Category: comparative literature

  • “The Intersection of Religion and Commerce in The Merchant of Venice and The Decameron: A Comparative Analysis”

    A
    comparative essay should make an argument about at least two texts that enriches our
    understanding of both of them in a way that would not be possible were we to
    only examine each text on its own. 
    Write a 5-6 page comparative essay that will address The Merchant of Venice and a few texts of your choosing from The
    Decameron by Boccaccio, following these guidelines:
    ·      
    Let
    us presume the following division of The Decameron readings:
    o   four longer texts: Introduction,
    2.7, 2.9, and 10.9
    o   five shorter texts: Preface,
    1.2, 1.3, 3.10, and the Epilogue
    ·      
    Overall,
    you must write on either two or three Decameron texts.
    ·      
    Of
    these, you may choose one or two of the longer texts.
    Prompt
    How
    does religion facilitate trade or commerce in these texts? In your essay,
    analyze the ways that commercial activity shapes the interactions between
    religious groups, particularly where one group has more power than another.
    What sorts of relationships come about as a result of commercial exchanges
    between members of different religious groups? You may wish to consider the
    place of gender, legal norms, or social conventions (these suggestions are
    meant to prompt your thinking; do not attempt to address them all in
    list-like fashion).
    Through
    your readings of The Merchant of Venice and
    one of the above texts, discuss the ways in which economic activity heightens
    tensions between religious groups and/or encourages religious tolerance and
    understanding.
    “FORMATTING”
    ·      
    Please use double-spaced pages and Times New
    Roman 12 pt. font. In the body of your essay, do not add extra lines between
    paragraphs.
    ·      
    Include your name and page numbers in a header
    in the upper-right corner of every page (as above).
    ·      
    On your first page, before the text of your
    assignment begins, include the following on separate lines along the left
    margin: your name, the date, and the assignment information (e.g. Essay #1).
    Skip one line, and then place the title of your paper in the center between
    quotation marks. In your title, capitalize all nouns, verbs, pronouns, adverbs,
    and adjectives, as well as the first and last word that follows any colon or
    semicolon (as above)
    ·      
    Titles of books, films, albums, plays, journals,
    and collections/anthologies go in italics.
    ·      
    Titles of short stories, songs, poems,
    paintings, book chapters, and articles go in “Quotation Marks.”
    ·      
    Place only one space after a period.
    ·      
    When writing about literary texts, always
    use the present tense.
    o  
    Correct: In The Ring of the Dove,
    Ibn Hazm articulates his views about love.  
    ·      
    But when quoting the text directly, keep the original pronouns and verb
    tenses.
    o  
    Correct: Samuel ha-Nagid writes,
    “I quartered the troops for the night in a
    fortress which soldiers destroyed long ago
    / and they fell asleep at its walls…” (Cole 66)
    o  
    Incorrect: Samuel ha-Nagid wrote, “[He]
    quartered the troops… / and they [fall] asleep at its walls”.
    ·      
    IMPORTANT: Include a Works Cited in MLA
    format. Further MLA guidelines may be found at: http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/01/.