Category: Chicago / Turabian

Simon & Gilbert Response

Task:

Holocaust survivor memoirs have the ability to shed light on a variety of experiences during the war.  While many memoirs center on survival in the camps, those who were rescued, and those who were the rescuers, there are few first-hand accounts that center on those who hid from the Nazis in plain slight or who were able to fight back and survived.  In both Marie Jalowicz Simons Underground in Berlin: A Young Womans Extraordinary Tale of Survival in the Heart of Nazi Germany and Joanne D. Gilberts Women of Valor: Polish Jewish Resisters to the Third Reich, the extraordinary experiences of five Jewish women in the Holocaust shed light on how acts of resistance that were both small and large were carried out by individuals who were the least likely to be suspected of defying the Nazi regime.  For these women, they not only recount their wartime experiences including the trauma and trials, but more importantly they disclose the lives they were able to build in spite of the hardships they endured under the Third Reich.  Together, their stories of survival offers the reader an opportunity to bear witness to a traumatic and dark period in modern history where choices seem to be punctuated by moments of luck, chance, and fate that seem to differ by the hour.  As each of these authors struggles to recount their own experiences, their reflections allow for a deeper contemplation that questions survival, human behavior, despair, and morality not only during the Nazi genocide, but well beyond the time period of 1933 1945.  For this paper you are to address the following parts in a well constructed analytical response essay (4 6 pages), using specific evidence from both books and any additional sources made available on Canvas.  The following may be used as a formatting guide if you wish to use it:

Introduction: 2 3 paragraphs

Identify the books, authors, and the background/setting of their experiences
Thesis statement: What are you going to be talking about in this paper and why?
What is significant about the subject matter/titles?

Part I: 3 4 pages

What motivated these women to resist?
What were some of obstacles, circumstances that each of the women faced in their attempt to survive? 
How were these women able to survive?
What stood out the most for you as you read these books?

Part II: 3 4 pages

How have these survivor memoirs helped shape/contribute to/enhance your understanding of resistance, survival, and the Holocaust?
How were you affected by hearing the testimonies of Holocaust survivors?
What can we learn about human behavior from the stories of Holocaust survivors/resisters? And what can we learn about ourselves?
How have the testimonies of/by those who were targeted by the Nazis affect us emotionally and deepen our investment in learning about and from this history?
 

Conclusion:  2 3 paragraphs

Why are memoirs/survivor testimonies important?
Even by reading memoirs, is it possible for anyone to fully understand the experiences of those who were victimized by the Nazis? Why is it important for survivors to tell their stories?
What lessons can be drawn from these books? What have you taken away from these readings, especially in regards to women, resistance, and the Holocaust?

Paper guidelines:

Submit one typed 4 (full pages) 6 page essay responding to the prompt
Papers must be typed and double-spaced (with standard 1 inch margins, Times New Roman, 12 point font)
Remember, you do not have to answer each of the guideline questions, they are there simply as a way of helping you organize your thoughts Should you choose to response to them, make sure that they are still addressed in a coherent essay format
You may address each book in its own right and you may use subheadings if you want to distinguish between the two
Since there are multiple women addressed in Women of Valor if you want to specifically focus on one or two of them that is all right
Name and title on the front page Standard rules for an essay should also be applied:
Proper writing grammar
could not instead of couldnt
will not instead of wont
should not instead of shouldnt
Decades should be written as 1930s, 1940s, etc.
Words like however, it, because should not begin a sentence
Avoid repetitive language and vague generalizations
Spell-check and proofread your paper. (Be aware that it helps to either read your paper aloud and/or have another person read your paper to check for grammar and spelling).
Sources must be cited in the Chicago Manuel Style of footnote or endnote citations. For Chicago Manuel Style please refer to http://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/tools_citationguide.html (Links to an external site.)
Be sure to include proper citations when quoting directly or even paraphrasing
The use of any outside information must first be cleared by me. If not, your paper will automatically fall into the D or F range for failure to follow instructions.
Papers must be submitted on WebCampus by the posted date. If you would like to turn your paper in early, you may do so.

Ramayana

Let’s now turn to another example representing the internal diversity within Hinduism.  Please read the following two articles on the epic Ramayana.  The first is an overview of the epic from Professor Vinay Lal from UCLA (University of California at Los Angeles.)  The second is a 2011 news story from the Sunday Guardian about how an influential essay entitled 300 Ramayanas from the renowned scholar A.K. Ramanujan was removed from the B.A. syllabus of Delhi University.

Keeping in mind your reactions to both the readings above, please share your reflections in the discussion board.  What surprised you in these depictions?  What did you find compelling or challenging? Please post your response and respond to the posts of at least two other people.  The sources are below

http://www.sunday-guardian.com/artbeat/ramanujan-a-the-ramayana

http://southasia.ucla.edu/religions/texts/ramayana/

Abolitionism

-Provide a close reading of the document, and an analysis of its historical context.
-Pay attention to describing the text, context, and subtext of the source.
-Use secondary sources(Foner) about the topic to help your analysis of these issues.

Answer the following questions:
-What makes the writers perspective, their voice, unique and/or important in reporting on and describing the issues they discuss in the selection you have chosen?
-How does that perspective influence what they do and do not consider in their discussion?
-What does the writer say about the people involved in the issue or events they write about?
-How do the readings(Foner’s) help you to put this document and its writer into a historical context?
-What questions would you like to ask about the topic or the people discussed that you might discover more about from reading more in other sources, either primary or secondary?

extended essay

It is an extended essay on two books: “The Edible Woman” by Margaret Atwood and “The Vegetarian” by Han Kang.

The question that needs to be answered is: How do Kang and Atwood use meat and sexual politics to explore the role of women in The Vegetarian and The Edible Woman?

INTRODUCTION: (500 words) Address the question, outline the purpose of the question – why is this an essential study in the field of academia? Consider some of the secondary sources that you have read that will impact your conclusion. Thesis statement: Answers the question and outlines the plan of the essay – say what you will write about.

MAIN BODY 1:(1000 words) The Vegetarian Meat in the novel Sexual Politics in the novel How these impact Women

MAIN BODY 2:(1000 words) The Edible Woman Meat in the novel Sexual Politics in the novel How these impact women

MAIN BODY 3: (1000 words) compare and contrast

CONCLUSION: (500 words)

The essay also needs to include all the sources (the number of sources doesn’t have a limit) that were used as links with the use of
“noodletools”https://www.noodletools.com/

Plus the reflection of 500 words on the essay is included In the mark scheme

extended essay

It is an extended essay on two books: “The Edible Woman” by Margaret Atwood and “The Vegetarian” by Han Kang.

The question that needs to be answered is: How do Kang and Atwood use meat and sexual politics to explore the role of women in The Vegetarian and The Edible Woman?

INTRODUCTION: (500 words) Address the question, outline the purpose of the question – why is this an essential study in the field of academia? Consider some of the secondary sources that you have read that will impact your conclusion. Thesis statement: Answers the question and outlines the plan of the essay – say what you will write about.

MAIN BODY 1:(1000 words) The Vegetarian Meat in the novel Sexual Politics in the novel How these impact Women

MAIN BODY 2:(1000 words) The Edible Woman Meat in the novel Sexual Politics in the novel How these impact women

MAIN BODY 3: (1000 words) compare and contrast

CONCLUSION: (500 words)

The essay also needs to include all the sources (the number of sources doesn’t have a limit) that were used as links with the use of
“noodletools”https://www.noodletools.com/

Plus the reflection of 500 words on the essay is included In the mark scheme

Western and non western civilization and culture

Instructions
Write a total of about 6 pages double spaced, Times New Roman font.  Select one Western and one non-Western culture/civilization and trace its development throughout the scope of our course.  Emphasize cultural, social, political, and economic issues, and draw some conclusions about those societies from your analysis.  This is fairly open-ended.  You can select any two societies and compare/contrast their development, issues they faced, as well as major achievements.  Be sure to have a clear main argument/thesis in your response.

legal issues and news media

Prompt: The organization RSF (Reporters Without Borders) has petitioned the United Nations
to establish a global watchdog to curb disinformation and fake news. They are proposing the
establishment of an independent multi-stakeholder organization like ICANN.
You have been asked to present a legal analysis of the potential rulings of such an organization
in the United States, and whether the work of such an organization would be useful in
highlighting fake news and disinformation campaigns as an aid to civil organizations or as a
foundation for treaty obligations.
Your answer should draw on the material provided in the Final: Disinformation – A Global
Challenge folder (including the relevant work of your classmates) in the content section of our
course blackboard. Your paper should provide the following:
An introduction, clearly stating the importance to society of the general issue, the central focus
of your legal analysis, and your conclusion.
A full description of the core legal issues youve identified,
o What are the relevant underlying facts?
o What is the controlling law (constitution, statute, case law, treaty, etc.)?
o How have similar issues been decided by relevant courts?
o How has this issue or issues moved through the courts?
What are the different sides/positions?
o Regarding the general topic you are focused on.
o Regarding the most important legal issues relevant to your research.
What is your conclusion?
o What do you think is the proper outcome?
o Provide convincing logical support for your conclusion.

Black Power, Cultural Nationalism and White Backlash

Below is the paper you wrote for me, but I need another page added to this one. Same concept and everything. If you could stay on track with what you have already written.

The Black Power movement had similar objectives to that of the civil rights. Both entities wanted America to recognize all races as equal without discriminatory practices against minorities such as African Americans. Unlike the tolerant civil rights movement leaders, black power pioneers believed in a vicious and impatient approach. black power movement successfully pressurized the society to respect racial equality because they popularized the idealism of black supremacy through confrontational strategies.
Revolutionaries such as Stokely Carmichael agitated for nationalism or separatism as long as Africans would acquire their rightful liberty. Most of the black power adherents argued that the black community would not live in a free society as long as white privilege was the norm (Ogbar 2018, 36).[1] Unlike the civil rights movement that believed in nonviolent pressurization, black power was uncompromising, as evidenced in the assertion that a peaceful revolution is a fallacy. Guided by the attitude of courageous icons such as Malcolm X, the black power movement formulated factions such as the armed Black Panther Party that deployed the same confrontational tactics to popularize the philosophy of freedom for African Americans (Austin 2017, 14).[2] Violence would coerce the rest of the country to avail of improved conditions for blacks alongside the institution of survival programs.
The black power movement represented the frustrations of African Americans at the slow pace of liberating African Americans. The movement wanted the country to recognize blacks as equal to Caucasians in critical areas such as the labor force. Unlike previous leaders such as Dr. King, black power did not fancy peaceful marches because they were not putting maximum pressure on the authorities. Black Panther Party is the embodiment of the black power philosophy of optimal pressure through violent resistance.

Bibliography
  Austin, Curtis J. 2017. Up against the wall: violence in the making and unmaking of the Black Panther Party. Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press. http://site.ebrary.com/id/10503156.
  Ogbar, Jeffrey. 2018. Black power: radical politics and African American identity. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.

 
[1] Ogbar, Jeffrey. 2018. Black power: radical politics and African American identity. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.

[2] Austin, Curtis J. 2017. Up against the wall: violence in the making and unmaking of the Black Panther Party. Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press. http://site.ebrary.com/id/10503156.

Public policy

Fact sheet
ACT SHEET (AKA ONE-PAGER).
This topic of this assignment is purposefully open ended, as are most such assignments in the world. You need to pick a relatively small slice of a social problem; for example, a big slice would be childcare, a smaller slice might be the impact of raising the wages childcare providers. Note that while much of our reading focuses on the United States, your final project (or midterm for that matter) does not need to be about American social policy. 

You will then craft a professional, concise, and informative advocacy-oriented two-page policy brief (one-pager if printed double-sided) on your selected topic. The final product should be easy to read and eye-catching. It could include some combination of charts, graphs, bulleted points, side bars, or other images to help the reader get all the information they need in a concise format. An insanely busy person should be able to understand its point at a glance and understand how this policy problem could be addressed. Needless to say, it is a valuable skill to be able to convey a good deal of information concisely. Some examples include these state fact sheets from the Center on Poverty and Social Policy at Columbia or those on Canada or Australia by the Centre for Global Social Policy at the University of Toronto. 

Your fact sheet should present thoughtful policy analysis of the social problem under study based on a carefulreview of the relevant empirical literature, with data and research evidence that documents the pros and cons of the policy topic you are analyzing. You will be graded on the qualityof the evidence you present in your paper and not on the particular position taken. That is, it does not matter to me if a project on Pre-K proposes to make it universal or eliminate it. What matters is that the final product is well-researched, refers to recent data and policy analyses on the issues, and that your analysis is sound and your conclusions are well-documented.

How to do this? There should be three major components: 1) The Problem- Provide context for the problem. Any history needed to understand it? Any significant trends? Any relevant terms, concepts, or vocabulary? 2) Myths and Misconceptions- Anticipate questions by considering roadblocks or addressing incorrect prevailing wisdom. 3) Potential Solutions- Are there countries, states, or private sector actors working on a solution? What are the costs/benefits of a possible solutionand are they greater than cost of doing nothing? May be useful to address counterarguments briefly.

In order to do this you need to have a good understanding of the social problem. How? Prepare an annotated bibliography and include some version it on a third page OR in smaller ont at end (check samples, the choice is yours). The annotated bibliography should be 5-8 sources, more than half of which should be from peer-reviewed sources. This list should include work often cited in this area, and perhaps two different perspectives on your social problem and/or its solution.

It should be 2 pages single spaced so I choose 3 pages double spaced.

Dawn of the New Millennium and the Election of Barack Obama Discussion Topic

The period from the 1980s on saw great gains in black political power, but inequality, particularly income inequality, remains great as does the overall sub-standard situation of many African Americans. Racism is frowned upon, but unfortunately is still a part of American life. There is a rising black middle class (many of whom were financially devastated by the Great Recession), while at the same time an increasing number of young black children have no fathers or are being raised by grandparents. Almost one third of young black men are incarcerated. Something is radically wrong with this picture.

Many Americans had hoped that the election of our nations first black President, and with him the appointment of high federal officials, would help the situation, but that does not seem to be the case.

This question is to be answered with no fewer than three (3) outside resources.

1. Discuss your thoughts on the issues mentioned above as well as any others that you believe to be important. What steps do you think need to be taken to solve the racial problems, including those that are financial in nature, that appear to be imbedded in our society?