ARGUMENTATIVE ESSAY ON The author Ernest Hemmingway and his work I’ll be discussing will be the short story “Soldier’s Home” is it easy for soldiers toadjust to normalcy on the return home after war

 
Research Paper Directions
Your research paper should be an argumentative essay that makes a specific claim about one of the course readings. The claim should be made by applying specific schools of literary criticism from the “Critical Strategies for Reading” section of our textbook. Support this claim and argument in a well-developed, well-written, and well-organized essay of at least 2000 words (roughly 6-8 typed, double-spaced pages). To support your argument, incorporate quotes, summaries, or paraphrases from at least five sources accessed through the GMC library. In order for you to succeed in this assignment, read and reread the following directions:
-Many of the writers we cover in this class might be difficult to find information on through the GMC library. Because of this, I have narrowed down the list of authors you are allowed to write about. You MUST choose one of the following authors as the topic for your paper: Ernest Hemingway, THE SHORT STORY” SOLDIER’S HOME” Remember that the work you choose to write about must also come from assigned course readings, detailed in the Syllabus under “Course Schedule.” You are not allowed to write about any other not on this list. Note that some of these authors are covered late in the course, so you will want to read ahead to find authors that interest you.

-Reread the texts you loved or had difficulty with and take careful notes: brainstorm, journal, free-write, and research with those questions in mind. All of these things will help you narrow down your topic.
-Once you have decided on a topic, begin doing preliminary research (you will need to do a lot of research for this assignment anyway). Read what other literary critics have said. This will help you to further narrow down your topic, and even to find some of the sources you will end up using in the paper. Remember that you are a literary critic too—this means you should feel free to question and disagree with the interpretations you read.
-Make sure your thesis is an arguable one, something that readers might actually agree or disagree with. Don’t be afraid to take a leap and put forward a new, creative, and/or unique interpretation. Remember that any argument can be a good one if you properly support it with evidence from the text.
-Your paper must incorporate information from outside sources found through the GMC library. Remember that you have three methods for incorporating outside information into any paper: you can quote (use the source’s exact words), paraphrase (put the source’s words into your own words), or summarize (boil down information from a source to a 1-2 sentence summary in your own words). If you need to review these topics, check out the information at the Purdue OWL here https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/563/1/
-Avoid unnecessary plot summary and biographical information. Assume that your reader has already read the work you are discussing, and assume that your reader knows important information about the author’s life already.
-Play the numbers game. Remember that your paper must be at least 2,000 words (not counting the Works Cited), and the paper must include at least 5 sources accessed from the GMC library. Note that sources like Wikipedia, Sparknotes, and other open-web sources are not appropriate for this paper. Conduct your research through the library like a real researcher, rather than relying on Google to find open-web sources that may not be appropriate.
-MLA formatting for paper style, in-text citations, and the Works Cited is a significant part of this paper. Review the sample essays in our textbook, the Purdue OWL MLA section (https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/01/), and other MLA guides for examples of what your paper should look like.
a) PAGE 2: Use your textbook as a resource. Review the “Critical Strategies for Reading”
section in the back of our textbook (pages 2025 – 2048) and the “Reading and Writing Process”
section (pages 2049 – 2068). There is also an example of a student essay that begins on page 2068.
b) PAGE 4: For further guidance on writing thesis statements and choosing topics, see pages
2049 – 2068 in our textbook; pages 2053 – 2056 will be particularly helpful for you.
-Organize your argument to maximize its effectiveness. Your introduction should include a thesis. Each paragraph of your paper should include a topic sentence that references your thesis. Each sentence in each paragraph should directly support that paragraph’s topic sentence.
-Finally, don’t forget the little things. Spelling, grammar, and punctuation should be perfect. Edit and revise your work. Manage your time efficiently to allow yourself the opportunity to read and reread your final paper multiple times.
-As always, contact your instructor whenever you have questions.
-The general rubric for the Research Paper is provided below:
-Your Research Paper should be uploaded in the appropriate space at the end of Week #7.
Argument
40 points
Application of Critical Reading Strategy
40 points
Use, Quality, and Correctness of Research, including MLA formatting
40 points
Explication of literature (Support)
40 points
Higher-Order Concerns (Development, Organization, etc.)
20 points
Lower-Order Concerns (Spelling, Grammar, and Punctuation)
20 points
Title: Performative Patterns in Hemingway’s ‘Soldier’s Home.’ Publication Information
Author(s): Ruben De Baerdemaeker Publication Details: Hemingway Review 27.1 (Fall 2007): p55-73. Source: Short Story Criticism. Ed. Jelena O. Krstovic. Vol. 117. Detroit: Gale. From Literature Resource Center. Document Type: Critical essay Bookmark: Bookmark this Document Full Text: COPYRIGHT 2009 Gale, Cengage Learning Full Text:
[(essay date fall 2007) In the following essay, De Baerdemaeker notes the past circumstances that inform Harold Krebs’s sexual identity in “Soldier’s Home,” pointing out Krebs’s difficulties in “coping with the narrative of his past upon finding himself in a completely different setting.”]
Patterned Pictures

Ernest Hemingway referred to “Soldier’s Home” as “the best short story I ever wrote” (SL 139). In the short story collection In Our Time, the short story does stand out if only because its protagonist, an American soldier in the aftermath of WWI, is not, as a reader might have come to expect, Nick Adams, but the oddly named Harold Krebs. It will not do to embrace Harold Krebs as just another version of the same old Nick Adams (or, indeed, as some would have it, as yet another straightforward literary incarnation of Hemingway himself). “Readers must wonder why Hemingway chose ‘Krebs’ instead of ‘Nick,'” David Ullrich asserts in an article dedicated to teasing out the meanings conjured up by this protagonist’s name. This story is different from those featuring Nick as a protagonist; this main character is not caught by the safety net of the famous Hemingway “code”–he slips through its mazes.

The text famously opens with a description of two photographs, forced into a parallelism that brings out the significant contrast between the worlds–or the potential safety nets–that they represent:
There is a picture which shows him among his fraternity brothers, all of them wearing exactly the same height and style collar. … There is a picture which shows him on the Rhine with two German girls and another corporal. Krebs and the corporal look too big for their uniforms.(CSS [The Complete Short Stories of Ernest Hemingway] 111)
These snapshots introduce the double backdrop against which Harold Krebs’s story will unfold, and they prefigure the antagonism that will direct its narrative. With reference to a theoretical framework based on the work of Judith Butler, this paper will trace how Krebs becomes an outsider to what once was his life, and how his tragedy is brought about by the conflicting social norms that govern his behavior–i.e. the norms of the respective societies represented by the aforementioned photographs.

The first picture seems to signify a traditional American schooling and education fuelled by a juvenile form of (homo)sociality:1 there are no women in this picture, and the fraternity brothers (first-rate homosocial pleonasm) wear collars of the exact same height and style, as a token of male bonding. This American ideal of youthful masculinity clashes with the uniformed male version of the second picture–a clash announced by the story’s very first sentence: “Krebs went to the war from a Methodist college in Kansas” (CSS 111). Women are suddenly present in this picture, and the hint of blossoming sexuality is highlighted by the remark that Krebs and his fellow soldier “look too big for their uniforms” (111). Though it may be far-fetched to suggest they are swollen with phallic desire, their size, their outgrowing the rigid convention of uniforms, conjures up an altered masculinity, one that is no longer strictly constrained by the limits of uniformity. That there is something out of joint in this evolution is suggested by the deadpan statement that “The German girls are not beautiful. The Rhine does not show in the photograph” (111).2 This small narrative diptych is more than a chronological prologue to introduce the protagonist, as it already contains most of the topoi and tensions that will dominate the further story.
Performativity

This sense of “outgrowing” a uniform pattern is the main theme of “Soldier’s Home.” The two pictures at the beginning of this story emblematize different styles of normativity–networks or patterns of norms and regulations that shape the people they encompass. To elaborate on this interplay between normativity and subjectivity, I turn to the theoretical writings of Judith Butler, who has addressed this issue in much of her work. After Gender Trouble was published in 1990, performativity, as a “stylized repetition of acts” (Butler 1999, 179), became one of the decade’s buzzwords–even if its popularity may be declining by now, probably due to overuse, misuse, and sometimes abuse. Theorizing the institution of the subject within social norms functioning as constitutive constraints has remained at the core of Butler’s thought even into more recent work such as Giving an Account of Oneself (2005) (which has no explicitly gendered angle and thus seems to digress from the bulk of her earlier writing).

Reading Butler alongside Hemingway can be productive, as shown by Thomas Strychacz in his book Hemingway’s Theaters of Masculinity. As the title implies, Strychacz focuses explicitly on the performative quality of Hemingway’s male protagonists, most notably Francis Macomber. He proposes a “hermeneutics of performance [that] undertakes to enter the sliding ground of signification, which renders meaning contextual and constative utterances rhetorical” (48). My own project, though similar, does not want to highlight the theatricality of Harold Krebs’s gender identity so much as to investigate its underpinnings.

It is certainly not the intention of this paper simply to apply a dab of queer theory to Hemingway’s text and give it a pink coating. This reading is triggered by the recurrent references to “patterns” that, in this story, crop up in various guises–from geometric to social. This paper therefore analyzes the patterns and matrices, nets and mazes in which protagonist Harold Krebs attempts to live his life.3 If the individual is always instituted, again and again, by performing the norms laid down by its environment, this may account for Krebs’s difficulties in coping with the narrative of his past upon finding himself in a completely different setting.
Lies

Upon returning to his home town, wanting to talk about his war experiences, “Krebs found that to be listened to at all he had to lie” (CSS 111). Having moved from the Methodist college in Kansas to the war in Europe and then home again, Krebs cannot retrieve the sense of fitting in so tellingly illustrated by the story’s opening snapshot. The setting of postwar Europe differs so greatly from homey Oklahoma that it becomes impossible to speak the truth about the war. Krebs moves from the “pattern” of college to the pattern of war back to the pattern of home, but he has lost his talent for uniformity. Krebs’s life in Okla-home is patterned, but does not fit in with the local ethos:
… he was sleeping late in bed, getting up to walk down town to the library to get a book, eating lunch at home, reading on the front porch until he became bored and then walking down through the town to spend the hottest hours of the day in the cool dark of the pool room. He loved to play pool.In the evening he practised on his clarinet, strolled down town, read and went to bed.(112)
Clearly, our soldier’s home is beset with fewer extremes than Belleau Wood and Soissons, and its inhabitants seem scarcely interested in the truth about the war. Even Krebs’s parents show no real interest in their son’s recent experiences: “[His mother] often came in when he was in bed and asked him to tell her about the war, but her mind always wandered. His father was non-committal” (112).

The “quite unimportant lies” (CSS 111)4 that Krebs finds himself compelled to tell have a curious effect on him: “A distaste for everything that had happened to him in the war set in because of the lies he had told” (111)–a distaste evolving into “the nausea in regard to experience that is the result of untruth or exaggeration” (112). At this stage, Krebs is in the process of losing whatever positive memories he may have had about his time in Europe–for it becomes clear that not all was miserable there, especially after the war had finished.5

Krebs’s growing distaste for his own war memories is emblematized in the way he interacts with former fellow-soldiers:
… when he occasionally met another man who had really been a soldier and they talked a few minutes in the dressing room at a dance he fell into the easy pose of the old soldier among other soldiers: that he had been badly, sickeningly frightened all the time. In this way he lost everything.(CSS 112, my italics)
That Krebs is obliged to pose even in the company of people with whom he shares parts of his past illustrates the extent to which views of the past are tainted by the present. Past experiences become embedded in the pattern of the present, encapsulated in a narrative that adapts itself to present circumstances, not facts in the past. Memories, then, as soon as they are actualized and “present-ed” in the form of narrative, acquire a performative value. Memory needs to be re-enacted or, rather, reconfigured in language to become intelligible within the discourse of the present. As Peter Messent has observed, this is a transition that Harold Krebs is not capable of making:
Belleau Wood has rendered his mother’s pious language and framework of conventional belief a nonsense. The world now contingent to Krebs is one from which he is absolutely disconnected–whose language and values he cannot share.(15)
Krebs, then, has come undone, or “lost everything” (CSS 112), because he is not in touch with home, or does not feel at home in Oklahoma, and because this present unease taints his past, rather than vice versa. Paradoxically, Krebs’s past actions do not give him a particular status (such as “war hero”) within the present regime; instead, the present alters Krebs’s very memory of the past. In the extreme case of Harold Krebs, there is such a disconnect between the war and his American home that his narrative about the past war cannot be accommodated in the present.

With regard to “Soldier’s Home,” John McKenna and David Raabe, inspired by “temperament theory,” boldly claim: “Language is an abstraction. Talk can never substitute for the event itself” (204). But what the story really shows is that language and talk are necessary in order to preserve an event as a factor in one’s self, in one’s narrative identity.6 The tragedy of Harold Krebs, then, lies not in having to talk or having to lie, but in being unable to translate experiences into the paradigm(s) expected in small-town USA. One may even suggest that it is this inability to translate the past into a past-as-present that causes Krebs’s passivity and apparent disaffectedness.
Sex
He would have liked to have a girl but he did not want to have to spend a long time getting her. He did not want to get into the intrigue and the politics. He did not want to have to do any courting. He did not want to tell any more lies. It wasn’t worth it.He did not want any consequences. He did not want any consequences ever again. He wanted to live along without consequences. Besides he did not really need a girl. The army had taught him that. It was all right to pose as though you had to have a girl. Nearly everybody did that. But it wasn’t true. You did not need a girl.(CSS 112-113)
Sexuality is a crucial factor in this particular story and in the construction of our protagonist’s identity. Krebs’s sexual development is woven through the story’s background and foreground and mixed up with his inability to (re-)adapt to life as he once knew it. Harold Krebs’s heterosexual desires have a strong homosocial incentive. The college photograph introduces homosociality in the opening lines of the story, and the concept is naturally extended into the military. The second snapshot sporting two German women may seem to speak against this reasoning, yet, as the passage just quoted makes clear, sexual encounters were part of the army’s male homosocial regime. Heterosexuality becomes an extension of homosociality, and the latter remains in the background as a safety net–there is no need for Krebs to become committed to a heterosexual relationship, or to a female other, because wanting to have a girl is only a “pose” associated with the male world of the army.7

Assumedly, Krebs’s first sexual experiences take place in Europe against the backdrop of the war (this seems to be implied by the story’s opening paragraphs), which goes some way in explaining his unwillingness to make an effort to get in touch with an American girl. Back in Oklahoma, Krebs suddenly lacks the homosocial bonds that shaped his sexuality and finds himself facing a complex cluster of relationships he is no longer a part of: “But they [the girls] lived in such a complicated world of already defined alliances and shifting feuds that Krebs did not feel the energy or the courage to break into it” (CSS 112). Having lost the male bonds that shaped his life (and his sexual desire) thus far, Krebs is unable to substitute the proper American heterosexual matrix for the tightly woven homosocial fabric he is used to. In her discussion of Freud’s take on melancholia, Butler writes:
In cases in which an ambivalent relationship is severed through loss, that ambivalence becomes internalized as a self-critical or self-debasing disposition in which the role of the other is now occupied and directed by the ego itself.(Gender Trouble 73-74)
The loss that Krebs suffers upon returning home–the loss of the homosocial ties he had relied on since high school–becomes part of his identity structure. The ambivalence of his sexuality (heterosexuality as produced by homosocial desire), as Butler tells us, can only result in melancholy self-debasement. Freud was, of course, particularly interested in the development of sexuality in childhood–and Butler focuses on the same issue–but this does not make the idea of melancholia as a necessary component of sexuality any less relevant to Krebs. We will see that Krebs’s relationship with his parents is problematic, to say the least–which becomes most blatantly obvious when Harold flatly tells his mother that he does not love her. The crux of Krebs’s sexuality is a nexus of loss and melancholia that reflects the formation of identity in the Oedipal stage. Krebs, through the loss he sustains, relives an oedipal scenario in which love for the (m)other has to be disavowed in order to be deflected onto a different object. Only, in Krebs’s case, he does not find his way out of the triangle.
He Liked the Pattern

In an attempt to deal with life in Oklahoma, Krebs decides to step outside of social life; he becomes interested in patterns:
There were so many good-looking young girls. Most of them had their hair cut short. When he went away only little girls wore their hair like that or girls that were fast. They all wore sweaters and shirt waists with round Dutch collars. It was a pattern.(CSS 112)
The pattern Krebs likes to watch only becomes a pattern when observed from the outside. Only by remaining on the outside of society is it possible to perceive social phenomena as structures. “If the ‘I’ is not at one with moral norms, this means only that the subject must deliberate upon these norms, and that part of deliberation will entail a critical understanding of their social genesis and meaning” (Butler, Giving an Account 8). If, in her early work, Butler emphasized how the subject is constituted by the social norms that condition its emergence, her recent writing leaves more room for a critical subject, a subject that is reflexive and takes itself and its own emergence as an object of thought. Krebs, rather than studying himself, is not “at one” with the norms he inhabits and is therefore able to study those norms as an uninvolved spectator. The patterns he finds in–or, more accurately, imposes upon–his surroundings are problematic; his longing for structure seems to reflect the melancholic desire for that lost homosocial space. It is not a coincidence, then, that he likes the girls with the boyish haircuts8 and flat shoes, nor is it a coincidence that he likes them for the patterned regularity reminiscent of his own high school picture:
He liked the look of them much better than the French girls or the German girls. But the world they were in was not the world he was in. He would like to have one of them. But it was not worth it. They were such a nice pattern. He liked the pattern. It was exciting.(113)
The sexualized desire for regularity becomes apparent not only in Krebs’s observations of these American young ladies, but also in his pastimes: For one thing, “He loved to play pool” (CSS 112)–an activity harmless enough in its own right, but one that heavily relies on geometrical abstractions. Billiards demands the construction of an abstract mathematical pattern from the actual position of balls on the table. In “Hemingway’s Concept of Sport,” Robert W. Lewis commented on Krebs’s affection for games because of their patterned and inconsequential nature: “Truly, pool, motoring (as pastime), and girls’ softball are mindless activities that are patterned (carefully patterned in the case of pool and softball), just as courtship and ‘getting ahead’ are, but the restrictions or rules of sport are purely arbitrary and gratuitous and without pretense to meaning or significance outside themselves” (Lewis 25).

Apart from sports, there are still other patterned activities in Harold Krebs’s life, such as playing the clarinet (CSS 112). Few things are more mathematically patterned than music–and clarinets, like many other musical instruments, require knowledge of fingering patterns. Consider also that the clarinet was originally a German instrument that became very popular in American jazz in the early 20th century. The instrument even shares Harold Krebs’s ethnic background, so that one might go so far as to say that this instrument (the shape of which is perhaps too obviously phallic to be interesting) symbolizes a successful transition from the old world to the new that Krebs finds himself unable to emulate.

We are also told that reading plays a big part in Krebs’s life-pattern, and later find out what it is Harold reads:
He sat there on the porch reading a book on the war. It was a history and he was reading about all the engagements he had been in. It was the most interesting reading he had ever done. He wished there were more maps. He looked forward with a good feeling to reading all the really good histories when they would come out with good detail maps.(CSS 113)
A map is an abstraction from reality yet again, reducing geographic space to an interpretation.9 Krebs is attempting to acquire an overview of his own past, and finds enjoyment in treating his present surroundings in the same way. However, this approach to life leads only to a rational and abstract view of Krebs’s troubles. In an extra Oedipal twist, Krebs becomes exactly like his father–non-committal.

One of the most striking (and hence often remarked-upon) characteristics of this particular short story is the way Hemingway uses repetitions and parallelisms. In the middle section of the story especially, we find an alternation of sentences beginning with “He liked” and “He did not want,” occasionally varying into “He would have liked” or “He wished.” Wendolyn Tetlow suggests that “in the second paragraph the recurrence six times of ‘he did not like’ and ‘he did not want’ counterpointing ‘he liked’ in the first paragraph, creates a rhythm of ‘yes-no’ that parallels the tension in the story between reluctance and persistence. The rhythm makes clear the conflict between Krebs’s desires and what he is able to deal with, or rather, life as it is” (73). Others, such as Kennedy and Curnutt, point out that “[t]hroughout ‘Soldier’s Home,’ echoes of [Gertrude] Stein’s rhythms and repetitions infuse Hemingway’s style” (5).10 There may be a specific reason for Hemingway’s use of Steinian repetitions in this particular story, however; through the repetitions, the story gains structural unity because of the recurring pattern. The reader is forced into a position similar to Krebs’s, forced to read the pattern and impose meaning on the story. In imposing meaning upon a story, the reader is arguably caught up in the same desire for abstraction that Krebs suffers from.
Psychic Excess

The reader attempting to puzzle out the patterns in the story is not necessarily a social failure like Krebs, but he or she assumes a similar position of outsideness. If society can be read as a normative structure, and a text can be seen as a pattern, then this is only possible because the structure or pattern is not entirely self-contained, but allows for (or even produces) an “outside” to itself. Normativity necessarily conjures up the spectre of that which is not normative and laws always establish that which is not lawful–structural entities create an “excess” that is not contained within the structure, though it depends on it. This concept of excess is vital to linking Butler’s thought with Krebs, and puts Krebs in a different light–he is fundamentally tied up in the “pattern” he attempts to study, as the structure of society makes his own subjectivity possible. A person is always more, however, than the position society allots to him or her. In Butler’s account of subjectivity, social constraints always create more than they can contain–a certain “psychic excess.”

Excess, that which is not captured by norms and regulations, is already apparent in the picture that shows Krebs and the other corporal looking “too big for their uniforms.” If, as argued previously, this phrase has a sexual connotation, it may well show Krebs’s evolution into a more mature individual, both in terms of sexuality and of intellectual development. Krebs’s uniform does not contain him–the structure meant to constitute him as a soldier produces something more than a soldier. The American structure Krebs returns to cannot encompass him either. Krebs no longer fits in, and the ways in which he has “grown” in Europe lead him into passivity. Being and remaining outside of the pattern he studies forecloses any serious form of commitment. Turning his surroundings into an object of study, Krebs no longer interacts with them, or the people in them.

Interaction is precisely what Krebs intends to avoid: “He did not want any consequences. He did not want any consequences ever again. He wanted to live along without consequences” (CSS 113). Consequences are parts of patterns governed by causality. The pool table may be seen as a symbol of the workings of causality safely confined to a non-permeable frame (even quite literally); one ball causes another to move in a mathematically predictable direction, but its course will be stopped by the frame of the pool table and not prove of any consequence outside. In the case of human interactions, however, psychology and indeterminacy take over and consequences can no longer be accurately predicted. Krebs therefore resolves to stay away from intersubjectivity and chaos, and lives in a world of rational abstraction limited to predictable outcomes.

Butler suggests that “ethical deliberation is bound up with the operation of critique” (Giving an Account 8), implying that the subject who is “not at one with moral norms” and who deliberates upon those norms shares this position with the critic. This is not to say that Krebs becomes a cultural critic, but his outlook on society allows him to obtain a view of norms and patterns that the critic would be equally eager to tease out. Krebs’s delicate position on the margins of society will ultimately cause him to trespass against some of its most fundamental values. To reflect on moral norms is to assume a distance from them–only from a position of awareness can we sin against them; only after eating from the tree of knowledge, do we find out what constitutes sin–and thus we find ourselves outside the social field of paradise. In choosing to step outside the social field he enjoys observing, Krebs becomes more liable to break its rules. He thinks too much–such men are dangerous.
The Great Taboo

A dimension of “Soldier’s Home” that seems to have been downplayed or underemphasized in much criticism is the relationship between Krebs and his younger sister and, especially, to what extent this relationship might be justifiably thought of as incestuous.11
“I tell them all you’re my beau. Aren’t you my beau, Hare?””You bet.””Couldn’t your brother really be your beau just because he’s your brother?””I don’t know.””Sure you know. Couldn’t you be my beau, Hare, if I was old enough and if you wanted to?””Sure. You’re my girl now.””Am I really your girl?””Sure.””Do you love me?””Uh, huh.””Will you love me always?””Sure.”(CSS 114)
This whole dialogue may be friendly banter or innocent playacting, but conjures an incestuous relationship between Harold and one of his sisters at least on a discursive level. Add into the equation that “[h]e was still a hero to his two younger sisters” (112)–the hero that he could not be to his fellow townsmen–and it seems that Harold’s affects vis-à-vis his sister may not be altogether “innocent” by the simple moral standards of, for instance, his deeply religious mother.

Significantly, Krebs’s sister engages in an activity that can be called patterned,12 and she trespasses against a gender boundary whilst doing so, firmly treading on the homosocial ground of Krebs’s past. She plays baseball and, according to herself, “can pitch better than lots of the boys. I tell them all you [Krebs] taught me. The other girls aren’t much good” (CSS 114). Significantly, she is the one who brings in the mail and hands Harold The Kansas City Star, which he then opens to the sporting page. She even seems to have picked up on the interest this situation may arouse in Krebs and, when the latter is reluctant to come and watch her play (indoor) baseball, actively twists sexuality and sports into emotional blackmail: “Aw, Hare, you don’t love me. If you loved me, you’d want to come over and watch me play indoor” (115). The whole conversation between Harold and his sister takes up no more than a page, much of it space-consuming dialogue. After Helen’s first teasing sentence, we read: “Krebs looked at her. He liked her. She was his best sister” (114). The conversation ends abruptly (but by no means coincidentally) when Mother Krebs comes in with Harold’s breakfast (an invigorating start to a man’s day, consisting of two fried eggs, crisp bacon, and a plate of buckwheat cakes to be topped with maple syrup) and tells her daughter to “run along.” Mrs. Krebs interrupts the (mock) sexualized conversation between brother and sister, and emphatically addresses the latter using her first name. Not until this moment do we find out that her name is Helen. We never learn the other sister’s name, nor does she put in an appearance anywhere in the story.

The story concludes with the sentence: “He would go over to the schoolyard and watch Helen play indoor baseball” (CSS 116). Helen is here named here for only the second time in the story. All in all, she crops up four times in the story, with surprisingly regular intervals in between–a lovely pattern indeed. The first time, she is one of “his two young sisters” (112) and the second time she is explicitly focalized through Harold as “his best sister” (114). The contrast between Harold thinking of her as “sister” before their flirtatious chat, and his subsequent decision to go and watch “Helen” play baseball, thus seems tied up with the mother’s naming the sister. Mother Krebs names Helen in order to try and pull Harold back into normal family life, but it seems that, because of the concretization of “sister” into “Helen,” she becomes more attractive instead. It is her company Harold decides to seek at the end of the story.

If mere naming is significant, then so is the name itself: the mythological Helen (of Troy) was blessed with legendary beauty and a talent for seduction. The sexual attraction inherent in the name Helen may well be the result of her parentage, her mother, Leda, famously having slept with Zeus, in the guise of a swan. The name “Helen” thus carries connotations of illegitimate sexuality and a disregard for the rules that constitute a normally functioning family. Apart from that, she is alliteratively associated with her brother, who is not only Harold, but also a Hero to her. (This alliteration is emphasised by the line: “You run along, Helen,” she [mother] said. “I want to talk to Harold” (CSS 115).)

Interrupted at this crucial point, the conversation between Helen and Harold becomes the perfect situation for Krebs in being of no consequence. For a man like Harold Krebs, who wants no consequences, how can any conversation be better than an eroticized chat with his sister (in whom he can have no official sexual interest, seeing that she is his sister), about an event as confined as indoor baseball (if baseball is already appealing in its own right–being a sport–it resembles pool even more when played indoors, safely framed by literal walls to contain the pattern of girls playing sports)–a conversation which has no issue (because it is fortuitously cut short by the maternal intervention)?

Along these lines, I do not claim that Harold and Helen have an incestuous sexual relationship, but that the cultural prohibition against incest allows for a “pose” of sexuality that would strongly appeal to Krebs’s sensibilities. Their conversation would plainly be flirtatious if it did not take place between brother and sister, so it paradoxically relies heavily on the incest taboo not to be incestuous, and to become culturally acceptable. Even so, Mrs. Krebs does not seem to like it and quite literally takes the sister’s place in joining Harold at the breakfast table.
“I Know, Mummy”

The scene between Harold and his mother is the most painful in this story, perhaps in all of In Our Time. She immediately pulls him back into the world of consequences, the very world that Krebs thought he was successfully managing to avoid. “There can be no idle hands in His kingdom,” the mother pleads, to which her son replies: “I’m not in His kingdom” (CSS 115). His mother appeals to him on the same grounds Krebs has tried to leave behind: religion, sexual morality (“I know the temptations you must have been exposed to. I know how weak men are” [115]), and the standard American business life. Krebs disavows being in God’s kingdom, and emotionally distances himself from his mother and the world she represents: “Krebs looked at the bacon fat hardening in his plate” (115).13 Mother Krebs tries to persuade Harold of the need to find a job, and informs him that his father wants Harold to come and see him in his office (the office which must be even less “homey” than the home this ex-soldier finds himself in).
“Is that all?” Krebs said.”Yes. Don’t you love your mother, dear boy?””No,” Krebs said.(115-116)
When his mother starts crying after this brisk denial of affection, Krebs finds that his rather vague afterthought–“I don’t love anybody”–is of very little consolation to her. What follows is a humiliating mother-and-son scene harking back to childhood:
Krebs felt sick and vaguely nauseated.”I know, Mummy,” he said. “I’ll try and be a good boy for you.”(116)
It may seem odd that Krebs, an adult man who has seen some of the bloodiest battles the world has ever witnessed, can be induced to promise his Mummy (with capital M) that he’ll be a good boy for her. It may seem even odder that, after stooping to such overtly childish rhetoric, he is still not found willing to pray with his mother. On the other hand, the scene also displays the wholly perfunctory nature of Krebs’s consoling his mother: “Still, none of it had touched him” (116).
Indoor Baseball

The story’s final paragraph is dense and difficult. Krebs realizes that his attempts “to keep his life from being complicated” have failed, and he resolves to “go to Kansas City and get a job and [his mother] would feel all right about it” (CSS 116). His one and final act of resistance, however, is not to go and see his father in the office, but to go instead to watch his sister play indoor baseball. Lewis claims:
Once more in a moment of crisis Krebs escapes from social patterns and finds haven among the patterns of sport, and here there might seem to be some hope that it is a prelude to a more thorough and general escape, an escape to freedom outside the context of games.(26)
This interpretation is particularly valid in the context of Lewis’s focusing on the meaning of sports in this short story. From a more gendered point of view, however, I believe the ending is richer and more problematic. We have seen that Krebs steps outside of social structures in order to study them, and this is precisely the gesture he forcefully repeats at the story’s conclusion. Again he trespasses against the “rules” or structure of the family by not heeding his mother’s words and by refusing to turn to his father for guidance. He trespasses even further by returning to the link with his sister–a link that was, as we have seen, decisively interrupted by his mother and that we might describe as “non-non-incestuous.”14

Ultimately, Krebs’s refusal to go and talk to his father, and his decision to go and watch his sister, is a double sin against the pattern of the family. Krebs again steps out of normal life (in the sense of a life lived according to the norms) and enters a world that can only be described as a negative, as an outside. Seeing that Krebs remains in an uncommitted position–he decides to go and “watch Helen play indoor baseball”–it may be too optimistic to claim, as Lewis does, that Krebs “finds haven among the patterns of sport” (26). All four italicized words fall into the patterns that have been identified in this text. Krebs observes a girl who is his sister during a patterned activity in an enclosed space. This story’s final sentence becomes the climax of all Krebs’s emotional problems.
A Game of Negatives

In my reading of “Soldier’s Home,” I have tried to stress how identity, and particularly gendered identity, emerges within the context of a particular social setting. Harold Krebs gets into (gender) trouble because decisive moments in his life take place in two very different settings illustrated not only by the two photographs, but also by the English name Harold and the German-sounding Krebs. One setting (the home mentioned in the title) will not accommodate a genuine narrative about the other. The political criticism inherent in Hemingway’s text, and the aspect that I want to emphasize, is not only about the way war veterans are treated back home (although Steven Trout has shown that this is one of the story’s themes), but also about the impossibility of accurately representing the experience of war. Krebs’s time in Europe shaped his identity, but the closure Oklahoma tries to impose alienates Krebs from his own life-story. He remains on the outside of society and becomes an “abject body.” In a final act of defiance, he trespasses against ordinary rules of family life, and even against the very incest taboo that structures American as well as European communities. The imposition of closure on Krebs’s war narrative backfires, and Krebs turns against the one who most severely tries to impose it–his mother.

Because of the way he tries to come to terms with past and future (by studying the social context as a pattern), Krebs finds that “It was all a lie both ways” (CSS 113). It becomes clear to him that experience cannot simply be converted into a narrative. That narrative, oddly, becomes a less than perfect substitute for lived experience–something is lost in translation. However, reading “Soldier’s Home” through the lens of Butler allows us to see that this loss is a necessary condition for a narrative to emerge. Even if Krebs unsuccessfully grapples with the society he finds himself in, we do read about this struggle in the short story called “Soldier’s Home.” The story we read is thus, paradoxically, a narrative about the impossibility of narrating the truth about the war. It is a lie both ways.

Kennedy and Curnutt (6) claim that the line “It was all a lie both ways” (CSS 113) was inspired by Sherwood Anderson’s “The Untold Lie.” The line in Anderson reads: “Whatever I told him would have been a lie” (253). “The Untold Lie” and “Soldier’s Home” are indeed similar in the sense that they are stories about the impossibility of language–the only way to avoid lying is not to speak at all. “Soldier’s Home” is more subtle in its treatment of this theme, however, in that it acknowledges not only the impossibility, but also the necessity of narrative; Krebs finds himself compelled to lie in order to be listened to, even to the extent that his lies taint his memories of the war because he cannot translate his European war experiences into the pattern of Oklahoma. At the same time, however, the patterns of the story do come together neatly in the final sentence, so that the formal unity of the story is tightly maintained and brilliantly balanced. Even though Krebs’s identity relies on the experiences he does not (and cannot) relate, because of the incommensurability of the different settings, it is apparently possible to construct a story about his life that is formally patterned and seemingly “closed” while at the same time open-ended and uncertain.

The reading of this story is a game, in which the reader is pushed into a position similar to that of Krebs’s–facing a beautiful and exciting pattern, but unable to quite make sense of it. The reader is pushed to the outside of the story in the same way that Krebs is pushed to the outside of a society that cannot accommodate him or his story.
SOURCES

research paper

 
The Assignment – An Article Review

1. Select a research article from the WCJC online library.

Choose a topic to research from the list provided.
Find an article acceptable for this assignment. Finding an article may take you more time that it first appears.
The research conducted must be one of the following:
a survey
correlational research
an experiment (has independent and dependent variables)
NO archival research or case studies, please
The article must be in PDF format.
Write a scientific/formal review of the article (3-3.5 pages) summarizing the article in APA format.
This review will include answers to the following questions.

A. What is the hypothesis?

B. What are the variables? This simply means: what are they studying?

C. What research method was utilized in the study? Describe.

D. Who were the participants?

E. What is the summary of the findings?

F. What are the limitations to the study?

G. What could be possible extensions to the research?

Your task is to simply answer the questions in paragraph format. That is all. I simply want approximately 5 pages: a title page, the body of the paper (approximately. 3 pages answering A-G; an introduction and concluding paragraph), and a reference page. With all the instructions, this looks like a long and complicated assignment, but I assure you it is not. 🙂 This assignment can be quick and easy or it can be long and drawn out. It all depends on you as a group, and you as an individual member.

Cell Phone Charging Station

 
High on Professor Patzer’s list of objectives or goals for our course:
A marketing term project that leads-focuses-directs each class member
“to look inward, outward, and forward—to move upward” her/his career and life.
3 Options for Term Project Report:
Product — or — Company — or — Self
• Option One (Option #1): Product (existing, fictitious, future idea, yours or not,
“small-time” or “big-time,” local, national, or international, etc.)

• Option Two (Option #2): Company (existing, fictitious, future idea, yours or not,
for-profit business or not-for-profit organization, “small-time” or big-time”)

• Option Three (Option #3): Self professional/career or personal life (or that of another
person such as spouse, partner, friend, child, politician, star/aspiring star, etc
Regardless which of the above three options that you choose for your course project, each will require (for your final term project report) your thought-discussion of formal components of marketing strategy (as required for this course, see “Written Assignment — Term Project Report, Essentials”). Correspondingly, your thought-discussion will be required to be applied to your chosen marketing strategy plan “product” that will in-turn require:

(1) realistic-idealistic goal(s) stated precisely for your chosen marketing strategy plan “product”
(2) in whatever timeframe that you choose (and stated specifically)
(3) along with specific text (ideally with rationale for stated actions) about how to get from start to finish (i.e., how you will market your chosen “product” to achieve your stated goal(s).

Note: Marketing defines “product” to include tangible physical items, services, individuals, politicians, causes, for-profit companies and not-for-profit organizations, etc.

Please note these three bullet paragraphs of information:

(1) Each of the above three options requires the same headings/sections/topics in the form of a marketing plan, of course with different type of text for each topic dependent on option/focus chosen. For list of these required headings/sections/topics, as well as required length, format, and so forth, please see “Written Assignment — Term Project Report, Essentials.”

Important elaboration to above paragraph: All class members need to include each and every specified section heading/section/topic (and to do otherwise will result in less favorable evaluation of your report). At the same time Professor Patzer is well aware that to fit discussion appropriate for your specific project option/focus into the individual specified topics/headings can be difficult and can take thought and creativity on your part. To assist you, three syllabus supplements designed specific to the course term project is posted under “Syllabus” at the respective RU website URL for this course:

• Syllabus supp, Term Project Info 1 of 2, Options-Intro
• Syllabus supp, Term Project Info 2 of 2, Essentials
• Syllabus supp, Q’s and A’s 2 of 2, Course Project
Note: My term project product is a Cell Phone Charging Station, which is a machine with different type of cable chargers, that allow people who get die phones to charge their cell phones with out worry about carrying their own charger with them where ever they go. And the target market for this project will be the universities student, malls and shopping centers customers.
***Required Primary Section Headings (without Commentary) for the Written Presentation
(as pertinent for option and project chosen)
————————————————————————————————————–
See also, following section titled: “Primary Section Headings
with Commentary for the Written Presentation (as pertinent for option and project chosen)
—————————————————————————————————————

Title Page
Executive Summary
Table of Contents
______________________________

*Introduction — *Optional section
Objective [or Goal]
Competitive Advantage(s) / Competitive Strengths (and/or Competitive Weaknesses)
Product (including PLC/Product Life Cycle stage and considerations, if appropriate)
Price
Place / Distribution / Marketing Channels
Promotion / Communication (including website and social media, if appropriate)
Uncontrollable Variables (uncontrollable environments/environmental variables)
Market Segmentation / Target Marketing
Buyer Behavior
Marketing Research
Perceptual Map(s)
International Marketing
*Budget (expense, revenue, and/or net profit, generally and/or specifically) — *Optional
*Ethics/Ethical Considerations/Ethical Dilemma(s) — *Optional
*Conclusion — *Optional section
*Limitations — *Optional
*References — *Optional
*Additional Titled Section Headings — *Optional
___________________________________________

*Appendix A: Example of Print Advertising — *Optional
*Appendix B: Example of Audio Advertising — *Optional
*Appendix C: Example of Audio-Video Advertising — *Optional
*Appendix D: Example of Resume (if/ maybe appropriate for Option #1 Self) — *Optional
*Appendix E: Example of Whatever (that you deem appropriate) — *Optional
*Additional and/or Differently Titled Appendices — *Optional
***Required Primary Section Headings (with Commentary) for the Written Presentation
(as pertinent for option and project chosen)
——————————————————

Title Page (requirements to be included and esthetically spaced on the page):
• (1) Project/product/report title (short but descriptive with 20 words maximum).
• (2) Name of individual/author/class member.
• (3) Contact information with at least one or more working e-mail addresses, and other contact info if appropriate/if deemed pertinent or important by the class member.
• (4) Current date (normally the scheduled submission due date):
o Month Day, Year
• (5) Course number and course title as printed in the university catalog, current semester (such as Fall Semester 20## or 20## Fall Semester) and both the college and university names. For example:
o MKTG 406-10, Marketing Strategies / MKTG 406-30, Marketing Strategies / MKTG 302-24, Principles of Marketing / etc.
o 20## Fall Semester / 20## Spring Semester
o Walter E. Heller College of Business Administration
o Roosevelt University
• (6) Course professor’s title (Professor), name (Gordon Patzer) and degree suffix (Ph.D.) and professor’s university email address:
o Professor: Gordon Patzer, Ph.D.
o gpatzer@roosevelt.edu
• At the least, Professor Patzer requires all these immediately above items to be included, esthetically spaced, on the title page, however, if your judgment is that all this information is too much for your written project report’s cover title page, then include an immediately following second title page with a portion of this information as you judge best.
• After “Title Page” text, start next topic/section on new page.

Executive Summary (requirements to include regarding content and length):
• This section should be titled “Executive Summary” and should present a summary overview of the entire report’s most significant points/information/thoughts/etc. It should be neither an introduction per se to the report nor an attempt to summarize the entire report. Rather, it should hit each important high point of the entire written report, leaving the reader with as best as possible brief understanding of what was done, found, and/or what is proposed, projected, concluded, recommended, etc.
• The executive summary, also referred to as a managerial summary (and at times an abstract depending on context/audience), is frequently considered to be the most important part of the written research report because it is likely that only a very few people might read the entire report in detail. Higher-level managers will focus on the report’s executive summary and refer to the report itself only to seek additional details about particular topics that pique their interest.
• Length (in double spaced text) should be a maximum of 1 to 2 pages (preferably about 1/3 to about 1/2 page, double spaced text) and a minimum of 1 of 2 short paragraphs. Organize content into paragraphs and sentences with or without bullets as you judge best.
• Begin executive summary section on a new page, following either the title page or the table of contents page as you judge best for your written report.
• After “Executive Summary” text, start next topic/section on new page.

Table of Contents
• Length should be a maximum of one page that lists the section headings along with the respective starting page number for each section. Please note that while the entire body of your written report needs be double-spaced, the table of contents page can be double space, single space, and/or both double space and single space; all which might is acceptable for the table of contents section depending on the number of report levels presented, e.g., see our textbook table of contents.
• Begin the table of contents page on a new page, following either the title page or the executive summary page as you judge best for your written report.
• Like nearly all tables of contents, for this term project report the Table of Contents page numbers should list only the beginning page for each section/heading of the report and should not include all page numbers on which a section/heading of the report might be discussed. I.E., only the starting page number of the respective section headings/topics should be presented. You need not (and should not) include the range of page numbers on which the corresponding section heading/topic spans.
• Note regarding table of contents page numbers: You can either do this “manually” or “automatically” through WordPerfect; it is your choice in that it is good to learn/know how to use this automatic WordPerfect feature but to learn it initially will take a bit of time that you need not expend for this course term project. Ideally for your own long-term benefit and convenience and accuracy, but not absolutely necessary for this term project report, you should learn how to automatically create and change pagination as well as revised wording of sections/headings in the table of contents. Microsoft Word and such word processors all have this feature and its worth your time (certainly in the long term) to learn this automatic table of contents feature. Note: Depending on your computer program and related expertise, using this wonderful, ultimately time-saving, automatic feature may take some, or even substantial, trial-and-error time-and-effort for you to learn to use it.
• After “Table of Contents” text, start next topic/section on new page.

_______________________________

*Introduction
• *Optional section

Objective [or Goal]
• For Option #1 (Self), precise statement identifying or describing where/what you wish to be (professionally and/or personally) realistically-idealistically specifically in 10 years or 20 years (or, with special advance professor approval in 5 years).
• For Options #2 (Company) and #3 (Product), precise statement identifying or describing where/what you wish it (company, product, or population/market segment) to be realistically-idealistically specifically in whatever time marker(s) you choose.
• Additional consideration not necessary for this course term project: A real-world ideal would be to include articulation of marketing objectives that would be measurable, realistic and challenging, and could focus on building brand/product strength, market share, sales revenue, etc. Related, this section could include a financial forecast (one year, two years, three years, five years, etc.) encompassing marketing overhead, variable costs, promotional spending, sales forecast based on market objectives and profit-and-loss statements.

Competitive Advantage(s) / Competitive Strengths (and/or Competitive Weaknesses)
• Please see Professor Patzer’s respective Q’s and A’s document specific to our course term project for some suggested text concerning the opening one or two sentences or more sentence for our course term project titled, “Competitive Advantage(s),” followed by some specific illustrative text.
• A formal SWOT analysis as performed sometimes in other classes is not necessary. It can be included if you desire but it cannot be substitute for any of the sections/section headings required for this term project as specified in this “Syllabus Supplement, 2 of 2”document. You are required to provide text specifically appropriate for the sections/headings/topics required for this marketing course term project. If you simply include a SWOT analysis in substitute of the topics required for this marketing course term project (without writing or re-writing text specific for the required topics for this marketing course term project), your project report will be evaluated negatively accordingly.

Product (including PLC/Product Life Cycle stage and considerations, if appropriate)
• Description of “product” (individual/person, product, product line, business, organization, etc.) along with, as might be pertinent, variations, what models and why, what sizes and why, product mock-up, product illustration(s), etc. Also, ideally, why, which means the rationale that it is needed or wanted it the marketplace.
• Branding either can be dealt with here concerning product or within the promotion section.

Price
• State appropriate price and explain its determination (e.g., based on wants and needs of the consumers/customers/clients, cost, competition, push-pull strategy, image, or whatever). In other words, what price and why.

Place / Distribution / Marketing Channels
• Location, methods of distribution, where/how distribution is to be done, and description of outlets if appropriate, also why. In other words, what distribution/channel(s)/place(s) and why. Note that Distribution/Marketing Channels/Place are all the same for purposes of this course term project.
• If marketing project focuses on marketing one’s self:
o (1) Then the focus in the report will most likely focus on “place” rather than “distribution” or “marketing channels.” In this case, state geographical place(s)/location(s) where you would see your marketing strategy career taking you in terms of geographical location to live and work. This could be as simple as listing one or more countries (e.g., US, Mexico, England, etc.), one or more cities (e.g., Chicago, Phoenix, etc.) or a specific suburb or a small rural town (e.g., Galesburg, I) or wherever you would be willing to live or, alternatively, where you would be only willing to live. Try to be as specific as possible and include a sentence or two about rationale that might involve the employment prospects for your career interests and/or might involve personal-family considerations. In addition, if particularly pertinent or important or special, include mention of the “place” where your career/marketing strategy likely will take you to work (e.g., “the Microsoft campus in Seattle”–[which as a footnote actually looks like a university campus when I visited there], “the Google high-tech free-food hip design facilities in Silicon Valley south of San Francisco,” “a typical business office environment in a St. Louis bank that will then involve traditional business suit-and-tie dress on most days,” etc.). Also, of course, your particular career choice might limit you to a particular location (such as working in a family business might, or might not, force a person to live in a particular location; which as pertinent would be appropriate to state in this section and which stated reason would also be rationale for that location/place).
o (2) It is not likely, but if your focus on marketing yourself requires or involves particular or specific or unique or special means of transportation, and/or even length commuting, then, yes, include mention of means of transportation. Even if the transportation component does not involve particular/specific/unique/special means of transportation but you feel it is important for whatever reason to your report then definitely include such text.

Promotion / Communication (including website and social media, if appropriate)
• Branding either can be dealt with here concerning promotion or within the product section.
• Additional consideration not necessary for this course term project: Thorough promotion campaign could include promotion mix, objectives, slogans, appeals, media usage, non media usage, etc. Be somewhat realistic but don’t worry excessively about the cost of your proposed campaign. Again, try to be at least somewhat realistic, as well as creative and appropriate for your product. In addition, just a few promotion mix tools could be Internet marketing, advertising on television (local, regional, national) on radio (types of program, day part, etc.), on outdoor billboards, and in print, in-store displays (POP), sales promotions, PR campaigns, etc. In other words, what types of promotion tool(s) and why. What promotional message(s) and why. If pertinent, who or what type of spokesperson/communicator and why.

Uncontrollable Variables (uncontrollable environments/environmental variables)
• Discussion of positive and/or negative effects of such pertinent variables.

Market Segmentation / Target Marketing
• List potential market segments and identify which you choose to address at this time, i.e., the target market/s. Whether “product” is a tangible product, service, or individual/person, this section might include demographic and psychographic profiles if the selected target market(s) are individuals and/or other defining characteristics if the selected target market(s) are businesses or other organizations of some sort.

Buyer Behavior
• Buyer behavior (consumer market and/or business market as pertinent) to this project’s product. As pertinent to your project, say/write something concerning the buyer behavior such, depending on your project–accordingly, much of the buyer behavior section depends on your specific project and your target market(s).
o Examples: If your project is a business-to-business product/service then describe how companies most likely make or not make their purchase decision. Is it a committee process or a single person? Is the purchase though a purchasing agent or a department head and if so what department head? If possible, what can you say or generalize about the purchase decision maker: older or younger, educated formally or not, male or female predominantly or not? Special considerations/biases/perspectives the buyer(s) might have–conservative, liberal, cautious, care-free, frugal, etc.? Is it a bidding process? How important does the buyer (business) is past experience with its product/service suppliers? This section and the examples in this paragraph apply whether your product is a tangible product, service, yourself as the “product,” a not-for-profit organization/cause/etc.
o Examples: If your project is a business-to-consumer product/service then describe how buyers most likely make or not make their purchase decision. Is it a family decision, typically father, mother, children prompter, etc? If possible, what can you say or generalize about the purchase decision maker, his/her demographics and psychographics–older or younger, educated formally or not, male or female predominantly or not–I realize these demographic and psychographic characteristics might already be presented in the target market section and if so you would NOT simply repeat them here and you probably would not even include these items here IF presented in the target market section? Special considerations/biases/perspectives the buyer(s) might have–conservative, liberal, cautious, care-free, frugal, etc.?

Marketing Research
• At least very very rough estimates of market potential numbers, some speculative discussion about how many buyers there might be and/or how buyers feel or perceive the product and maybe the pros and cons of the best or worse marketing research method to use: secondary data or primary data and/or some other procedure (e.g., for option one, “informational interview/s”).
• Additional consideration not necessary for this course term project: Within this marketing research section include, analysis/thoughts concerning a particular firm/organization as pertinent, analysis/thoughts concerning pertinent firms/organizations in general, and/or analysis/thought concerning the product’s industry.

Perceptual Map(s)
• Plot product and competition on one or more two-dimension maps. This section needs to include one or more visual maps along (with a vertical axis and a horizontal axis, both with “bi-polar” descriptors) including related text discussion.
• Required for Option #1 (Self), Option #2 (Company), and Option #3 (Product)

International Marketing
• At least some mention of some international considerations for your product, which may regard either the immediate, short term, and/or long term.

*Budget (expense, revenue, and/or net profit, generally and/or specifically)
• *Optional

*Ethics/Ethical Considerations/Ethical Dilemma(s)
• *Optional

*Conclusion
• *Optional section
• After “Conclusion” text, start next topic/section on new page.

*Limitations
• *Optional–This section requires a “step back” look to objectively identify realistic limitations of this marketing proposed marketing strategy, which includes limitations of both this plan itself and the proposed marketing actions. Please note that limitations of the report/proposed marketing strategy may or may not equate with uncontrollable variables.
• After “Limitations” text, start next topic/section on new page.

*References
• *Optional–If pertinent, as appropriate.
• If you include references in your written report, please then do so with typically used/accepted reference citation format style: Reference/bibliography citations “in-text” should citations use, preferably, “author year” format or superscript number cross-referencing. “End-of-report” reference/bibliography citations should consistently use a common writing guideline style such as APA (American Psychological Association), Journal of Marketing Research, or Journal of Marketing, but other common styles are acceptable such as MLA, Chicago Turabian, etc.
• After “References” text, start next topic/section on new page.

*Additional Titled Section Headings
• *Optional

__________________________________________
*Appendix / Appendices
• *Optional
• If one or more appendices are deemed appropriate by you for your report, please title each appendix and start each appendix on a new page. Examples of potential appendices and title format:

*Appendix A: Example of Print Advertising for such media as magazine, newspaper, billboard, Internet, etc.
o *Optional. Very rough mock-up to be explained in both written and verbal presentation.

*Appendix B: Example of Audio Advertising for such media as radio, Internet, Podcast, etc., 30 or 60 seconds, possibly 10 or 15 seconds, with script
o *Optional. Very rough draft, ideally with audio, to be explained in both written and verbal presentation.

*Appendix C: Example of Audio-Video Advertising for such media as television, Internet, etc. 30 or 60 seconds, possibly 15 seconds, with scripted storyboard
o *Optional. Very rough draft to be explained in both written and verbal presentation.

*Appendix D: Example of Resume (if/maybe, appropriate for Option #1 Self)
o *Optional.

*Appendix E: Example of Whatever (that you deem appropriate)
o *Optional.

*Appendix F: Example of etc.
o *Optional.

*Additional and/or Differently Titled Appendices
o *Optional.

 

***Term Project Written Presentation: Required Mechanics
Required Length

• Maximum: 2,880 words (12 pages) to 4,800 words (20 pages) – number of words (not spaces) per Microsoft Word count feature – “body text” not counting title page, table of contents page, or appendix materials that might accompany the report.
• Minimum: 1,680 words (7 pages) – number of words (not spaces) per Microsoft Word count feature – “body text” not counting title page, table of contents page, or appendix materials that might accompany the report.

Required Format

• Times New Roman, 12 pitch, 1” margins on all sides, double-spaced (which likely approximates 240 words per such page. Note: Double space the text even though double space may look weird to your view.
• Nearly always, all text for this class project written report should be double-spaced except the title page, table of contents page, and maybe the appendices pages. While the entire body of the written report is required to be double spaced, the title page, table of contents page, and pages presenting appendix material can be either double spaced, single spaced, and/or both double spaced and single spaced, as judged best by the report writer/author. In regard to the table of contents page, the spacing usually depends on the number of report levels presented, e.g., for illustration see our textbook table of contents and/or Professor Patzer’s course syllabus table of contents.
• Body text within the report should be “left justified” and not full justified and not right justified.
• Pagination: Every page — Upper right corner pagination (in Arabic numerals style and not in Roman numerals style) on every page of the report along with a few key “running header words” identifying the report title/topic.
• Do not write report in “block style” / “block letter style.” This includes, do not “double double” space between paragraphs and, instead, start new paragraphs by indenting the first line of each new paragraph by 1/2 inch.
• Please note that all electronic submissions must be compatible with the university’s PC computer hardware and software (keeping in mind that even in this day-and-age, problems can arise, particularly concerning text columns and graphs, when prepared and electronically sent via Apple computer to a PC computer). The university standard provided to Professor Patzer is a PC computer utilizing Microsoft Outlook (for email), Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint), and Microsoft Windows (operating system).

Required Report Completion and Submission, Method and Date

• Completed term project report must be submitted by Blackboard submission (except for specific explicit advance pre-arrangements with Professor Patzer to do otherwise such as, possibly in rare cases, submit a paper-and-ink hardcopy).
• Specifically, all class members are required to submit (by Blackboard submission)–and in electronic form as an email attachment–the semester-long course term project with related written report to Professor Patzer by the due date specified in the “Schedule of Course” section of our course syllabus that is identified with a bullet designated:

• Due Deadline Written Item:
o Assignment with required Blackboard submission–due with rigid deadline of…–..see document titled, Written Assignment — Term Project Report.
o Note: The immediately above referenced document includes specific steps for “Submission procedure to/at Blackboard for this written term project report assignment.”

• Your term project report submitted to Professor Patzer to/at Blackboard in electronic format need NOT be submitted also in paper-and-ink hardcopy format. Both are not required for the assessment/grading evaluation needs of Professor Patzer for our class.
• Likewise, your term project report submitted to Professor Patzer to/at Blackboard need NOT be submitted also in electronic form as an email attachment. Again, both are not required for the assessment/grading evaluation needs of Professor Patzer for our class.

Note about your Word Processor “Page Breaks” and “Centered Words Within a Line”

• Regarding your “page breaks” within your report: It is not essential for you to do for this course term project, however, you really should learn how to insert “hard page breaks” after sections in which you want the report project to continue on the next page (rather than manually inserting a bunch of seemingly appropriate line spaces into/onto the next desired page). This is a super easy Microsoft WORD feature to learn/use and saves much time and effort at later times particularly if/when a person makes potential later changes in the report text.
• Regarding your “centered words within a line” within your report: It is not essential for you to do for this course term project, however, you really should learn how to center words within a line (rather than manually inserting a bunch of space bar spaces into/onto the line until the words reach the desired center location). This is a super easy Microsoft WORD feature to learn/use and saves time and effort at later times if/when a person makes potential later changes in the report text.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Regardless which of the options and corresponding focuses that a class member chooses, to strengthen her/his term project report (and accordingly increase its assessment by Professor Patzer) please include more-rather-than-less reason or reasoning, justification, rationale, explanation, thinking, data, and/or detail for your statements and thoughts presented throughout your report.

research paper

 
With this step in the process remember that you are not an editor, but a peer giving feedback. Consider asking questions instead of telling your peer what they should or shouldn’t do. This alleviates the responsibility from you and your notes.
You are expected to respond to at least TWO group member’s papers. These letters will discuss the strengths and weaknesses of their papers.
The letters need to be 1-2 pages long.
They need to cite the author’s paper by using quotes and referring to specific parts of the paper.
You may want to offer suggestions for places to elaborate and allow the offer to gain more insight into their work – see suggestions below.
Drop off the letters you’ve written in the drop box for week 2A.
Your letters will be graded by the quality of the feedback and how it meets the above standards.

Possible Questions to address in Peer Letters:

What is the author’s thesis? Is it effective?
How well does the paper develop?
Does it make note of issues and justify how they develop the essay? Does it reinforce the thesis?
Does the author truly analyze the essay or is she simply summarizing? What suggestions would you make?
Is there a discussion of sub-issues and does it take on the essay’s main argument? Is it effective?
Are there quotes and do they seem effective?
How does the paper conclude without simply restating the opening?

I plan to research a career in Human Resource field. Ever since I was a young girl I have always been very interested in the business field. As a high school student I am very lucky to be a part of the Business and Finance Academy.I still have a lot of &q

 
Research Paper
Parameters & Resources: PART I
AREAS of STUDY and EXAMPLES of TOPICS
A career that interests you as a potential career choice for yourself
A career in which you are deeply interested, even though you do not intend to pursue it as your own vocation
for example, a student whose family has a strong history in law enforcement or the military might choose that topic even if the student did not personally intend to enter the military or pursue a career in law enforcement
An area of intellectual inquiry and engagement that interests you deeply, perhaps an area to pursue in graduate study rather than a “career,” per se
for example, a specialization in psychology or a research area in physics
An artistic pursuit or skill area that interests you significantly as a hobby and that you wish to explore in depth through reading and research
dressage riding, surfing, oil painting, digging for gemstones, slam poetry, organic gardening, a tradition in woodworking, specialty baking
Your research paper in this class will address a topic of personal interest and significance to you. Your first task is to brainstorm ideas for topics and for possible angles on one or more topics.
To reiterate, one requirement—and a key to a successful paper—is that
the topic you explore must relate to you personally in a significant way.
Another key to a successful paper:
The topic you explore must be one you wish to learn more about.
If you are not open to new ideas about your topic, or if you are convinced that you know enough to write as an authority on the topic without exploring new ideas, then your paper is guaranteed to run into trouble.
And one more key to a successful paper:
You must not be so emotionally invested in the topic
that you are unable to consider it clearly.
[Re-read that last statement and think about it as you choose your paper topic and begin your research.]
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
You will use information from at least SEVEN different sources in your paper. The seven sources must include at least one scholarly journal article, one book, one Web source, and one non-scholarly periodical article (newspaper or magazine); you must also conduct one personal (face-to face, telephone, postal mail, or email) interview.
Use at least ONE scholarly journal article. Older journal articles are often just fine, depending on the topic. If you are considering the use of an older article and are not sure of its viability, just ask. Scholarly journal articles may be in print or electronic form. If in doubt whether a source is scholarly, ask me, a librarian, or a consultant at the Writing Center.
Use at least ONE book. E-books count as books. So do printed books. So do book chapters. (No, you need not locate an entire book devoted to your topic.) You may find a book about water recreation, one chapter of which is devoted to kayak fishing in the Keys. If you are writing about saltwater sportfishing and you find useful information in the book chapter about kayak fishing in the Keys, you may count the source as your book.
Use at least ONE source found online via the Web (e.g., through a Google search). This source need not be scholarly, but it must be credible. Do not cite Wikipedia. Do not use any source for which you cannot identify the publisher/sponsor.
Use at least ONE non-scholarly periodical article—that is, an article from a newspaper or magazine. You may use a printed copy or may use an article found online at a magazine or newspaper website. This must be a dated article.
You must conduct at least ONE personal interview with someone who is an authority on your topic; that authority may be established through formal education, through experience in the field, or through some combination of those and other factors. You may conduct this interview in person, by telephone, or by email.
In addition to the above five sources, you must use an additional two sources in your paper. The type of source you choose for these two citations is up to you—a book, a DVD, a pamphlet, or a radio broadcast, for example.
If you are not sure what kind of source material you have found, show it to me or to a librarian. We will tell you how to classify the source.
To review, your paper will cite at least seven sources total, including
at least one scholarly source
at least one book
at least one Web-based source
at least one non-scholarly periodical article
at least one personal interview
two additional sources of your choice
LENGTH
Your research paper will be 1000-2500 words. Aim for about 3-6 pages. (Note: This assignment sheet is about 1650 words.) Type the Word Count at the end of your paper’s text (before the Works Cited page). The Word Count will include all the TEXT of your paper—NOT your heading, NOT your title, NOT the Works Cited page.
You may NOT fall short of the minimum number of words; if so, you will earn a failing grade regardless of the merit of your paper’s content or the beauty of its style. If you exceed the maximum number of words, your paper should show evidence of being tightly woven and carefully reviewed. In other words, you’d better need the extra space in order to bring your absolutely brilliant paper to its natural conclusion.
In addition to the required 1000-2500 words, you will include a Works Cited page. Your Works Cited page is NOT included in the word count.
Do not include a title page. Secure the pages by stapling them in the upper left-hand corner. Format your document according to MLA style, using a 12-point font with serifs (like Times New Roman or Cambria), 1” margins, etc. Please note directions below for submitting the final copy.
Cite quoted material and information that you gather from outside sources and include in your paper. With very few exceptions, you should limit the length of quoted passages to fewer than three lines. Why? With rare exceptions, this paper is too short for block quotes.
You may use headings in addition to your title, but use them wisely. Headings do not take the place of solid organization. You may use graphics including photos, charts, cartoons, and the like. These items will NOT count toward your total 1000-2500 words.

research paper

 
My major is nursing. I am starting the nursing program in January.
Paper #1: A description of a CURRENT (within the last 12 months) topic or development in your field and an explanation of its significance to those outside of the field.
The paper will be in MLA format. You will need to read the following chapters from your course textbook to prepare for your paper:
Chapter 14: Preparing for a Research Project
Chapter 15: Doing Research
Chapter 16: Evaluating Sources and Taking Notes
Chapter 17: Integrating Sources and Avoiding Plagiarism
Chpater 18: Writing a Research Project

Audience: Students new to your major who have a curiosity or research interest in this particular topic but no prior specialized knowledge of the topic; your English 3311 teacher Length: at least 2 to 3 pages, not counting references page There are two basic tasks to fulfill in this paper: – to describe this topic or development as clearly and concisely as possible for the specified audience; in other words, to educate your audience about this topic as thoroughly as possible given the space constraints. – to make a compelling, specific, and explicit case explaining obvious and not-so-obvious reasons this development is important to the world outside your major. It may help you to think in terms of a little role-playing to imagine how this assignment might match real-world expectations: You are doing research or making something closely related to this topic. Your company, department, or division needs funds to begin your research or project. To be awarded these funds, you need to go in front of a group of people and provide them some necessary background as they make their decision. This could be an internal or external group: a board of directors, a grant committee, a government agency, a venture capital firm, among other possibilities. You can’t assume (ever!) that every member of the group making the funding decision is familiar with your topic. We need to understand and be responsible for the terminology we use given the audience for whom we write. This means that you need to decide for yourself how much members of the specified audience already know about the topic and its terminology, and how much those student doesn’t know. This will help you in turn decide what kind of vocabulary, detail, and tone will be appropriate for your writing. You’ll also need to decide what kind of research is appropriate for the paper. Many of you will rely heavily on popular sources for this paper, though scholarly sources will be helpful or necessary in certain cases. I will require in-text citations and a references page in the citation style of your choice. That references page should include a variety of source material, so that your reader will understand that you are not simply repeating one or two sources without considering audience and purpose. You will receive a provisional grade on this paper. If you choose to revise the paper, that provisional grade will be entirely replaced by the final grade.

Research Paper

Choose one of the following area for the topic of your research paper. Next, identify issues.
Then formulate a research question to guide your investigation. You will need to locate
information, use logical reasoning to analyze the information, and finally use your own values
and judgment to reach a position that will allow you to formulate a strong working thesis.
Below are some very general areas; all of them need to be narrowed to a specific focus. On the
next page and continued on pages 3-5 are examples of using research questions to narrow a
broad topic and to focus on a specific issue on which it is possible to formulate a thesis.
— TOPIC AREAS —
1. Body (health or athletics): Does a vegan diet help or hinder a person’s health or athletic
ability? What evidence supports the views of people who advocate veganism as a healthier
lifestyle?
2. Environment: Does raising animals for food harm the environment? How much and why?
3. Ethics (philosophy): What is the history of philosophers questioning human use of animals?
4. Spirituality/religion: What causes some people in various religions to reject all use of
animals, and how effective are they in convincing others to adopt their views?
5. Publicity: What methods have organizations used to change the attitude of the public
toward the use of animals? Which methods are successful and which are unsuccessful, and
why?
6. Commerce: What businesses have sprung up to capitalize on the demand for products that
do not use animal ingredients, such as food (including restaurants), clothing, or other
products?
7. Medicine and medical education: What activists groups and movements have evolved to
change the policy of using animals for research and other medical uses? How effective are
their methods?
8. Law: What progress in animal rights or welfare has been made using legal methods? What
are the most effective methods and which are the least effective?
9. Individual activists: Who are some of the most effective people who have engaged in
activism to gain better treatment of animals? Which ones have been most effective, and
why?
10. Movements within ethnic communities: Why do some people within a specific ethnicity
fight for animal rights as an extension of their own identity or culture? How effective are
they?
Research Paper Requirements
The following requirements apply to all topic options. The paper must be 2,500-3000 words
in length and must meet all the other requirements detailed below. It must follow MLA in-text
documentation and include a works cited list. For help, see the instruction sheet called “The
Process of Producing a Research Paper.” Also be sure to download and print out the “Research
Paper Checklist.” The purpose of the checklist is to help you meet the key requirements for this
assignment.
Research question and thesis. Formulate a narrowly focused research question for any option
you choose. Your thesis should be a well-composed sentence that directly answers your
research question. Your thesis will state your main claim and express an informed, reasoned
judgment.
Required number and types of sources. In addition to the articles by Cartmill, Regan, Cohen,
and Singer, your Works Cited list must include at least three books and three Internet sources
(for a total of ten). Your goal is to write a paper with eight to ten sources. Ten is usually about
right for a paper of this length, but no matter how many sources you have, the key to success is
to use each source in an effective way. Your list of Works Cited must include two or more
sources from each of the following three categories:
• the articles by Cartmill, Regan, Cohen, Singer, Foer, Frazer, and/or Walker;
• the books by Masson, Wise, and/or Foer (or any of the books on reserve)
• other sources, including both print and online sources.
Grading standards. The grade for this paper will be based on the following: (1) how well you
fulfill the promises made by your thesis statement; (2) how well you integrate clear, purposeful
summaries, paraphrases, and limited, selective quotations into your argument; (3) how well you
synthesize and contextualize your sources to frame your argument; (4) how well you appeal to
ethos, pathos, and logos in your argument; and (5) how effectively you draft, revise, and edit
your paper, including its overall organization, paragraph development, sentence structure, and
word choice.
Examples of Narrowed Topics Using Research Questions to Find a Specific Focus
SUGGESTED EXAMPLE 1
Research Question: How effective are the methods of persuasion used by authors who hold
strong views for or against animal rights? For example, you could begin with the argument
made by Masson in The Pig Who Sang to the Moon, and then build your analysis by contrasting
his methods with those of other authors. Or, instead of Masson, you could begin with Wise,
Patterson, or Tuttle. Or you could choose an author of one of the books on reserve in the
library, such as Adams, Marquardt, Linzey, Scully, or Spiegel. If you choose this topic area, you
would need to judge carefully which authors are the most logically appropriate to synthesize
and integrate into your argument. For example, if you use Adams, you would want to bring in
the arguments of Alice Walker and Marjorie Spiegel, as well as key points in Patterson. But you
would want to challenge their views with authors who strongly disagree with them.
INFORM: Present examples of the author’s means of persuasion and those of others who agree
or disagree with him or her. Include references to appropriate books in the library and to online
sources.
REASON: Starting with your synthesis of Regan, Cohen, and Singer, use the critical thinking
methods we have studied to assess the effectiveness of the arguments you decide to focus on.
Make careful distinctions between methods that are similar in some ways but have important
differences.
JUDGE: Use your judgment, which includes your values and experiences, to shape your views
as expressed in your thesis and conclusion.
SUGGESTED EXAMPLE 2
Research Question: How effective are the methods of persuasion used by organizations who
hold strong views for or against animal rights? You can find such organizations in the list of 1A
Web Links or the list of 1A Topics for Thought. PeTA is a prime example, but there are many
other organizations with different approaches. Sanctuaries for rescued farmed animals make a
good topic. Or web sites such as VegaTopia, SoulVegFolk, SistahVegan, Vegan Hip Hop
Movement, Humane Farming Association, or Vegan Anarchism (veganarchism). Go to 1A
Web Links or 1A Topics for Thought, or in some cases, to a subpage.
INFORM: Present examples of the means of persuasion and evaluate them using arguments of
authors who would agree or disagree. Integrate information from appropriate books in the
library and from other Internet sources.
REASON: Starting with your synthesis of Regan, Cohen, and Singer, use the critical thinking
methods we have studied to assess the effectiveness of the organization or web site you have
chosen. Make careful distinctions between methods that are similar in some ways but have
important differences.
JUDGE: Use your judgment, which includes your values and experiences, to shape your views
as expressed in your thesis and conclusion.
SUGGESTED EXAMPLE 3
Research Question: Find an idea that you strongly agree with or disagree with in Masson,
Wise, Patterson, or Tuttle. Why does this idea deserve our attention? Why do you support or
reject it?
INFORM: Present the arguments of other authors and important thinkers who agree or disagree
with the author of your choice, bringing in appropriate lines of reasoning and evidence.
REASON: Use critical thinking methods to argue in support of positions you agree with and
against those you disagree with. Bring in the views of other authors, such as Regan, Cohen, and
Singer.
JUDGE: Use your judgment, which includes your values and experiences, to shape your views
as expressed in your thesis and conclusion.
SUGGESTED EXAMPLE 4
Research Question: What causes certain people to become an ethical vegetarian or vegan, and
in what ways are their decisions wise or unwise? What similarities and differences can you
discover?
INFORM: Present details about the decisions made by people who have become vegans, which
might include famous people like Cesar Chavez, Ghandi, Dick Gregory, and Albert Schweitzer,
as well as people who are not famous but are known to you. Choose thoughtfully and organize
purposefully.
REASON: Starting with your synthesis of Regan, Cohen, and Singer, use the critical thinking
methods we have studied to evaluate key decisions and trace the causes behind them.
JUDGE: Use your judgment, which includes your values and experiences, to shape your views
as expressed in your thesis and conclusion.
SUGGESTED EXAMPLE 5
Research Question: Pick an important person in animal rights or animal welfare. What are his
or her contributions to an issue, the reasons for his or her importance, and what good or harm
has he or she has produced?
INFORM:

Present details about the person you pick. Some suggestions: Henry Spira, Dick
Gregory, Temple Grandin, Gary Francione, Amy Hatkoff, Marc Bekoff, Melanie Joy, Rory
Freedman.
REASON: Starting with your synthesis of Cartmill, Regan, and Masson, apply the critical
thinking methods we have studied to evaluate the decisions and trace the causes behind them.
JUDGE: Use your judgment, which includes your values and experiences, to shape your views
as expressed in your thesis and conclusion.
SUGGESTED EXAMPLE 6
Research Question: Why are the views expressed in Patterson’s Eternal Treblinka and Marjorie
Spiegel’s The Dreaded Comparison (on reserve in the Rosenberg Library) so controversial, and are
the objections raised valid or invalid? Begin with the controversies about the PeTA campaigns.
INFORM: Research the views expressed by people who have reviewed either one or both of
these books, compare and contrast them. Research online:
“Metacrawler”(www.metacrawler.com) is a search engine that searches all the other search
engines; it would be your best choice for this topic.
REASON: What causes you to agree or disagree with some or all of the points made by the
critics? Use critical thinking methods to assess the importance and significance of these ideas.
JUDGE: Use your judgment, which includes your values and experiences, to shape your views
as expressed in your thesis and conclusion.
SUGGESTED EXAMPLE 7
Research Question: What are the origins and the evolution of the philosophical ideas or
religious beliefs that underlie the views of Masson in The Pig Who Sang to the Moon, the views of
Patterson in Eternal Treblinka, or the views of Tuttle in The World Peace Diet?
INFORM: Present information on the philosophical ideas or religious beliefs relevant to these
books. You should focus exclusively on philosophy or on religion; doing both would be require
a much longer paper.
REASON: Use critical thinking methods to assess the importance and significance of these
ideas. You may argue your own position for or against any or all of these ideas, or you may
restrict your focus to the chain of causes and effects behind these ideas and beliefs. However,
you should bring in the views of Regan, Cohen, and Singer.
JUDGE: Use your judgment, which includes your values and experiences, to shape your views
as expressed in your thesis and conclusion.
SUGGESTED EXAMPLE 8
Research Question: How do views on animal rights appear in popular culture? What attitudes
and arguments seem valid, invalid, meaningful, or absurd? Why? Trace the causes and effects.
INFORM: Present information about how conflicts over animal rights appear popular culture.
REASON: Use critical thinking methods to assess the importance and significance of these
ideas. You may argue your own position for or against any or all of these ideas. However, you
should bring in the views of Regan, Cohen, and Singer.
JUDGE: Use your judgment, which includes your values and experiences, to shape your views
as expressed in your thesis and conclusion.
SUGGESTED EXAMPLE 9
Research Question: What businesses cater to people who avoid all animal products? Use a
search engine to find products or services that are specifically targeted to reach such people. Or
visit the web site for VegNews (www.vegnews.com). What is the significance of these
businesses?
INFORM: Present information on commercial activities aimed at people who avoid animal
products, covering the types of products or services they offer and how they have been able to
create successful business. You may want to focus exclusively on just one area, such as
restaurants that serve only vegan or vegetarian food.
REASON: Use critical thinking methods to assess the importance and significance of these
ideas. You may argue your own position for or against any or all of these ideas. However, you
should bring in the views of Regan, Cohen, and Singer.
JUDGE: Use your judgment, which includes your values and experiences, to shape your views
as expressed in your thesis
SUGGESTED EXAMPLE 10
Research Question: What validity and use do you find in “carnism,” Melanie Joy’s neologism?
Does it contain a socially useful insight that our culture could benefit from if it became widely
used, or is it a term limited only to her views and the views of a small number of people who
agree with her views? (NOTE: This topic is similar to Suggested Example 3, which asks you do
argue pro or con about an idea from Masson, Wise, Patterson, or Tuttle; the difference is that
this idea comes from Melanie Joy’s book and is discussed by other authors.)
INFORM: Present information on this neologism and its origins, being sure to contextualize it
and the author Melanie Joy. Begin by clicking on “Carnism” on the 1A Topics for Thought page
on the web site.
REASON: Use critical thinking methods to assess the information you present. Bring in
relevant points by the author’s we have read in this course. An important “conversation” (pro
and con arguments) can be found in the link to Wikipedia debate, where Joy’s neologism was
rejected (judged that it should be deleted from Wikipedia).
JUDGE: Use your judgment, which includes your values and experiences, to shapeyour views
as expressed in your thesis and conclusion.

The Research on Media Image of Ordinary People in China-taking the program the voice of chin

a
I study mass communication master degree.In this unit the professor let me initiate a substantial research project in a specialist media topic(I have been chose) related to key issues of media and communications .based on the research proposal elaborated in the Unit MED502-6(I will sent to you under ) Research Methods, approved by your course co-ordinator, supervised by an academic supervisor). Syllabus Content Workshops on the main research methods (theory and practices). E.g.: survey, content analysis, qualitative interview, participant observation, and visual analysis.
On completion of this unit you
should be able to:
Threshold criteria Assessment
No.
1
Critically evaluate the
theoretical/scholarly
approaches, research design
and methodologies relevant to /
suitable for an area of study in
the media.
Be able to select and use the appropriate
theoretical framework and methodology for the
chosen area/topic of research
Write a clear, and internally consistent
dissertation, expressing your research design and
critical evaluation of your chosen methodologies
in the form of an effective research
design/methodology statement for your chosen
topic.
1
Submit a research journal, documenting research
activities as they are undertaken.

In this unit you will develop research skills and communicative skills, in order to express your ideas to your supervisor, your unit co-ordinator and your fellow students, and write a clear and academic appropriate dissertation. Contextual understanding In this unit you will understand how to conduct a research, critically reflecting on theoretical frameworks and methodologies appropriate for an area of study in the media

Research Paper

 
Research Paper Instructions

In Module/Week 8, you will write a 1,500-word (5–7 pages) essay that addresses 1 of the plays from the Drama Unit. A minimum of 6 citations, including the primary source and at least 5 secondary scholarly sources, is required for this assignment. Before you begin writing the essay, carefully read the guidelines for developing your paper topic that are given below. Review the Research Paper Grading Rubric to see how your submission will be graded. Gather all of your information, plan the direction of your essay, organize your ideas by developing a 1-page thesis statement and outline, draft your research paper, and compile bibliography sources used. Format the thesis/outline, the draft, and bibliography using current MLA, APA, or Turabian style (whichever corresponds to your degree program). You have the opportunity to submit your thesis, outline, rough draft, and bibliography by 11:59 p.m. (ET) on Monday of Module/Week 7 for instructor feedback.

The Research Paper is due by 11:59 p.m. (ET) on Friday of Module/Week 8 and must include a title page, thesis statement, and outline followed by the research essay itself and your correctly documented sources page.

Guidelines for Developing Your Paper Topic

Chapters 41 and 42 of the Kennedy and Gioia textbook provide helpful pointers for writing about plays and for developing research papers. Be sure to review both chapters thoroughly before you begin doing any further work for this assignment.

Choose 1 of the prompts below to address in your paper:

1. Write an essay explaining how Sophocles’ Oedipus exemplifies or refutes Aristotle’s definition of a tragic hero. Review Chapter 34 in your textbook for the background and overview of Aristotle’s concept of tragedy/the tragic hero and drama. This chapter also contains critical information on Sophocles and the play Oedipus. You may use any of the critical material as a secondary source, but remember to cite it correctly.
2. Discuss William Shakespeare’s Othello, the Moor of Venice as a tragedy. As defined by Aristotle, is it correct to label Othello a “tragic hero” and to classify the play as an Aristotelian tragedy? Review Chapter 35 of your textbook for the background and overview of Shakespeare’s Othello, the Moor of Venice, and drama. This chapter also contains critical information on Shakespeare and the play Othello, the Moor of Venice. Also, see pp. 944–947 and pp. 1,112–1,115; this addresses Aristotle’s concept of tragedy and the tragic hero. You may use any of the critical material as a secondary source, but remember to cite it correctly.
3. Use evidence from Sophocles’ Oedipus, from Shakespeare’s Othello, Moor of Venice, and from secondary sources to explain why you agree or disagree with this statement: “The downfall of Oedipus is the work of the gods; the downfall of Othello is self-inflicted” (Should you choose this option, you need to read both Oedipus and Othello in full).
4. Discuss the author’s perception of death and the treatment of death in Everyman.

Finding Scholarly Sources

For your papers, you are only permitted to use academic sources. Resources such as 123Essays, Spark Notes, Cliff Notes, and Masterplots (or similar resources) are not scholarly and will not be permitted in your papers. To find appropriate sources, access the Liberty University Library through the Services/Support link on the course menu. From there, you can use the Library Research Portal to find peer-reviewed, scholarly journals. The Literature Resource Center is an excellent resource for these types of papers.

If you need additional help finding the right sources, you can receive help from a librarian in the Liberty library by emailing your questions to research@liberty.edu. You are also free to visit your local library or do some research on the Internet; however, make sure that you have credible sources. If you are uncertain, email your source to you instructor in advance.

Research essay/ summary through discussion

 
I need you to send the introduction part by Nov 8
The purpose of this assignment is to allow yo to actively engage in an area of clinical practice relevant to your branch which is Psychiatry Nursing, through engaging with research by conducting a literature review. Specifically you are required to:
1. Identify a patient/client nursing issue
2. Develop an answerable research question in relation to the chosen issue
3. Outline your search strategy
4. Critically analyse the literature
5. Summarize the literature through a discussion
6. Make recommendations for nursing practice
The assignment has TWO PARTS:
PART A (Assessed with Part B)
This section of the assignment is part of the overall mark for the module and is a pre-requisite to part B.
1. Identify a patient/client nursing issue that is specific to Psychiatric nursing practice
2. Specify a clinical/practice question pertinent to that patients/clients issue.

This section will take the format of a short essay to meet the above learning outcomes. It should include an introduction to your practice issue and provide some background as to why you have chosen to explore this issue. It should outline your research question which should be clear and concise, not too broad. This section should be supported with the relevant literature to ensure feasibility of Part B. NOTE: You need to show evidence of your search strategy with adequate literature.

This is an academic essay and therefore should adopt the appropriate writing style and format.
1. Word count: 400
2. Please use the format, Introduction, main Body, Conclusion
Assignments must be typed in times Roman Numeral/Arial font size 12 and double spaced as per assignment submission guidelines.
NOTE: I am in 4th year, Psychiatric Nursing. in Ireland. Please I will be in touch with you. Thank you. 2500 words for the whole essay.Part A which is Introduction is 400 words, then Part B 2100 words.Please I want new originality of my paper to avoid plagiasm.