HISTORY 221H: THE MEDIEVAL LEGACY



 FIRST PAPER ASSIGNMENT: the Early Middle Ages

Due-Date: Monday October 1, in class

Format: a 3-page, typed, double-spaced, well-written and carefully proofread paper!  Citations to texts should be informal: use parenthetical citations with a shortened, but still indicative name of the text and a page number. For instance: (Einhard, p. 123) or (Asser, p. 129) or (Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, p. 159), etc.

Assignment: Write a 3-page response to one of the following questions. Make sure to use primary sources as evidence for your argument. Make sure, too, that you state and defend an argument/thesis.

            1. Both Charlemagne and Alfred were given the nickname “the Great”. What were the criteria for greatness in the 8th and 9th centuries?  Compare and
            contrast Alfred and Charlemagne with regard to what their biographers felt made them great.

            2. How do authors shape the way in which history is written? Approach this question by examining Asser and Einhard as historians. [Here I want you to
            critically read the text and consider how the authorial interests and pre-suppositions may or may not have shaped the image of each author’s subject]

            3. Is history made by great individuals, or by impersonal underlying forces? Address this question by considering whether or not Alfred and Charlemagne
            were ‘great men.’  That is, were they responsible for their success (and if so, how and why), or were they simply the product of underlying forces?
            Whichever way you decide to argue, I want to see you, however briefly, discuss both sides of the issue.

Reminders:
1. This is a formal paper, and should be written in grammatically complete, formal prose. That means that you should eschew figures of oral speech, colloquialisms, and informal comments.
2. Make sure you understand the possessive.  “Its” is the possessive of ‘it’.  Hence you would say “The cat is playing with its toy” (‘its’ shows whose toy it is).  On the contrary, “it’s” is ONLY a contraction of the words ‘it is’.  For example, “It’s raining today” (which really means “It is raining today.”).
3. Many students also confuse plurals with possessives.  With ordinary nouns, apostrophes only mark the possessive form, never the plural.  For instance, “The cat killed many rats,” NOT “The cat killed many rat’s.”  And, “The cat’s dish was blue” NOT “The cats dish was blue.”
4. All papers should follow the standard format for essay writing
 a. introduction (about a paragraph in length), in which you state the topic and then state very directly
   what it is you are going to prove in the paper. [this is your argument]
 b. the body: a series of paragraphs in which you present evidence from the sources that supports the
  argument you advanced in the first paragraph. Don’t forget to actively explain your examples; don’t just assume that they speak for themselves.
 c. the conclusion: a single paragraph in which you remind the reader of your argument and then explain
   how your evidence (from the body) has proved it.
5. Learn how to employ evidence. Evidence, in history classes, comes from primary sources. This means you need
to find examples from the text that support whatever proposition you are trying to make. Some students think that this means they have to provide lengthy quotations from the primary source. This is not the case. If your reader wanted to read all of Einhard, he/she could do so. He/she wants to read your analysis of Einhard. So you should briefly mention the relevant example, perhaps using a short phrase from the text (in quotation marks if they are the direct words of the text), and then proceed to explain in your own words what that example means.
6. Doing history really means learning how to interpret and analyze.  Your essays should  therefore be interpretive and analytical, not narratives or summaries.  Again the easiest way to remind yourself to do this is to make sure you explain the meaning of every example you produce (and your explanation should help prove your argument).


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