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Pages:
2 pages/≈550 words
Sources:
2 Sources
Style:
APA
Subject:
Literature & Language
Type:
Essay
Language:
English (U.S.)
Document:
MS Word
Date:
Total cost:
$ 14.4
Topic:

Surviving A Wintry Landscape: “To Build a Fire” vs. “Blizzard Under Blue Sky” (ENG 2012)

Essay Instructions:

ENG 2012 Paper Assignment and Grading Rubric
The ENG 2012 paper is a close reading of one short story, or a comparison of two stories. Its length is 2 full pages, single-spaced, Times New Roman 12pt font (not 1.5 pages, not double-spaced). It is a thesis-driven argument in which you state your thesis early in the paper, usually at the end of an opening paragraph that contextualizes the story. A thesis is a concise statement of an argument, not a self-evident truth, which can be supported using evidence from the text. It is a position that you will argue rhetorically. 
Sample thesis (you need to make your own!): “An obvious contrast between London’s “To Light a Fire” and Houston’s “Blizzard Under Blue Sky” is the main character’s egotism, which affects his/her sensitivity to the dangerous extremes of cold environments. However, their different fates are less dependent upon personality than upon the equipment they carry, with Houston’s heroine able to survive because she is a consumer in an advanced industrial society of the late 20th century. London’s frozen man would have survived with the tents, skis, and freeze-dried meals that support her recreation in the wild. Therefore, the stories have less to say about cruel wilderness, and more to say about industrial-consumer goods, than is evident from the first reading.” 
To defend your thesis, you will have many options: quotes from the story, narrative and character analysis, and identification of themes, symbols, metaphors. A little bit of history or biography of the author is acceptable, but not necessary. It should not be a research paper with numerous citations. With only two pages, there is no room for filler, superfluous spacing, autobiography, or plot summary. 
: The ENG 2012 paper is a close reading of one short story, or a comparison of two stories/poems. Its length is 2 full pages, single-spaced, Times New Roman 12pt font (not 1.5 pages, not double-spaced). It is a thesis driven argument in which you state your thesis early in the paper, usually at the end of an opening paragraph that contextualizes the story. To defend your thesis, you will have many options: quotes from the story, narrative and character analysis, and identification of themes, symbols, metaphors. A little bit of history or biography of the author is acceptable, but not necessary. It should not be a research paper with numerous citations. With only two pages, there is no room for filler, superfluous spacing, autobiography, or plot summary. 

Essay Sample Content Preview:
Surviving A Wintry Landscape: “To Build a Fire” vs. “Blizzard Under Blue Sky”              What does it take to survive a wintry landscape? It all depends on who you ask. If one were to base it on Jack London’s “To Build a Fire” (1908) and Pam Houston’s “Blizzard Under Blue Sky” (2011), the answer is simple: one’s state of mind. Written over 100 years apart, London’s and Houston’s work details the story of two characters who decide to venture all alone in winter, in defiance to the advice of other, more experienced winter campers. While the two stories share the same story elements, there are a number of differences. One obvious contrast between them is the main character’s view of their self and their respect for the might of nature, which then affects their experience of the dangerous extremes of cold environments. Their differences in fate were sealed early on their journey, in the way they treated their furry companions, a representative of nature, and their only hope and support for the seemingly impossible feat.             Written in 1908, “To Build a Fire” is about a man attempting to cross the Yukon trail in order to join his companions camped several miles away. He begins his journey in the morning, his heart full of confidence. He knows that the climb would be steep and dangerous, and he notices the gloom in the air before heading out. “But all this – the mysterious, far-reaching hair-line trail, the absence of the sun from the sky, the tremendous cold, and the strangeness and weirdness of it all – made no impression on the man” (London, 1908). Read today, one would think immediately, “why didn’t he pay attention to the signs?” But taken in context, the man’s actions were not at all baffling. For one, the men of this age did not pay attention to “signs”; they were the modern man, they created their own destiny, and not even nature can deter them from doing what they think they can do. The character’s attitude is reflective of the consciousness of the time. The year 1908 is a golden age for the United States. It was a time of hope, the peak of the mindset, “anything is possible”. The United States, on the verge of becoming a world superpower, had its industrial systems on full steam. Forests were cut down to build more impressive homes. On the streams were the waste of newly built factories and mines. Nature was nothing more than a resource, a source of income that must be exploited and taken advantage of. The misuse of environmental resources at the time was alarming. In fact, as early as then, President Theodore Roosevelt was already starting to worry about the environment (Hampson, 2011). But there was no time for imaginings of a gruesome future; after all, this was the year that man finally conquered nature: with the creation of the assembly line, man could now reproduce products at an astounding rate; the release of Model T has enabled families to purchase their own cars and control their mobility. Perhaps the tw...
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