Ursula K. Le Guin’s “Those Who Walk Away from Omelas.” and Wilfred Owen’s “Dulce et Decorum Est”

Ursula K. Le Guin’s “Those Who Walk Away from Omelas.” and Wilfred Owen’s “Dulce et Decorum Est”

ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY: Essay 3 Your Annotated Bibliography will provide an MLA Style citation for each of the 10 references you select and short annotations of approximately 1-5 sentences. You will be evaluated on the correctness of your citation style and the grammatical correctness of your annotation. Your annotation must include a sentence on the relevance of the entry to your paper. It is not enough to say: “this paper is important to my paper”. With regard to ONE of the questions below compile a bibliography listing TEN secondary sources. For each item in your bibliography, write a brief note on the nature of the source. Use complete sentences and correct grammar. What is the genre of the source? Is it scholarly, a review, a note, a personal response, et cetera? What is the primary purpose of the article? What is the nature of the periodical or book it is published in; is it scholarly, popular, peer-reviewed, self-published, etcetera? What aspects, if any, of the source could be useful in writing for scholarly work? Why is this article important to your paper? The primary texts that you use for your paper CANNOT be included as part of the bibliographic entries Your bibliography must meet the following criteria: no more than five sources may be drawn from the materials in WebCampus, no more than two sources may be electronic in their original format, and no more than four sources may be “notes” or “reviews.” (A “note” is generally a very brief article, consisting of 1-3 pages, focused on a highly specific element of the text. A “review” is generally published in a newspaper or popular magazine, and it is usually less than 2 pages. Wikipedia and non-academic online resources are not acceptable for this assignment). ESSAY 4 You must use secondary sources appropriate to your topic in both focus and quantity. Your paper should demonstrate a grasp of both the primary text(s) you choose to write on and the critical materials available. This means that you must show an understanding of the reliability of critical materials, how to find scholarly criticism, and an ability to judge whether a work is dated or current. While some topics will have more or less critical materials available than others, I advise a 3-4 sources minimum. You may wish to consider biographical materials, letters, print history, journals, or other such sources as well. Ursula K. Le Guin’s “Those Who Walk Away from Omelas.” and Wilfred Owen’s “Dulce et Decorum Est”