Guidelines for your annotations  (with thanks to Prof. Lisa
Freinkel) Each annotation should be no more than 200 words and should
cite the article or book chapter using proper MLA documentation
style. Generally you should
   - Avoid summarizing the article part-by-part. Your goal here is
   to explicate the author's thesis as concisely and clearly as
   possible. Details of the argument should only be mentioned when
   they seem necessary for understanding the author's thesis. A good
   annotation will give a sense of "what's at stake" with the
   argument. Why is s/he writing this essay? To what critical trend
   or presumption is s/he responding?
   
   
 - Avoid quoting the article. Occasionally a brief quote will be
   helpful to convey the author's position or his/her tone, but be
   careful! You want to explicate, not to re-cite. Be especially
   careful to paraphrase rather than quote directly if your author is
   using jargon, specialized or highly theoretical terms.
   
   
 - Avoid editorializing. Be as neutral as possible. Your goal is
   not to critique but to explicate. You are presenting an argument -
   not demonstrating its weakness.
   
   
 - Say something about how your expect to use the article:  how
   has it affected your thinking?
 
 
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