Literary Analysis Checklist
-Quotation marks around short stories and poems: "A Good Man is Hard to Find," "Cathedral"
-Italicize novels, plays, and novellas: Candide (novel or novella) Oedipus Rex (play)
-Provide the author's full name the first time--afterwards, only the last name
-Synonyms for literature: text, work
-Don't refer to Oedipus as a story--it's a play.
-You need a Works Cited page even if you don't use any outside sources.
-Correct MLA heading and header--last name and page number in upper right-hand corner
Clint Smith
Mrs. Bishop
ENG 471--block 3
21 November 2023
-Use present tense when writing about literature* Links to an external site. (There are a few exceptions)
--Parenthetical citations: Use page numbers for Oedipus because it doesn't give you line numbers. For the two short stories, you don't need a page number. You don't always need a parenthetical citation as long as you have referenced the author.
-Punctuation belongs inside quotation marks! "In A Good Man is Hard to Find," O'Connor illustrates that....
-Ctrl F for "This"--especially beginning a sentence
-Ctrl F for "talks about"--see Literary Analysis Handout Download Literary Analysis Handout
-Times New Roman, 12-point font, double space, no extra spaces between paragraphs
-Don't start out too broad in your introduction--no "since the dawn of time" introductions Links to an external site.
-No first or second person (No I, we, or you)
--the words "many," "different," and "various" are almost always signs that a writer is being vague
--Your essay needs a specific title, correctly capitalized and centered. NOT LITERARY ANALYSIS ESSAY
-Refer to the text(s)! Shorter quotations are usually better.
-Read your paper aloud before submitting it!