120 likes | 358 Views
Blending Quotations. The Basics. Always integrate quotations into your text. NEVER just “drop” a quotation in your writing! In other words, don’t let a piece of textual evidence stand alone as its own sentence (unless it’s multiple sentences long).
E N D
The Basics • Always integrate quotations into your text. • NEVER just “drop” a quotation in your writing! • In other words, don’t let a piece of textual evidence stand alone as its own sentence (unless it’s multiple sentences long). • Use your own words to introduce a quotation. • I should only recognize a quote because I see the quotation marks!
How To Improve Blending Quotes • Use only the most effective part of the quotation. • Maintain a smooth sentence style. • Use ellipses (…) when necessary • Remember to use brackets [ ] if you add or change a word. • Use signal phrases which precede the quote.
Example from TKAM • Original example: • Mr. Radley is an unattractive man. “He was a thin leathery man with colorless eyes, so colorless they did not reflect light” (Lee 32). • See how the quote is just “dropped in?”
Example from TKAM (cont’d) • Original — unblended: • Mr. Radley is an unattractive man. “He was a thin leathery man with colorless eyes, so colorless they did not reflect light” (Lee 32). • Smoother integration — well blended: • Mr. Radley is unattractive, a “thin leathery man with colorless eyes” (Lee 32). • The part about his eyes reflecting light is omitted as extraneous information, unimportant to the purpose. • Smoother integration – with a signal phrase: • Harper Lee describes Mr. Radley as “a thin leathery man with colorless eyes…[that] did not reflect light” (32).
Another Example • Original: • This becomes apparent when Hemingway hints of a storm on the move. “The shadow of a cloud moved across the field of grain” (Hemingway 179). • Smoothly blended into sentence: • The danger of the approaching storm became apparent, as “the shadow of a cloud [moved] across the field of grain” (Hemingway 179).
Student Examples from a Night Timed Writing • Original: • Now, as Rabbi Eliahu searches hopelessly for the son that had abandoned him, Elie renounces his faith completely. “In spite of myself, a prayer formed inside of me, a prayer to this God in whom I no longer believed” (Wiesel 91). • A suggested revision: • Now, as Rabbi Eliahu searched hopelessly for the son that had abandoned him, “a prayer formed inside [Elie]…to this God in whom [he] no longer believed,” and he renounced his faith completely (Wiesel 91).
More Student Examples • Original: • Night also represents the fire that killed so many people. “Just as the train stopped, this time we saw flames rising from a chimney into a dark sky” (Wiesel 28). • A suggested revision: • Wiesel suggests night represents death by fire as he and other passengers witness “flames rising from a chimney into a dark sky,” which are no doubt burning people alive (Wiesel 28).
More Student Examples • Original: • You start to see Elie’s disgust with himself fairly early in the book. “What had happened to me? My father had been struck in front of me, and I had not even blinked” (Wiesel 39). • A suggested revision: • Elie is disgusted with himself after his father was beaten right “in front of [him], and [he] had not even blinked” (Wiesel 39). He begins in that moment to question his own values, as his concern for his father appears to decrease.
More Student Examples • Original: • Throughout the book, most of the killings or horrible events occur during the night. “They must of taken him away before daybreak and taken him to the crematorium” (Wiesel 112). • A suggested revision: • Throughout the book, many horrible events including the killings occur during the night. Indeed, Wiesel tells of a man “taken…away before daybreak… to the crematorium” (Wiesel 112).