E-Mail From A Pair of Students and One Response

Subject: drowning in a sea of Grimkes

Hi-

Well, Sara and I are doing well on the information part- a little too well, actually. we have SO much stuff, and it's getting hard to narrow it down.

We did find a letter that we liked today at the AAS in the book of letters from Grimke to Beecher and asked to get it photocopied, but they didn't have it ready by the time we left. It's the letter about the Colonization Society, and we are interested in it because she uses Beecher's complaints about Grimke's earlier comments on the Colonization Society to form her arguments. There are some good quotes to show the different aspects of her argument, and how she argues her point. But the problem is that we have all this other information that we want to use, we just need to figure out how to put it in.

Help us! Maybe we can meet sometime soon and you can look over all of our stuff and try to make more sense of it than we can.

See you tomorrow! Lindsay and Sara


From: lknoles@assumption.edu
Subject: Re: drowning in a sea of Grimkes

Dear Lindsay and Sara--


How well I understand! I've got the saltwater from that sea permanently in my lungs because I've gone under so often, and I think I'm beginning to sprout gills.

What happens when you work on a research project is that you start with a topic and begin looking for resources. Then you think, "I better have a clearer focus or I'm going to die!" And so, you construct a focus, and you go back to your looking and your thinking but keep yourself more to the focus you've chosen. But gradually that focus turns out to be waaaaaay too big, and overwhelming. And it feels like your head is going to bust open. And you know that if you write about it all, you'll die of old age before you get through half of it. So you decide you need to figure out your point, and your organization. But then, if your brain works like mine, it starts sabotaging your attempts to narrow down, because your brain just LOVES all that interesting stuff! So each time you narrow, your brain figures a way to connect your narrowed topic to every stinking interesting thing you found. Bad Brain! Actually, Good Brain! But Bad Brain nonetheless, because it has you on the road to the crazy house, and in the crazy house projects never get done because they just go on, and on, and on, and on ...

My guess is that you believe me about all of this because you have probably gone through many of these stages. There was a protest song about the Vietnam War that had a lyric that fits perfectly: "You're neck-deep in the big muddy and the Big Fool says to push on!"

You would think if I understood the problem so well that I'd have a perfect answer. Unfortunately... If I had a better answer more of my own projects would be finished and published by now. However, I do know that it is important to: 1) focus; 2) remember that you only are shooting for a certain length and that can only accommodate a topic of a certain size; 3) realize that you can't go deep if you go too broad; and 4) remember that you can always come back and use the other material for later projects in your academic life.

Why not bring as much as you have to class today and we can talk about this? If you can focus on one particular letter, one particular idea, one particular argument and then limit your discussion to issues to connect just to that, you may be able to live and dry off. But feel free to pack a whole lot of background information into your opening, and to draw upon all your knowledge of the Grimkes and their work in your analysis of the material you discuss and in forming your conclusion. Even the world's greatest Shakespeare scholar must still be able to write a three-page paper on some issue in Shakespeare, but we would assume that her three page paper would carry the weight of all that other learning and understanding.

Sorry to have thrown you in the salty sea, but it's sure wonderful to have more swimmers---

Yours,
Lucia Knoles


Subject: Update on Project Two

So far, we are finding this project to be very interesting. It is so cool to be able to work with the actual document in the hadwriting of the author. neither of us have had the chance to do that before. Our first major break through was when we started finding connections between the different material. As with the first project we are finding that our ideas of women's role in society are a whole lot differnt that what we thought. We realized that women did more than just sit around and tend to household needs. The Grimke sisters are a great example of women in action! The focus of our paper( we finally got one) is to assess the similarities and differences between Angelina Grimke's letter to a friend and her letter to Catharine Beecher, A fellow activist with opposing views. What is most important to us is to look closely at why she spoke one way to a friend and another way to a debator.

Lindsay and Sara

 

 

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