one of the reading handouts or decided to analyze a larger section of Chapter One of To Kill a Mockingbird, you should have printed a copy.)
- Identify elements in the text that contribute to its effectiveness. (See the list of elements below.)
- Develop your analysis through a close examination of those elements.
- Write in dark ink, preferably black.
- Double-space to allow for my annotations in between. You are welcome to use both sides of the page.
- Before you leave class today, staple this handout on top of your draft and submit it to me. Next Wednesday, I will return your draft with notes, and you will have the class period to begin revising and editing on your laptop or tablet.
Elements for Textual Analysis
- Language and Stylistic Devices: Literary devices (metaphors, irony, symbolism), diction (word choice), and syntax (sentence structure).
- Content and Themes: Recurring ideas, patterns, or points of contrast.
- Structure: Organization, including scene structure, and how it adheres to or breaks from convention.
- Characterization (for fiction only, which includes To Kill a Mockingbird and “The School”): Character development, motivation, and their role in the story.
Directions for Revising
The revision of your analysis should include the following:
- A title that offers a window into your analysis
- An introduction that presents a summary of the text
- A thesis statement, or main claim, that presents your take on the text based on your close study of it
- Textual evidence that supports your claims
- A minimum of two relevant quotations from the text, introduced with signal phrases and followed by parenthetical citations
- A conclusion that revisits the thesis without restating it verbatim
- A work cited entry
- A minimum of 600 words
Sample Works Cited Entries
Barthelme, Donald. “The School.” The Best American Short Stories 1975, edited by Martha Foley. Houghton Mifflin, 1975. pp. 8-11.
Junod, Tom. “The Falling Man.” Esquire, vol. 140, no. 3, Sept. 2003, pp. 176+. Gale Academic OneFile Select, https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A106423422/EAIM?u=hpu_main&sid=bookmark-EAIM&xid=ce48797f.
Keller, Helen. “The Day Language Came into My Life.” https://janelucas.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/a0461-3.thedaylanguagecameintomylife_keller.pdf.
King, Martin Luther, Jr. “Letter from Birmingham Jail.” California State University, Chico. https://www.csuchico.edu/iege/_assets/documents/susi-letter-from-birmingham-jail.pdf.
Lee, Harper. Chapter One. To Kill a Mockingbird. Lippincott, pp. 9-19.
Lewis, Michael. “Back Story.” The Blind Side. 2006. Norton, 2009, pp. 15-23.
Sedaris, David. “Me Talk Pretty One Day.” Me Talk Pretty One Day. Little Brown, 2000. pp. 166-73.
Think of your preliminary draft as your down draft; your aim in the first stage of the process is to get your ideas down on the page. You may need to go through the process of drafting to discover what you think the text achieves or what it means and how it conveys that meaning.
Directions for Formatting and Posting Your Revision—See the Course Calendar for the Due Date and Hard Deadline
- Save your revised essay as a Microsoft Word file or PDF and submit it to Blackboard in compliance with MLA manuscript guidelines.
- Publish your revision as a blog post. In your post, omit the first-page information included in your file submitted to Blackboard (your name, course, section, instructor’s name, and date). Add to your blog post an image that documents some part of your writing process away from the screen, such as a photo of your reading notes or a page of your draft. Also add to your blog post an embedded link to a relevant website.
Grade Criteria
- An A analysis complies with all assignment guidelines, demonstrates a depth of understanding by using relevant and accurate detail, and is also well organized and relatively free of surface errors.
- A B analysis complies with all assignment guidelines and presents an adequate analysis but examines little more than what was addressed in class. A B analysis is also well organized and relatively free of surface errors.
- A C analysis complies with most but not all assignment guidelines and may also be flawed by issues of organization and/or surface errors, or more consequential factual errors.
- A D analysis complies with only a few of the assignment guidelines and may also be flawed by issues of organization and/or surface errors, or more consequential factual errors.
- An F analysis fails to comply with most or all assignment guidelines. It may also be flawed by substantial issues of organization and/or surface errors, or more consequential factual errors.
MLA Style
Look to my sample assignments on Blackboard as models of MLA style. For more information on MLA style, see the MLA Style Center and OWL sites linked to my blog and the January 15 class notes devoted to MLA style.
Next Up
Wordplay Day! To prepare for class, revisit the Scrabble Dictionary and World Builder pages or the Merriam-Webster Scrabble Word Finder page, and review the blog posts devoted to Scrabble tips.

















