Krause
A.P. English Language and Composition
Fall 2015
Narrative Essay
A narrative essay tells a story from a defined point of view (usually 1st-person), using specific, sensory details and vivid, precise diction to develop the main point of the story. As a story, the narrative essay contains main story conventions:
- a plot, including setting and defined characters
- a climax (a peak experience often leading to the realization of the thesis idea)
- a resolution (explanation of how the incident resolved itself, alluding to how the thesis idea comes to its full realization)
As an essay, the narrative essay also contains essay conventions:
- an introduction, establishing the thesis concept that the story will address
- body paragraphs in support of the thesis idea that move the reader through the complexity of main ideas and evidence
- a conclusion, reflecting on the near and far significance of the event and the thesis concept
Narratives can detail a moment of insight, can explore a character, can illustrate an idea, can impart historical information, can argue for a course of action, or can simply exist for their own sake.
Importantly, the larger point (thesis) of the narrative essay does not have to capture a truth about all humanity; the truth can be very personal, revealing a truth about the writer’s own life or understanding of reality.
Essays (All are in The Writer’s Presence)
- Cooper, Bernard.“A Clack of Tiny Sparks: Remembrances of a Gay Boyhood.” Answer #1 or #2
- Staples, Brent. “Just Walk on By.” Answer #2 OR the questions posed in the italicized intro to “Another Version.”
- Silko, Leslie Marmon. “In the Combat Zone.” Answer #1 or #2
- White, E.B. “Once More to the Lake.” Answer #2
Compose all responses in analytical paragraph format, please.
Examine the range of prompts posed per question, choose a specific line of inquiry, and then craft complex responses that assert a claim, integrate specific textual references and provide commentary regarding the evidence.
***See the back for formatting requirements.***
Calendar
8/24 / Read Bourdain essay in-class; model analytical paragraph response /- Read Staples essay (both versions)
8/31 /
- Staples ¶due
- Read Silko essay in-class
- Silko ¶due
- Read Cooper essay in-class
9/7
NO SCHOOL /
- Cooper ¶ due
- Read White in-class
- White ¶ due
- Work on narrative essay
9/14
- Work on narrative essay
- Work on narrative essay
- Work on narrative essay
9/21
NARRATIVE ESSAY DUE / NO SCHOOL
Questions to Ask of a Narrative (when reading and when composing)
- What is the purpose of this narrative? If a larger idea is being explored, what is that idea?
- For what audience is this written? What seems to be the desired reaction from the audience?
- How does this narrative move from its opening, gain momentum, and find resolution?
- What is appropriate about the narrative perspective?
- What tone has the writer chosen to adopt? Is the tone consistent, or does it change?
Useful Rhetorical Strategies for Thinking and Writing about Narratives
- Point of view/vantage point
- Conflict
- Motives/motivation
- Plot
- Irony
- Varied syntax
- Concrete language
- Sequence of action
- Explicit and implicit commentary
- Setting
- Active verbs
- Figurative language
- Dialogue and dialect
- Context
- Sensory details
Analytical Response Formatting Requirements
12 point-font
Double-spaced
1” margins on all 4 sides
Type your heading NOT in the header, but on the first line of the body. Double-space your heading
Justify your heading on the left-hand side of the page
Provide a title for the assignment that is centered on the first line below the heading
Indent the first line of your paragraph 5 spaces. Your “tab” button might not be set for 5-spaces.
Your NameMy Name
Class and Period
Assignment due date
Title
Begin your paragraph…