代写 Annotated Bibliography

  • 100%原创包过,高质代写&免费提供Turnitin报告--24小时客服QQ&微信:120591129
  • 代写 Annotated Bibliography

    Assessment One: Bibliographic
    Exercise 
    Word count: 500 words
Due: 4pm (AEDT), Friday April 1
Percentage:
    15%
This first piece of assessment is designed to familiarise you with some
    of the basic requirements in producing written work in Arts subjects. 
    The task 
    Select ONE of the essay topics from assessment 2 that interests you and
    produce an annotated bibliography of four sources for this topic. (NB: You
    might like to use this task as research toward your essay for Assessment 2;
    although you may write on a different identity category for the essay if
    you so wish.) 
    The annotated bibliography should use MLA style and be broken up into
    two sections:
1. A title and brief description of the case/object of study
    you have selected (approximately 100 words)
2. Bibliographical details
    (i.e. author, title and publication details) and descriptions (i.e.
    annotations) of 4 items (approximately 400 
    words in total). The items selected must include 2 of the following:
a. ONE
    peer-reviewed academic article (what is this? More information here: 
    <http://www.library.unimelb.edu.au/services/help_yourself/online_tutorials
    >) b. ONE book or book-chapters
c. ONE newspaper article 
    Learning Outcomes and Grading Criteria 
    Your annotated Bibliography will be assessed on the basis of how well it
    demonstrates your achievement of the following learning outcomes: 
    .  i) identifying, sourcing (through the library and relevant databases) and
    using academically valid and reliable sources;  
    .  ii) identifying and summarising a writer’s key arguments; and  
    .  iii) acknowledging or citing these sources correctly.  
    These are useful skills which are essential when conducting research and
    engaging in academic writing. 
    Useful information for Assessment 1 
    Annotated Bibliography? 
    A bibliography is an alphabetical list of resources (usually found at the
    end of a published piece of academic work). Each entry includes
    information on the author, title, publisher, year and place of publication,
    and relevant pages. 
    An annotated bibliography also contains concise descriptions of each
    resource, usually of about 100 words or so. Your description should focus
    on the following aspects of your chosen resource (text): 
    • content, aims and core argument 
    • special features: e.g. scope, perspective 
    • usefulness for your purposes 
    • reliability and limitations. 
Refer to General MLA style notes on the library
    website.
    http://www.lib.unimelb.edu.au/recite/citations/MLA/generalNotes.h

    代写 Annotated Bibliography
    tml 
    Exemplar 
Below is an example of an annotated bibliography
    framed towards this task. In many ways it goes beyond the task
    requirement in that it develops a focus on embodiment as text. This
    is the kind of annotated bibliography one might produce for an
    essay on the proposed essay questions – assessment 2. It’s up to you:
    it would be possible to build a bibliography in relation to gender,
    race or ideology, or how the intersect in another context (such as a
    specific event or newsworthy debate, for example) in respect to
    one of the essay tasks. Indeed, you might find it more enjoyable to
    research something that interests you in this way. 
Bottom line: You
    should focus on finding useful resources in respect to the essay
    question you have chosen in relation to Assessment task 1.
    Annotated Bibliography
    Name:
    Tutor:
    Tutorial Day and Time:
    Biological Determinism: Some Problems in Reductionist
    Arguments.  
    This annotated bibliography begins to structure a platform from
    which to stage further research for the coming essay. Refining my
    research to the broader application of critical accounts of social
    construction in questioning the self in society, as opposed the the
    limitations set by biological determinism, allows a comparison and
    understanding of the epistemological or political objectives of the
    respective authors. de Beauvoir and Lindsay situate identity in
    society. Gowaty questions the language ideology of determinist
    discourse(s) and Lippert-Rasmusson attempts to argue that
    gender is apolitical. (86 words)  
    Beauvoir, Simone de. The Second Sex (1949). Trans. Constance
    Borde and Shiela Malovany-Chevallier. London: Vintage Books,
    2010. Print. 
    This seminal text, first published in 1949, critically poses the
    question “what is a woman” (1) to challenge the ideals of
    androcentric definitions of femininity as natural. de Beauvoir
    points out that, very astutely, ‘one is not born a woman, one
    becomes one’ which situates the subject in culture. Basically,
    historically and epistemologically, the gender construct of
    femininity has been judged as ‘the second sex’ from the
    perspective of masculinity as the ideal. In this sense ‘man’ is the
    Subject, ‘woman’ is the Other in this gendered apparatus. This
    notion of ‘becoming’ is most important as it offers a critical
    position from which to question our social environment and
    consider our participation in it. (116 words) 
    Gowaty, Patricia Adair. “Introduction: Darwinian Feminists and
    Feminist Evolutionists.” Feminism and Evolutionary Biology:
    Boundaries, Intersections, and Frontiers. Ed. Gowaty, Patricia
    Adair. Boston; MA: Springer US, 1997. 1-17. Online. 
    Gowaty’s introduction is useful for its consideration of
    predetermined notions of gender difference as innate
    characteristics that may instead be attributed to society’s
    influences and the norms and expectations that are socially
    imposed. Questioning whether evolutionary biology is inherently
    sexist, in that it prioritises the male experience, this introduction
    poses the question of whether biological determinist views
    contradict feminist perspectives of social construction. This text is
    useful in assisting to unpack the limitations of biological
    determinism on gendered lived experience. (80 words) 
    Lindsey, Linda L. “Gender Role Development: The Social
    Process.” Gender Roles: A Sociological Perspective. Ed. Lindsey,
    Linda L. New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 1990. 34-56. Print. 
    Lindsey argues that socialisation, the process whereby infants
    and children prepare to become agents in society, introduces
    them to a society where they are conditioned to adopt gender
    roles. This article explores games and television programs that
    encourage and perpetuate ideals of masculinity and femininity
    and how these gendered stereotypes are reproduced in schools
    by unwitting educators. The author also points out how gendered
    titles and occupational terms can at times connote notions of the
    inferiority of women. This article is useful as it aligns with de
    Beauvoir’s notion of ‘becoming’ and articulates an understanding
    of how gender stereotypes are reproduced. (102 Words) 
    Lippert-Rasmusson, Kasper. “Gender Constructions: The Politics
    of Biological Constraints.” Scandavian Journal of Social Theory
    11.1 (2010): 73-91 Print. 
    This article explores the competing arguments between “radical”
    [sic] (73) social construction, according to which gender
    differences are social and not biological, and biological
    determinism, whereby biological or genetic factors are proposed
    to be fixed or innate and thus unchangeable. Arguing for
    consideration of what this author terms as ‘genetically constrained
    constructivism,’ where social factors are considered with
    biological factors, the argument seeks to distance biology from
    the politics of determinism. Whilst this argument sounds
    rhetorically reasonable it in fact reproduces the discourse of
    determinism by resorting to sentiments such as empirical
    evidence to show that there are innate differences between the
    genders and that these are genetic. This discursive manoeuver is
    nothing more than a revisionist argument promoting biological
    determinism. (120 words) 
    (Word Total: 502 words not including title or references) 
    About this example: I wrote this annotated bibliography with a particular
    argument in mind. I’m hoping that this comes through in some form—
    even though I have not articulated it clearly, as I would in an essay.
    Indeed, this annotated bibliography is a good start to writing my essay
    because it takes a consistent approach to the key issue. See if you can
    identify: 
    1. My position on the issue of embodiment and social construction—am I
    likely to argue that embodiment is a social construction? 
    2. What sorts of things do I include in my summary? 
    3. Do the annotations come across clear and concise or not? What makes
    them so? 
    4. What do you notice about the structure and organization of the
    bibliography in formal and conceptual terms (basic 
organisation as
    well as the organisation of my ideas)? 
    5. How would you grade this bibliography? (See grading system below) 
    6. What feedback would you give? 


    代写 Annotated Bibliography