CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.9-10.1

By Anonymous (not verified), 16 March, 2026
This literary analysis focuses on To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee.
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This literary analysis focuses on A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle.
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The writer describes the book Rocket Boys: A Memoir by Homer Hickam, Jr.
By Anonymous (not verified), 12 March, 2026

Editing Literary Research Papers

Once you complete major improvements to your research paper, you can focus on every word, letter, and punctuation mark. Editing helps you correct errors in punctuation, mechanics, spelling, grammar, and usage. You'll also want to make sure that you have correctly used Modern Language Association (MLA) style. The following activities will help you.

Editing In-Text Citations for MLA Style

Whenever you use ideas or direct quotations from others, you need to credit the source. You do so to show who originated an idea, to avoid plagiarism, and to allow readers to explore the same materials in their own research.

All credits begin with an in-text citation that names the source and page number (if there is one) and refers to a complete entry on the works-cited page. The simplest citation names the title and author in the text and provides the page number in parentheses after the borrowed material, before the period.

In "On Faerie Stories," Tolkien argues that Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass are not actually fantasy because they are framed by a dream. Everything in Wonderland is unreal, and the reader knows that it is. Also, Gulliver's Travels is not fantasy because the tiny people and giants Gulliver encounters are in the Primary World, simply removed by distance (5).

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Revising Literary Research Papers

After you complete the first draft of your research paper, take a break. Then you'll be able to return to it and see it with fresh eyes. That's what the word revision means—seeing your work anew. When you revise, you check the "big picture," looking at the ideas, organization, and voice of your writing. The following activities will help you.

Revising to Elaborate Details

Your research paper should be more than just a list of details: First of all . . . Second of all . . . Thirdly . . . Fourthly . . . . Instead, you should elaborate ideas. You can do so by introducing a concept, looking more carefully at it, defining the terms you are using, giving examples, telling an anecdote, providing historical context, and so on. Note how each of these types of details further "unpacks" the concept, allowing readers to understand it more fully.

In the following paragraph from "The Mind Behind Middle-earth," note how the topic sentences introduce two main points, and the writer explores each point separately, using a variety of details to unfold the picture for the reader. Click on the callouts to view each part.

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Writing a Literary Research Paper

If you have thoroughly researched your topic, you should have plenty of information to share in your first draft. Relax. Your job at this point is just to get your ideas down on the page. You don't have to get everything perfect right from the start. Instead, write freely, exploring ideas, relating concepts, quoting sources, paraphrasing, making connections. Once you get your ideas on the page, you'll have time to work with them and shape them. Right now, you should just focus on expressing what you've learned about your topic and doing so in a way that makes your curiosity infectious.

Writing the Beginning Paragraph

If you're having trouble deciding how to start, you can experiment with different strategies for catching your reader's interest. (If you'd rather just plunge in to writing your middle paragraphs, go ahead, and circle back to this step later.) Your lead sentence will begin your first paragraph and help to introduce your thesis statement.

Write a lead sentence.

Try out some of these strategies for introducing your research paper. Read the examples for ideas.

By Anonymous (not verified), 12 March, 2026

Prewriting for Literary Research Papers

American novelist Zora Neale Hurston once wrote, "Research is formalized curiosity. It is poking and prying with a purpose." So, the start of a successful literary research paper is choosing a topic that really sparks your curiosity. If you want to find out about a specific book or author or genre or movement, your curiosity will make it easy to gather sources and discover what they have to offer.

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Reading a Literary Research Paper

Before you start work on your own literary research paper, you should read a paper created by another student. As you read, note how the writer analyzes his topic with a breadth of ideas and a depth of details. He draws evidence from multiple sources, including the fiction and nonfiction of the author as well as historical references. He also connects the literature to larger thematic questions about life itself. Click on the side notes to study these features.

Reading a Student Model

This research paper explores the meaning of the term fantasy, specifically in the works of J. R. R. Tolkien. The overall structure includes a beginning paragraph, multiple body paragraphs, an ending paragraph, and a works-cited page. The writer uses source citations as well as historical context and discussions of theme in the analysis.

By Anonymous (not verified), 12 March, 2026

Editing Character Analyses

After revising your character analysis, you should edit it for style and correctness. Now is the time to carefully review sentences, punctuation, capitalization, spelling, usage, and grammar. Use the following activities to edit your analysis.

Editing to Combine and Punctuate Sentences

When you combine sentences to create better flow, you need to make sure the sentences still have correct punctuation. You can join two sentences (independent clauses) together, but you need to use both a comma and a coordinating conjunction (and, but, or, nor, for, so, yet). You can also use just a semicolon.

Simple Sentences

Gatsby can’t change the past. Tom can’t make Daisy love him again.

Compound Sentences

Gatsby can’t change the past, and Tom can’t make Daisy love him again.

Gatsby can’t change the past; Tom can’t make Daisy love him again.

Leaving out the coordinating conjunction creates an error called a comma splice. Leaving out both the comma and the conjunction creates an error called a run-on sentence.

You can also combine two sentences using a subordinating conjunction (although, because, when, since, after, etc.). When the conjunction starts the sentence, place a comma after the clause. When the conjunction comes in the middle of the sentence, you usually don't need to set off the clause with a comma.

Simple Sentences

Myrtle is killed. Wilson loses everything else in his life.

Complex Sentences

After Myrtle is killed, Wilson loses everything else in his life.

Wilson loses everything else in his life after Myrtle is killed.