Writer’s Workshop 1.4 Basic Style & Errors

Humanities 1: Writer’s Workshop 4, Basic Style & Errors to Avoid

For editing your writing I encourage you to find someone near you (perhaps a parent), who can read your paper aloud to you. You might think this silly, but I have had many students over many years express how surprisingly helpful this exercise is. Not only will the reader be able to critique and fix your writing, but you will also hear mistakes yourself and hear how your writing sounds when made physically manifest. You will be able to hear confusion and stumbling in your reader’s voice, which will clue you into either a grammar issue or perhaps clarity of expression or argument. Sometimes students are pleasantly surprised and sometimes they are unpleasantly surprised about how they sound.

You do not have to do this, but I strongly encourage you to do so. You are graded on grammar and related issues in your writing. A good first impression is always important; if your paper begins with a bunch of errors, it will likely continue that way forward. Consequently, your reader will immediately become skeptical of your writing and assess you more harshly than if your writing is clean of elementary errors.

It’s all a matter of respecting your reader. Consider that this textbook is presented to you with as few grammatical errors as possible. How would you feel as you are reading this text if there were misspelled words everywhere, misused or missing punctuation, incorrect use of capitalization, sentence fragments or run-on sentences, improper parsing of lists, etc.? Not only might you be confused, but you would probably take the activity less seriously, and also possibly respect me less as your teacher, since I clearly cannot take the time to clean up my work before presenting it to you.

This respect and self-respect of work is reciprocal not only for our class, but for all classes and even in your future career; if you present your teacher, boss, or colleague with work that is rife with errors, you will likely be viewed as inconsiderate, disrespectful, irresponsible, incompetent, and undeserving of opportunities like promotion. So, though you might think editing work is the least important step in the process of expressing your ideas, it is actually the most important. Cogency, fluency, and careful consideration are valuable assets in all arenas of life.

Thus, EDIT YOUR WORK!!!!!

To help you in your editing process, I have collated, over many years, common errors I observe on student papers. Below, I will present to you some of these errors in the fashion of a recipe for Key Lime Pie, mostly as a hyperbolic example of the issue. Following each “recipe,” I will explain the issue and show you an example of this same error in past students’ works.

(NB: all student examples are presented exactly as given by the student; all grammatical errors are preserved with no emendations made by me.)


Platitudes

What’s a “platitude”?

A platitude is very popular in political speeches and debates as well as in parenting (often poor parenting). Platitudes are often used by someone to give someone else the impression that the person saying the platitude is smart, wise, or well-informed. Platitudes are often subtly given as an alternative to saying something meaningful and content rich, likely due to the speaker have no meanginful grasp of available content.

Thus, a platitude is often a trite, meaningless, overused cliché (the worst of all clichés), aimed at avoiding deep thinking or critical insight into a matter, often to the end of quelling some potential social, emotional, or cognitive unease. Thus, these are popular among politicians who don’t want to tell their constituents their real policies or who have no substantial policies but do not want to reveal their ill-considered platforms. These are also popular among parents who wish to avoid talking to their children about possibly sensitive matters.

Some popular examples include:

  • Boys will be boys.
  • It’s all just a big hoax.
  • Go with the flow.
  • It is what it is.
  • It’s a witch hunt.
  • Nobody’s perfect.
  • You gotta do what you gotta do.
  • Make ___________ great again.
  • I believe in ___________ .

Why are these bad? Because they say nothing substantive.

To the right are some critically minded responses to such platitudes addressed to an abstract user of these platitudes.

Examples of Platitudes:

“Boys will be boys…” Okay, an apple will be an apple. So what? What is a “boy” exactly? Are all boys the same? Likely not? So then what do you mean by this?

“It’s all just a big hoax…” How so? What makes you think this? Is it really a malicious or humorous deception, or are you hyperbolizing? Is it necessary or appropriate to hyperbolize?

“Go with the flow…” Which flow? How does one “go with” this “flow?”

“It is what it is…” Basically the same as “boys will be boys.” Things aren’t always what they appear to be.

“It’s a witch-hunt…” Is it really? Are we burning someone alive at noon? Has someone been accused of doing evil acts with no evidence to suggest or prove the actuality of these actions? Are you a historically persecuted class or minority (women, LBGTQ, Jewish, some other ethnic minority), which has historically been targeted as a scapegoat for social turmoil? If not, I am not quite sure of how this is a “witch hunt” or the appropriateness of the term’s appropriation here.

“Nobody’s perfect…” Well duh. Thanks for stating the obvious. So what?

“You gotta do what you gotta do…” Do you really? Should you? How well conceived is this action which you “gotta” do? Why is it imperative?

“Make _________ great again…” Whether America or something else, what does this really mean? How will this be accomplished? At which point previously was _________ great? How was it great then and how is it not as great now?

“I believe in _________ …” Consider an American politician saying, “I believe in freedom.” My response: “Well I would hope so!” This is one of the fundamental precepts of American philosophy, whether successfully implemented or not. Why are you telling me this? It would be more important for you to express this if it was not expected, such as if you did not believe in freedom. Cannot this politician tell me something more precise and meaningful about what they want to accomplish as a public servant? What are they avoiding telling me, or do they just really have nothing better to say?


To the left is a practical example from a student’s term paper on the Ancient Greecian play, Antigone, which is about a young woman who defies the rule of a king to do what she believes is right (though it is debatable as to whether Antigone is right or not). Their introduction paragraph is excerpted below. is from their introduction paragraph:

To begin, Antigone’s disobedience was from her perspective that tradition should always be respected and followed regardless of circumstances. Her deep devotion to tradition and her beliefs were aspects she felt were not only worth fighting for, but worth dying for as well. This idea of being a martyr for her cause is still relatable in today’s world, especially in relation to war, human rights and modern-day religion. However, tradition is not the only reason that drove her to disobey King Creon. Antigone rebelled against the king’s orders because of family loyalty and fearing the gods’ law and its consequences more than she feared the repercussions of man’s law.

The emboldened part is the platitude. While this might be a rudimentary thesis, the serious issue arises when we get to the final sentence of the paragraph and realize the real thesis (underlined). So, then the reasonable question is, “which is your actual thesis?” As the assessor of your writing, I am justified in holding you to both theses; consequently, if you do not address one of these theses, your paper is only half complete.

The boldened sentence is totally unnecessary and clearly platitudinal filler to elicit in the reader a sense of cultural import regarding Antigone and scholarly wisdom regarding the author. Don’t just throw in needless ideas to sound fancy and profound; you might find that you have doubled the work expected of you…


Colloquialisms


What’s a “colloquialism”?

A colloquialism is a word or phrase that is not a formal or literary part of a language, perhaps confined to a dialect or lingual region (country, state, culture, geographic region, etc.). These are usually used in informal conversation but should be avoided in formal speech and writing as they typically demonstrate a lack of professionalism and suggest an inability to access higher vocabularies/fluencies within a given language. Generally, colloquialisms are not encouraged in “professional” arenas; thus, you are responsible for avoiding the use of colloquialisms in your writing.

Colloquialisms can be problematic, since they are typically confined to a particular culture or region. If I am not from the region or part of the culture from where a colloquialism originates, then I will likely not understand it and perhaps will totally misinterpret its meaning.

Take for example “to be shit” and “to be the shit.” If all I have access to is a standard dictionary, I will assume both of these mean either that something “is feces” or that something is as worthless or disgusting as feces. However, being somewhat familiar with American colloquialisms, I do know that if someone “is shit,” they are a worthless person, while if someone “is the shit,” they might in fact be a great person. For so many reasons, this particular colloquialism can be problematic if used in professional situations where not all people will necessarily know your nuanced understanding of the word “shit.”

Obviously, if you were unfamiliar with American colloquialisms and I told you that I am going to “bomb” my test, either you might ask for clarification or call the police and report a bomb threat.

For any colloquialism there is always a panoply of alternative formal expressions, better words that will equally, if not more precisely and eloquently, express your meaning.

Some examples of colloquialisms in America include:

Wanna – want to.

Gonna – going to.

Y’all – you all.

a “total game-changer” or a “game-changer” – something that fundamentally alters the dynamics of a situation; “pivotal” is a better word, and not everything is a game.

a “raincheck” – a promise to reschedule plans that had to be cancelled.

to “ride shotgun” – to sit in the front passenger seat of a car.

to “score” something – to aquire what you want.

to “trash” something – to destroy something.

a “ballpark” – used to describe something that is close to accurate.

to “bomb” – to do terribly on something, often in reference to a test.


To the right is a practical example from a student’s term paper on Antigone. The emboldened phrases contain the colloquialisms.

She got one past Creon” – What was Antigone trying to get around Creon? “One” what? Why wouldn’t he let her pass him?

  • A better version could be “Antigone felt like she had deceived Creon.”

MLK wasn’t trying to pull a fast one on the people” – What was MLK attempting to pull onto the people? How does one pull something onto a group of people? Was it a large blanket? Why did he have to do this pulling so fast?

  • A better version could be “MLK wasn’t trying to circumvent his supporters.”

MLK was in the faces of his oppressors.” – Really? How did MLK climb into the face of someone, let alone a group of people? Did he take his shoes off first?

  • A better version could be “MLK was candid and intractable before his oppressors…”

Note also that this excerpt contains quite a few platitudes, the worst of which is underlined. This excerpt also contains much needless verbosity, as seen in the first sentence. We will address verbosity later in this workshop..

Example of student’s colloquialisms:

This manifests the idea that Antigone rejoiced in the fact that she felt like she got one past Creon. This idea is completely different from Martin Luther King Jr.’s because he wasn’t trying to pull a fast one on the people of his community. In reality it was the polar opposite, he was upfront and in the faces of his oppressors and they knew what he was trying to accomplish. He did not hide behind a different set of laws, rather he followed his heart and morals to achieve the goals he set out to conquer.


Sesquipedalianry


Don’t be sesquipedalian!

Often to avoid colloquialisms, hide a deficiency in vocabulary, or just sound smarter, inexperienced writers will fall into sesquipedalianry. Don’t do this! Embellishing your writing with more advanced vocabulary can be nice and a break from monotony for an experienced reader reading your work. However, the insertion of such “precocious locution” should sound natural, being a present part of your style throughout and not overindulgent in any moment.

Use a thesaurus to find better words, but always double check their denotations and connotations. Sometimes while words might be similar, their definitions might have a critical difference: bake and scorch for example (a baked pie is great, but a scorched pie is not, though it was in a fashion “baked”).

Checking the denotation of your selected word can be important, since synonyms are not necessarily congruent and often contain important differences, which might drastically hyperbolize, mitigate, or transform your intended meaning.

Your Words Ooze Connotations:

Considering and/or checking the connotation of your selected word can also be important. For a classical example, consider the word “gay.” In a thesaurus, gay is a synonym for “happy;” however, most people in America no longer use “gay” to mean “happy,” and so you might either sound humorously antiquated or confuse your meaning by using “gay” as a synonym for happy due to “gay’s” cultural connotations.

A more prescient example today might be the word “discriminate.” Traditionally, one who is “discriminating” is one who can tell the quality of something or the lack thereof. One could be a “discriminating” wine connoisseur or art critic. However, due to the cultural baggage taken by this word when it was used to “discriminate” between the quality of a person based on the color of their skin, this word now has a cultural connotation that is quite negative. If you called someone a “discriminator” or “discriminating,” one might assume you are insulting this person or accusing them of some malfeasance. Thus, if you use the word “discriminate” or “discriminating,” you would be wise to consider the cultural weight placed onto the word (connotation), and not only its basic definition (denotation).


Surprise Quotations


The use of a quotation is more than just a requirement that checks a box on some teacher’s checklist. A quotation should be useful, clarifying, and contextualized by your own prose, NOT merely inserted somewhere you think might make sense and to an end that no one is certain of.

Your use of a quotation should clearly have a purpose in furthering the case for your thesis as well as be contextualized by your own writing, not inserted as a stand-alone sentence. When a quotation is inserted as a singular sentence without author contextualization, it is not as clear for the reader how this quotation fits into the argument.

For example, consider your thesis and the argumentative essay like a court of law. In a court of law, there are two sides to an argument, each trying to justify the merits of their side to either some judge or some jury. Let’s consider that you are arguing for the guilt of someone accused of murder. Below is NOT a good method to convince the judge or jury of your evidence’s worth against the defense:


A quotation should be useful, clarifying, and 
contextualized by your own prose, NOT merely 
inserted somewhere you think might make sense and 
to an end that no one is certain of.

1.

“Your Honor, I will now present evidence that demonstrates, without a doubt, that X is guilty of the crime of premeditated murder. Let’s first consider the scene of the crime. At the scene in question was found a shoe.”

2.

[prosecution presents shoe – (this is the metaphorical quotation)]

3.

“Clearly, this shoe demonstrates that the defendant is likely culpable of murder.”


If I was a member of that jury or the judge, I would say “wait, how does the shoes demonstrate this?” Even if it was clear, as the prosecution, I would be well served in clearly stating why this shoe is good evidence, rather than hoping that the judge and jury will successfully come to the same conclusions as me when simply shown the shoe. If you hope to win your case (i.e. write a good essay), you need to state a clear and comprehensive argument, not leaving analytical work for your reader (judge/jury). The work of analysis is yours alone. If you do not explain the worth of your evidence, your reader might interpret it as they see fit (perhaps misinterpret it altogether). Be warned!


Here are two practical examples from two student’s term papers from past semesters.

Student Excerpt:

King knows if he is going to argue the unjust ways of society, he needs to have the facts to back himself. “[W]e are confronted by a series of demonstrations by some of our Negro citizens, directed and led in part by outsiders…” “Outsiders” stands out to King (“Statement by Alabama Clergymen”).

So first we know that King needs facts. Then, you present a quotation that, for me, shows how King was “confronted” by protests from “Negro citizen,” which were led by “outsiders.” What do these two pieces of information have to do with each other? Maybe there is a meaningful connection, but I can’t see it. Then, you say that the word “outsiders” is particularly noticable for King (note that “stands out” is arguably a colloquialism). How does this word “stand out?” Why is this point important to the prior two, seemingly unrelated, bits of information.


Student Excerpt:

“Now I go onwards, my disciples. You too go now, alone… One repays a teacher badly if one always remains nothing but a pupil… I bid you to lose me and find yourselves; and only then when you have all denied me will I return to you… that I may celebrate the great noon with you.”- Fredrich Nietzsche. This quote about a student finding their own path to becoming a master the story of Siddhartha. “I will learn from myself, be my own pupil; I will learn from myself the secret of Siddhartha” (Hesse 39). Once a Brahman (the highest caste), Siddhartha chooses a life as a Sumanas in pursuit of his own enlightenment. After observing his teacher carefully”, he had begun to sense that his venerable father and the other teachers, that all the wise Brahmins, had already imparted to him the bulk and the best of their knowledge, that they had already poured their fullness into his waiting vessel, and the vessel was not full ” (Hesse 5).Siddhartha after realizing he will never become enlightened as a Brahmin decided to pursue a path as a Sumanas, a group of starving, half-naked, beggars in hopes that he could clear his mind and become more in touch spiritually.

DON’T ENDLESSLY CONCATINATE UNCONTEXTUALIZED EVIDENCE. All things should have a clear purpose.

While there are many problems in this example, I want you to pay particular attention to the emboldened phrase. Here is an example of an unnecessary quotation, likely inserted to fulfill some requirement of quotation implementation. There was no need to use a quotation here. The quotation proves no point to a thesis, only providing quoted summary information. Your summary should not be via quotation. You should cite summary, but quotations are not necessary for this kind of information. Quotations are for important points of exemplifying evidence to the justifcation of your thesis.


Bad First Impressions

What’s the problem?

Not much needs to be said for this. EDIT YOUR WORK. First impressions are important. If your essay beings like this recipe, your reader will lose all confidence in your argument, not care about what you have to say, and rightfully assume that what you have to say is not that important since you could not be bothered to proofread it. If you cannot proofread your work, why should anyone be bothered to read it at all?

RESPECT YOUR READER IF YOU WANT THEM TO RESPECT YOU!

If you do not yet know how to properly use a period, comma, semicolon, and colon as well as the various clauses which they might signal (dependent, independent, prepositional, subordinate, relative, etc.) you need to work through the Aegis Insititute Grammar Review.


Student Excerpt:

One of the many experiences that Siddhartha encountered was that allowed him to believe the difference between teaching and learning about wisdom and finding as opposed to knowledge and seeking is his experience with materialism. Initially, he started with the Samanas where they taught him the significance of materialism being bad; therefore, causing suffrage, emptiness, and a lost soul. They felt that materialistic objects did not fulfill them, hence they were satisfied with little to no items as their enlightenment.

To the left is a practical example from a student’s term paper.

I have no idea what the first sentence (a run-on sentence) means; it seems important, but I really can’t tell what this person is saying. This excerpt has numerous syntactical issues, not properly employing punctuation as needed.

“materialism being bad” – really? that’s the best wording you could do?

“suffrage” = right to vote. I think they mean “suffering.” Suffrage and suffering have two distinct Latin origins and are totally different in their meanings. Siddhartha was not about the “right to vote,” but that certainly will make an interesting thesis… (I hope they can prove it!).

“little to no items” – “items”? Again, word choice issue.


Misplaced Modifiers


What’s a comma for?…

This issue has much to do with the aforementioned common deficiencies with punctuation and syntax. If you don’t know how to properly use a comma, semicolon, and colon, you will likely fall into the problem of incorrectly modifying your sentence objects.

Let’s parse the sentence in the above image:


Antigone once made a pie for her father Kreon, though she didn’t even really appreciate pies, that he dropped on the floor and it made everyone sad.

  1. The comma following “father Kreon” signals that we are likely going to modify Kreon (this is a “subordinate clause”). However, I have said “she” following this comma. Now, technically, I am claiming that Kreon (a man, since he is “[Antigone’s] father”) is a “she” and that “she” (Kreon, a man) did not like pies.
  1. The comma following “pies” is either the break from our prior subordinate clause or a subordinate clause modifying “pies.” Since “he” follows the comma and since we already know that Creon is a “she,” and since we also know by the use of the word “her” at the outset of the sentence that Antigone is also a “she,” this cannot be the break from our clause (unless we assume Creon dual-gendered) but a further subordinate clause modifying “pie,” So, by this modification, I now know that “pies” is a “he” and that these “pies” “dropped” something on the floor.

Obviously, the “she” refers to Antigone and “he” to Creon, but technically they do not. While a good reader can navigate this, if the reader is unfamiliar with the play (such as you might be), they might become confused or misinformed due to these errors. Furthermore, if the reader is informed and knows how to write, such an error will signal to the reader either your lack of care in writing or your ineptitude in writing.


Student Excerpt:

Antigone humiliates Creon by transgressing his decree, and being a woman does not lighten his demeanor.

To the left is a practical example from a student’s term paper.

So by this subordinate modification after “decree,” we know that the decree is a woman and possibly a man, since by being a “woman,” “his” (the decree’s) demeanor was not lightened. Interesting!


Inappropraite Vantage or Voice


Following from the confused use of commas and pronouns from above, make sure your pronouns agree and that you are in the correct person (or “point-of-view”).

Point-of-View: Point-of-view is the angle of considering things, which shows us the opinion or feelings of the individuals involved in a situation. In literature, point-of-view is the mode of narration that an author employs to let the readers “hear” and “see” what takes place. In modern English, there are three “points-of-view” (PoV), which one might employ.


First person (FP) point-of-view involves the use of either of the two pronouns “I” or “we.” (e.g. “I felt like I was getting drowned with shame and disgrace.”)

Second person (SP) point-of-view employs the pronoun “you.” (e.g. “Sometimes you cannot clearly discern between anger and frustration.”)

Third person (TP) point-of-view uses pronouns like “he,” “she,” “it,” “they,” or a name. (e.g. “Stewart is a principled man. He acts by the book and never lets you deceive him easily.”)


So, what’s wrong with the example from the recipe above? Well, it is in a point-of-view no longer extant in English: the Royal Second Person (RSP).

Interestingly, royal second person still exists in many other languages, including most European languages, which you might have studied in high school. Do you recall the “informal you” and “formal you” from your language studies, if you learned a second language? Well, this is a vestige of the more common use of royal second person, during a time in which people would refer to nobility in an impersonal fashion. Now, with the decline of monarchies in the Western world, since the American Revolution, the need for this point-of-view as well as the social acceptability in using it or requiring it have nearly disappeared.


Second-Person vs. Royal Second-Person

Imagine if you met the President of America.

Second-Person: In greeting, you would likely say

“Hello Mr./Ms. President. How are you doing?”

Royal Second-Person: You would likely NOT say,

“Hello Mr./Ms. President. How is yourself doing?”


While point-of-view mistakes happen all the time between the commonly used PoV’s, people who speak a first language that still has the “formal you” (such as Spanish and German) will also sometimes fall into this unusual archaism.

The use of “you” (informal second person) is also not great for professional writing, unless addressed to a very specific person (a letter, for example). Generally, attempt to use third person either with gendered or ungendered pronouns as appropriate (he/she/ze/they/one). Second person should be AVOIDED unless there is a clearly good reason to use it.


Take for example these worse and better options between RSP, SP, TP, and FP:

Generally Inappropriate:

Royal First Person = “We have disappointed ourselves and others to an extreme that we cannot come back from”

Royal Second Person = “Yourself has disappointed yourself and other to an extreme, back from which yourself cannot come.

Second Person = “You have disappointed yourself and other to an extreme that you cannot come back from” (Okay, but non-optimal)

Generally Appropriate:

Third Person (gendered) = “She/he has disappointed herself/hismself and others to an extreme, back from which she/he cannot come.”

Third Person (ungendered) = “One/xe has (they have) disappointed oneself/zeself (themself) and others to an extreme, back from which one/xe (they) cannot come.”

First Person = “I have disappointed myself and others to an extreme, back from which one I cannot come.”

Note on Gender Neutral Pronouns:

If one wishes to use pronouns that lack gender, the classical choice is “one.” However, there are more modern choices that have been developed over the past decased. Consider the below chart.

Generally, in this textbook, if we use a first-person gender-neutral pronoun, we will use xe/xem/xyrs; however “one” will be used for a general third-person pronoun in place of “you.”

Student Excerpt:

“While failure plays the role of an educator in life, I am left wondering if there is ever a point where we have disappointed yourself and others to an extreme that we cannot come back from? Siddhartha finds fascination in the river as it is always moving yet always the same. Do you believe that we will always be the same inside despite how lost we become?”

To the left is a practical example from a student’s term paper. A corrected version of this with the point of view changed could be:

While failure plays the role of an educator in life, one is left wondering if there is ever a point at which one disappoints one's self and others to an extreme that one cannot come back from it? Siddhartha finds fascination in the river as it is always moving yet always the same. Should one believe that one will always be the same inside despite how lost one becomes?

A wholly better, less garbled version of this passage could be as follows:

While we can learn much from our own failures, there is the potential that too much or too great a failure will irrepribly destory rather than teach. Is it reasonable to believe that one will never gown or change despite their failures?

Note that the sentence on Siddhartha removed since it is not clearly related to failure; the author has not explained this point of evidence. One should always explain their evidence and shgow how it relates or demonstrates one's point.

Cliché Introductions


NEVER EVER NEVER NEVER EVER NEVER NEVER NEVER EVER NEVER START WITH A DEFINITION!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Do not start anything you do henceforth with a definition of a word. Whether you know it or not, whether or not your high school valedictorian does this in xyr graduate speech (yep, it particularly happens there a lot), this kind of introduction is a MAJOR CLICHE. If this surprises you, please just google search “should I start an essay with a definition.”

DON’T DO IT!

In professional writing, the use of such blatant and well-known clichés will signal to any educated person that you are not a good writer or speaker.

Furthermore, don’t start anything you do henceforth with some variation of the phrase “since the dawn of time.” Some variations include but are not limited to:

  • Since the dawn of time…
  • Throughout human history…
  • Through the course of human history…
  • Since the time of ____________ …

The Five Introductions to Avoid:

Example:

Webster’s dictionary defines catharsis as “a purification or purgation [of the emotions] that brings about spiritual renewal or release from tension."

1. The Webster’s Dictionary introduction. This introduction begins by giving the dictionary definition of one or more of the words in the assigned question. Anyone can look a word up in the dictionary and copy down what Webster says. If you want to open with a discussion of an important term, it may be far more interesting for you (and your reader) if you develop your own definition of the term in the specific context of your class and assignment. You may also be able to use a definition from one of the sources you’ve been reading for class. Also recognize that the dictionary is also not a particularly authoritative work—it doesn’t take into account the context of your course and doesn’t offer particularly detailed information. If you feel that you must seek out an authority, try to find one that is very relevant and specific. Perhaps a quotation from a source reading might prove better? Dictionary introductions are also ineffective simply because they are so overused. Instructors may see a great many papers that begin in this way, greatly decreasing the dramatic impact that any one of those papers will have.


Example:

Antigone was a very important play in ancient Athens. It won many awards and was very cathartic for the people who saw it. The play and its characters addressed many important social issues.

2. The placeholder introduction. When you don’t have much to say on a given topic, it is easy to create this kind of introduction. Essentially, this kind of weaker introduction contains several sentences that are vague and don’t really say much. They exist just to take up the “introduction space” in your paper. If you had something more effective to say, you would probably say it, but in the meantime this paragraph is just a place holder.


Example:

A hundred years after Antigone was first performed, Aristotle described the concept of Catharsis as an emotional purge of fear and pity in which the audience, by experiencing these bad feelings while watching the play, purged themselves of their own such feelings. Using Sophocles as one of his primary models, Aristotle argued that a character must be endowed with both good and bad qualities to gain the audience’s sympathy and achieve catharsis. Antigone, in Sophocles' eponymous play, most elicits one's sympathy and helps achieve catharsis through her noble yet flawed nature. This catharsis is well facilitated for a modern audience.

3. The restated question introduction. Restating the question can sometimes be an effective strategy, but it can be easy to stop at JUST restating the question instead of offering a more specific, interesting introduction to your paper. The professor or teaching assistant wrote your question and will be reading many essays in response to it—he or she does not need to read a whole paragraph that simply restates the question.


Example:

Since the dawn of man (Since the time of ancient Greece, etc.), the act of catharsis has been extremely important for not only the emotional and spiritual health of the individual but also the health of a society.

4. The “dawn of man” introduction. This kind of introduction generally makes broad, sweeping statements about the relevance of this topic since the beginning of time, throughout the world, etc. It is usually very general (similar to the placeholder introduction) and fails to connect to the thesis. It may employ clichés—the phrases “the dawn of man” and “throughout human history” are examples, and it’s hard to imagine a time when starting with one of these would work. Instructors often find them extremely annoying.


Example:

Sophocles wrote his tragic play, Antigone, around 442 BCE in ancient Athens. In it, he tells the tragic story of the house of Oedipus following a great civil war in Thebes, concluding with the martyrdom of Antigone by the hubris of King Creon.

5. The book report introduction. This introduction is what you had to do for your elementary school book reports. It gives the name and author of the book you are writing about, tells what the book is about, and offers other basic facts about the book. You might resort to this sort of introduction when you are trying to fill space because it’s a familiar, comfortable format. It is ineffective because it offers details that your reader probably already knows and that are irrelevant to the thesis.


Here is a practical example from a student’s term paper comparing civil disobedience as practiced by Martin Luther King Jr. and Antigone. The example on the left is the student’s introduction using the “Webster’s Dictionary cliche”; the one on the right is an example your teacher has crafted. The professional example talks about a concept (namely the word “civil disobedience”) but does so in a way that shows us something interesting and relevant about the word that the reader might not have known or had easy access to (as they do have easy access to the definition of words via the internet or a deictionary).

A poor and hackneyed intro using the “dictionary cliché”:

Civil Disobedience, as defined by Merriam-Webster, is the refusal to obey governmental demands or commands especially as a nonviolent way of forcing concessions from the government. Sophocles’ main character Antigone and Martin Luther King Jr. both embody this term through their own actions driven by their moral and values.

A thoughtful and interesting intro, similar the dictionary cliché but better:

The term “civil disobedience” was introduced into the English lexicon by famous transcendentalist poet and author Henry David Thoreau as a protest against the Mexican-American War. However, this concept had been used long before Thoreau coined it, dating back to events such as the Boston Tea Party, and can be found in ancient Greek plays. Civil disobedience consists of two parts: violation of the law and non-violence. Individuals or groups typically use civil disobedience to protest unjust laws or regimes, such as how Mahatma Gandhi demonstrated against the salt tax and British occupation of India. Sophocles’ Antigone used civil disobedience to bury her brother against royal decree so that her soul would be saved in the afterlife. Martin Luther King Jr. staged sit-ins, boycotts, and marches in the name of racial equality in the United States. Martin Luther King Jr. and Antigone both sought to do what was just, following their morals to defy existing institutions. However, King was far more successful at achieving his goal because of the wide base of support of his tactics and his ability to mobilize a large population for a common good.

Its okay to talk about words and concepts in introduction, but do so in a thoughtful way that does not thoughtlessly outsource the work to Webster’s dictionary.

For more help in crafting an good introduction see this link: