Comparative Writing
Comparative Writing
Comparative Writing
HSC Criteria
Elective 1: Intertextual Connections
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=
XCLML470y2I
Preparation
Thesis statements
The thesis statement is that sentence or
two in your text that contains the focus of
your essay and tells your reader what the
essay is going to be about.
This goes after you have introduced the
author and the texts and is a road map for
the paper; in other words, it tells the reader
what to expect from the rest of the paper.
Introductions
Main analysis
Method 1
Batman example
Method 2
You can alternate between the two subjects paragraph by paragraph. That
is, the first paragraph of the main body of your essay begins with one side
of the argument. The next paragraph deals with the other, and so on. You
keep repeating this process looking at another point in the comparison until
you reach your conclusion. This method allows you to discuss points in
greater detail, but be sure to keep alternating and ensure you continue
discussing similar aspects of each argument.
EG: Lemons & Apples
Para 1 Color of Lemons
Para 2 Color of Apples
Para 3 Vitamins found in Lemons Para
4 Vitamins found in Apples Para
5 Health benefits of Lemons Para
6 Health benefits of Apples
Batman example
Salient feature
Foreground of the frame
Background of the frame
Conclusions
The conclusion should give a brief, general summary of the
most important similarities and differences. It should end with
a personal statement, an opinion and the "So What" what's
important about both things being compared
It should leave the reader feeling that all the different threads
of the essay have been drawn together in a cohesive way;
they have learnt something - and they must be certain this is
the end not look around for missing pages. When you have
two radically different topics, it sometimes helps to point out
one similarity they have before concluding. (i.e "Although
_______ and _________ don't seem to have anything in
common, in actuality, they both ________.)
Example
Comparative Examples
Under Compare and Contrast BM find
examples of comparative writing
Example Comparative
essays
What structure has been used?
How many points for comparison/contrast
are made?
Highlight the thesis statement
What does the conclusion offer that builds on
the main essay/introduction?
Helpful tips
Warnings
One of the most common faults of a poor comparative essay is
that the comparison is not balanced that is when the essay
focuses predominantly on one of the two issues, and gives less
importance to the other.
Beware of the "Frying Pan Conclusion", in which you simply
recount everything that was said in the main body of the essay.
While your conclusion should include a simple summary of your
argument, it should also emphatically state the point in a new
and convincing way, one which the reader will remember clearly.
Avoid, at all costs, the conclusion that the two subjects are
"similar, yet different." This commonly found conclusion weakens
any comparative essay.
Helpful websites