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  1. SOURCE #Intro to quote (look at options for subjects and verbs listed on the back) “QUOTE-3 or more exact words highlighted on your secondary source” (CITATION-will include the first word from your source card and a page number; if from a printed source, the page number is the page number from what you printed).Explanation of quote- at least 1 sentence stating what is important about the above quote; try to think how it links to back to your topic (what does it prove? How does it link to a detail already presented?)

  2. Source #2One critic states that “Cotton Mather’s account(of witchcraft) can also be read as a handbook of instructions for feigning possession by demonic spirits” (Martin 2).There is evidence of this type of outburst before, and the colonists knew about it.

  3. Source #2Martin claims, “According to Marion Starkey, Parris had a copy of this(Mather’s) book” (2).There is evidence of Abigail having access to Mather’s book, which reads as a how to for faking possession.

  4. Source #3Kim asserts that “Capote argues, none too subtly, that Smith had significant potential for a constructive life had he not been abused, neglected, and disenfranchised” (1). The mention of the men’s dreams coupled with Capote’s bias seems to indicate that Capote believes the American dream is not accessible to many.

  5. Source #3“The most interesting revisions in the ‘non-fiction novel’ are those purporting to correct factual errors. Capote altered numerical counts, for example, changing the number of churches in Garden City from twenty-two to twenty-eight, and giving detective Dewey eighteen assistants rather than seventeen” (De Bellis 1).Capote changes many aspects of the story for no apparent reason. These changes, even though they seem minor, make the story a work of fiction.

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