ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY on In the time of the butterflies
Alvarez, J. (1995). In the time of the butterflies. New York: Plume Books.
As you begin the narrative, you would start off with the summary. What was the central purpose of the study or article? What was the central research question or hypothesis or what substantive question did the author wish to address? Summarize—in your own words—the major results/findings of the study and the author’s interpretation of these findings/results. You would continue the narrative by adding an assessment. What about this source makes it a valid and scholarly source? Finally, you would use the remaining section to discuss your source’s usefulness. Discuss how the findings relate—directly and indirectly—to what you want to address in your final paper. Do these findings and conclusions seem reasonable to you? Do you have a different interpretation of the findings or approach the topic from a different theoretical standpoint than the author? Each narrative should be 150-175 words—just about this size paragraph.
Grice, H. (2004). Artistic creativity, form, and fictional experimentation in Filipina American
fiction. MELUS, 29(1), 24-35. Retrieved from ProQuest database.
As you begin the narrative, you would start off with the summary. What was the central purpose of the study or article? What was the central research question or hypothesis or what substantive question did the author wish to address? Summarize—in your own words—the major results/findings of the study and the author’s interpretation of these findings/results. You would continue the narrative by adding an assessment. What about this source makes it a valid and scholarly source? Finally, you would use the remaining section to discuss your source’s usefulness. Discuss how the findings relate—directly and indirectly—to what you want to address in your final paper. Do these findings and conclusions seem reasonable to you? Do you have a different interpretation of the findings or approach the topic from a different theoretical standpoint than the author? Each narrative should be 150-175 words—just about this size paragraph.[unique_solution]
Morrison, T. (1993). Jazz. New York: Plume Books.
As you begin the narrative, you would start off with the summary. What was the central purpose of the study or article? What was the central research question or hypothesis or what substantive question did the author wish to address? Summarize—in your own words—the major results/findings of the study and the author’s interpretation of these findings/results. You would continue the narrative by adding an assessment. What about this source makes it a valid and scholarly source? Finally, you would use the remaining section to discuss your source’s usefulness. Discuss how the findings relate—directly and indirectly—to what you want to address in your final paper. Do these findings and conclusions seem reasonable to you? Do you have a different interpretation of the
Commented [AMF1]: Notice that this reference entry uses double spacing. However, the narrative portion uses single spacing.
Commented [AMF2]: If you obtain an article from an online library database:
1.If you have a DOI, provide that number.
- If no DOI exists, but you have a direct link, provide the link. Please note that links to online libraries are not direct. They require a special sign-on, which your reader most likely will not have
- If you do not have a direct link, use this format: Retrieved from ProQuest database. (You will have to chang
findings or approach the topic from a different theoretical standpoint than the author?
Each narrative should be 150-175 words—just about this size paragraph.
Nguyen, K. (2002). The tapestries. New York: Little Brown and Company.
As you begin the narrative, you would start off with the summary. What was the central purpose of the study or article? What was the central research question or hypothesis or what substantive question did the author wish to address? Summarize—in your own words—the major results/findings of the study and the author’s interpretation of these findings/results. You would continue the narrative by adding an assessment. What about this source makes it a valid and scholarly source? Finally, you would use the remaining section to discuss your source’s usefulness. Discuss how the findings relate—directly and indirectly—to what you want to address in your final paper. Do these findings and conclusions seem reasonable to you? Do you have a different interpretation of the findings or approach the topic from a different theoretical standpoint than the author? Each narrative should be 150-175 words—just about this size paragraph.
Stern, R. G. (1997). A few things American fiction says. Southwest Review. 82, 243-54.
Retrieved from ProQuest database.
As you begin the narrative, you would start off with the summary. What was the central purpose of the study or article? What was the central research question or hypothesis or what substantive question did the author wish to address? Summarize—in your own words—the major results/findings of the study and the author’s interpretation of these findings/results. You would continue the narrative by adding an assessment. What about this source makes it a valid and scholarly source? Finally, you would use the remaining section to discuss your source’s usefulness. Discuss how the findings relate—directly and indirectly—to what you want to address in your final paper. Do these findings and conclusions seem reasonable to you? Do you have a different interpretation of the findings or approach the topic from a different theoretical standpoint than the author? Each narrative should be 150-175 words—just about this size paragraph.