How to Write a Literary Analysis Paper

ByeHow Education Editor

The literary analysis paper is a rite of passage for any scholar. No English class is complete without the dreaded literary analysis assignment. With some practice and patience, you don't need to dread this paper's yearly occurrence. Literary analysis papers aim to focus your thinking about a text and give a venue through which to express either the journey to an opinion or the validity of the opinion itself.

Instructions

Step 11

Know the two styles of literary analysis papers. The most common is the thesis-driven paper, which is structured around a central thesis or argument about a text you introduce at the beginning of the paper. In a process paper, you explore how you're processing a piece of text and arrive at a thesis or argument by the paper's conclusion. This second approach is really about exploring and interacting with a text. Ask your instructor which approach she prefers or which best suits where you'd like to go with the paper.

Step 22

Brainstorm your ideas and narrow your focus to one element or angle of the text. Begin your research. Some literary analysis papers require secondary sources. Online journals, literary criticism, and other resources can help you acquire additional information. Take notes and always keep track of your sources in MLA or APA format. If you only need to use the text itself, go through the piece again, making notes of where you plan to draw from for textual evidence in your paper.

Step 33

Begin writing your paper. If your paper is thesis driven, be sure you present it clearly early on in the paper.

Step 44

Keep your writing in a style and voice that feels natural to you. A literary analysis paper doesn't have to be dry, and you don't have to sound like you smoke a pipe and wear blazers with elbow patches. However, you shouldn't use vulgarity of any kind or be overly familiar. Have fun and be playful in your writing. Include a variety of sentence styles and structures. Use first person if it's allowed.

Step 55

Assume the reader of your paper has read the text you're talking about and don't summarize the plot. Literary analysis isn't a book report. If you use summary, do it only as a support for your central thesis, and keep it brief. Use literary terminology to help you write effectively about what an author is doing, and keep your paper focused on analysis.

Step 66

Keep your quotes accurate and use parenthetical documentation rather than footnotes unless told otherwise. Keep all quotations in line with MLA or APA style. Remember, for poetry, always show the line breaks.

Step 77

Reread your paper several times. At least once, read your paper out loud so that you can hear your mistakes. When you have at least one or two complete drafts of your paper, give it a title. Always give your essay a title that clearly conveys what the paper is about; if it's catchy too, that's a bonus.

Tips & Warnings

  • Do your best to approach the text in an original way, but realize that you probably won't be the first person to see something in a text. It doesn't matter if the idea isn't new, as long as it's new to you.
  • Include your works cited and works consulted in MLA or APA format at the end of your paper. Start a works cited on a fresh page if it doesn't all fit on the last page. Remember to put these in alphabetical order.
  • Don't use weak writing. Weak statements such as "I feel," "I think," "seems" and "maybe" sound like you're apologizing or don't trust yourself; they lack confidence. Strengthen your paper by cutting these words and leaving just the backbone of the sentence. Confidence in writing, like in life, goes a long way.
  • Avoid common errors. Don't talk about your paper in your paper, for example, saying "In this essay I will show.." or "I couldn't think about what to write so..." or anything along those lines. Statements like these make teachers cringe. Also, never use second person in your paper. Second person has an air of immaturity that shouldn't be associated with a literary analysis paper.

Taken from