Directions:
- electronic copy: e-mail me at victor.leuci@westminster-mo.edu; the name of your
attached file should be:
- F13-215-P1-Last Name, First Name (e.g. F13-215-P1-Leuci, Victor)
- paper copy: bring to class
- length: 600-1000ish
- In-text Citations
- you must have in-text citations for your sources of information (facts, theories, parts of myths, etc.)
- every main body paragraph should have in-text citations (you want at least 2 good examples with citations per paragraph)
- Citing primary sources from Powell's text (i.e., the actual myths):
- make sure you include the following--the ancient author, the title of the ancient work in italics, the numbering from the ancient work, the modern author, the page number in the modern book
- it is probably best to work some of these into your main body text instead of saving them for the citation itself
- example 1: Hesiod, in the Theogony, notes that "surmounting his [Typhoeus'] shoulders sprouted the hundred heads of a terrible serpentine dragon" (824-825, Powell, 92).
- example 2: Homer, in the Iliad, has Zeus say to Hera "I should have known! It was your dirty trick that put lord Hector out of the way and made his army panic!" (15.14-15, Powell, 141).
- example 3: In the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite, 222-223, "Eos, poor foolish lady, neglected to ask that her lover might never be subject to aging" (Powell, 82).
- Citing the Norse pdf: use the number system given in the text, e.g. "It was Time's morning, When there nothing was;" (Snorre, The Younger Edda, IV. 4)
- Citing Powell's summaries or general information: Give the author and page number, e.g. (Powell, 70)
- Citing from Leonard & McClure's book: Give the first author and the page number, e.g. (Leonard, 70)
- Works Cited "Page" reminders:
- to save paper, don't put on a separate page
- in the same font, font size, etc. as your main text
- use hanging indents
- use MLA 7th edition (see syllabus for how the entries for our textbooks should look; see beginning of the Phone version of the Norse text for how it should look)
- entries for classical texts from Powell's book should list ancient author first, then the work (in italics), then the translator, ... Here is an example: Pseudo-Hesiod. Shield of Heracles. Trans. by Herbert M. Howe. In Classical Myth. 7th edit. Barry B. Powell. Boston: Pearson. 2012. Print.
- writing intensive:
- Don't forget to turn in the draft copy with my or the Writing labs' comments on it for it to count towards your revised paper total (and don't forget to make the revisions!)
- print this out and bring this to your writing lab conference and have the tutor sign here: _______________________
Write on one of the following topics:
- Powell gives several short selections from the Iliad that deal with Zeus and Hera on pp 150-151, 157-159 (Iliad, 14.314-328,342-351; 15.13-33; and 1.561-611). What do these passages say about how husbands and wives relate to each other? Reminder: restrict your evidence base to the specific passages listed earlier.
- Compare the picture of marriage given by Ovid (Metamorphoses 1.313-421) on pp 138-140 with that given by Homer on pp 150-151 & 157-159 (Iliad, 14.314-328,342-351; 15.13-33; and 1.561-611). Don't have separate paragraphs talking about Ovid's views and Homer's views; instead organize your paper based on similarities and/or differences.