3702
Colonial and Neo-Colonial Encounters
Critical Reviews
A critical review
is an evaluation of a book's strengths, weaknesses and validity. It is used to
inform readers of a book's value through explanation, interpretation and
analysis. The reviewer must present information that will allow the reader to
make a value judgement about the book.
Reviews of a single
book must have an introductory section to establish a focal point for
discussion. The second part characterizes the author's treatment of the subject,
and the final section brings the paper to a conclusion. A conclusion must deal
with the essence of the author's arguments. Students are free to agree with the
author on every point, disagree with the author on every point, or any
combination of the two. The important thing is that students offer insights into
what contribution they believe the book makes to the literature on the subject
and who, if anyone, might benefit from reading it. (See
a sample review of one book)
Reviews of two or
more books contain the same elements as reviews of one book, but the emphasis is
on comparison. Therefore, the introductory section establishes a focal point of
comparison between the two books. The second part characterizes each author's
treatment of the "problem." The final section brings the paper to a
conclusion by way of synthesis or repudiation, in other words, the conclusion
offers a suggestion of an interpretive orientation consisting of elements of
both perspectives under review or an argument against one or both authors. (See
a sample review of two books)
Guidelines
- The first assignment is a
critical review of The Colonizer's Model of the World.
- The second assignment is a
critical comparative review of The World That Trade Created and Death
By Migration.
- The third assignment is a
critical comparative review of God's Peoples and The Colonizer's
Model of the World.
- The first review essay, should
be six pages in length and the last two should be eight pages long.
- The first book review is worth
15%, the second is worth 20%, and the third is worth 25% of the final mark.
- Reviews should begin with a full
bibliographic citation (author, title, publisher and date of publication).
- The books will be discussed in
class and students are expected to participate in all of the discussions.
- Students are advised that late
assignments will be assessed a penalty of one percent of the final mark per
day for each day that elapses between the due date and the actual date of
submission.
- Students are advised that they
are responsible for knowing what plagiarism is and for avoiding it.
Questions to be Considered
- Is there any bibliographic
information about the author given? What are the author's qualifications and
authority?
- Who is the intended audience?
- Define the general problem area.
What does the author intend to discuss? Why?
- Does the author build on past
research?
- What is the objective or purpose
of the research? Is it clearly stated?
- Does the author define any
terms? Are the definitions specific and useful?
- Are references given? Are the
references recent, important?
- What are the author's major
findings and conclusions? Have these been supported by the author's
analysis, arguments, findings or evidence? Has the author overlooked
anything?
- Does the author accomplish his
or her objective? Does the author do what he or she has set out to do?
- Does the author suggest areas
for further research or discussion?
(Please note that these
questions are meant for you to develop a critical understanding of the reading
and are not meant as a guide to writing the review)
Prepared by R.
Harpelle
Research
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