A Guide To Writing In: Religious Studies
A Guide To Writing In: Religious Studies
R E L I G IOUS STUDIES
F AY E H A L P E R N
THOMAS A. LEWIS
ANNE MONIUS
ROBERT ORSI
CHRISTOPHER WHITE
Acknowledgments
This guide is the result of a collaborative effort among several faculty members: Christopher
White, who initiated the project while serving as the Head Tutor of Religious Studies; Faye
Halpern of the Harvard Writing Project; and Professors Thomas A. Lewis (Study of Religion and
Divinity School), Anne Monius (Divinity School), and Robert Orsi (Study of Religion and Divinity
School). Thanks also to Tom Jehn of the Harvard Writing Project and Nancy Sommers, Sosland
Director of Expository Writing, for their assistance.
The guide was made possible by a Gordon Gray Faculty Grant for Writing Pedagogy.
PART I
Generating Questions 7
PART II
Thesis 13
Motive 16
The Body 18
PART III
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Part 1: Strategies for Getting Started
G E N E R AT I N G Q U E S T I O N S
One might think that a good essay gives the sense that there is nothing the
author does not know. In fact, most good essays begin with an honest question
or set of related questions (which sometimes appear in the actual essay), ques-
tions that genuinely puzzle and interest the author-and, one can presume, the
reader. When beginning to think about your paper topic, one of the rst things
you should do is nd a good question. If you nd the right question, you will
need every page you have been allotted to answer it sufciently.
So far, we have been assuming that you will be the generator of the question
that founds your essay, but quite often you will be given the question your
essay should address.
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W H AT M A K E S A G O O D Q U E S T I O N ?
2) A good question leads you back into the evidence (data) you
have available:
Not: What kind of religious practice did prehistoric peoples engage in?
(By denition, theres no evidence to answer this)
Example: Why does this author, who claims to believe in Gods love,
spend all his time writing about Gods vengeance?
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under strain of some kind, or having to adjust? If so, how and why?
Here you are given the question. Yet even with a directive assignment like
this, you will still need to generate your own questions as you re-read the text
before doing the assignment: Where does this strain show? Is this, in fact,
best typied as a strain? If so, does this strain arise out of things we might
not have initially expected?
1 For more details about the process of freewriting, see Pat Belanoff, Peter Elbow, and Sheryl
I. Fontaine, eds. Nothing Begins with N: Toward a Phenomenology of Freewriting (Carbondale:
Southern Illinois UP, 1991).
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ing to the outline. People often nd that the writing process causes their
thoughts to develop in ways they had not expected. Recognize that your
outline is a hypothesis rather than a life sentence. Your outline is a work-
ing map of how you will proceed with your writing, which will most likely
change as you begin to write.
Finally a word about divine inspiration and what have been called little dar-
lings. We all have a tendency to think whatever we write, especially if writ-
ten at 3 a.m., is inspired or brilliant, and in any case worthy of preservation.
But revising and deleting are critical. They require that you throw away old
sentences and paragraphs (and in many cases, whole sections) and rewrite
them completely. As one of our own professors told us, The quality of a
paper can be measured by how much has gone in the trash. Cutting is es-
pecially hard to do when you come up with a particularly nice turn of phrase.
The problem is that these phrases often are off-topic or, given the improved
state of your draft, no longer appropriate. Gertrude Stein once encouraged
writers to be willing to murder such little darlings, and we have found her
brutal advice to be right.
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Part II. What Every Good Essay Needs
THESIS
An academic paper without a thesis would be like a mammal without a
spine.2 You might have heard thesis dened as the main idea or argument
of your paper. In some cases, this basic denition makes sense. But in many
writing assignments, especially longer research papers, the stakes for a good
thesis go up. In more ambitious papers such as your junior essay, a good the-
sis must meet three criteria: it should be original, arguable, and interesting.
When we say a thesis must be original, we mean that it must be your own work.
You cannot take your thesis from something you have been reading. Your thesis
is your answer to questions you are asking of the text or other evidence.
2 We owe this metaphor, as well as the criteria for a good thesis, to Michael Radich, A Students
Guide to Writing: East Asian Studies Sophomore Tutorial (Cambridge: President and Fellows of
Harvard University, 2003), 36.
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TWO LEVELS OF THESES
3 One of the biggest differences between these two levels of theses is the absence of motive in
the rst level. To reach the second level of thesis, there has to be a fairly explicit motive, which
can be gleaned from the thesis statements offered above. We discuss motive in the next section.
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Example: Hindu views of the divine are more nuanced than views
of the divine in other traditions. (The problem here is that proving
this statement would require an immensely complex comparison,
with data drawn from many different traditions. This would be an
impossible task.)
Linked to the idea that a thesis must be arguable is the idea that it must be
falsiable. Could there be evidence that would disprove your thesis? It is
important that there could be. If you are asserting things that no conceiv-
able evidence could refute, you are not asserting anything interesting-even
though everyone would agree with it.
Example: The Bible is the central text for the Christian tradition.
(Same problem.)
One way to think about thesis statements is this: your reader will not agree
with it until the end, after you have offered all of your evidence and argu-
ments. A thesis statement that seems immediately true is a thesis statement
not worth arguing.
Finally, a thesis must be interesting. How do you make it that way? Your
thesis must concern a topic worthy of consideration, and you must attempt
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to convince the reader of a conclusion that casts fresh light on that topic.
Often, a thesis is interesting because, if shown to be true, it would require
conventional views of the subject to be modied or changed. In other words,
your thesis should say something that is in some way controversial. Exactly
what counts as interesting may vary among subelds, so be sure to refer
to the sections as the end of this guide on writing in specic areas. (We will
show you a crucial way of establishing that characteristic below, when we talk
about motive.)
All of these things are characteristics of what we might call a second level
thesis-one that is interesting, arguable and original. These are the kinds of
theses that you will need to generate for research papers, your junior essay
and your senior thesis. But this kind of ambitious thesis is not required of
every essay you will write in religious studies. There is what we could call a
rst level of theses as well, a simpler thesis that is merely your answer to a
question posed by your instructor.
We will end this discussion of thesis with a few practical notes. Essays
should not read like mystery novels; that is, you should not reveal what the
essay is arguing only at the end, even though this structure might mirror
your own process of drafting. This mystery-novel-structure happens to all of
us in early drafts, and the solution is to take the end of that early draft, where
you nally discovered what you want to argue, and make it the starting point
of your revision.
In general, your thesiswhich does not, despite what your nicky senior Eng-
lish teacher told you, have to be contained in one sentenceshould come in
the rst few paragraphs. It is sometimes useful to ag your thesis statement
clearly with explicit phrases like, In this paper, I will contend . . .; This
paper argues that . . .; or even My thesis in this paper is . . .
MOTIVE
Every academic paper has to answer the so what? question that critical
readers always have in the back of their minds. Why is this thesis important?
These questions take us into the realm of motive. The motive is the element
of the paper that draws the reader in; motives set out reasons you have written
your paper. Often they establish that your paper is a plausible counter-argu-
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ment to another signicant view on your topic. We talked above about how
good theses sometimes correct a conventional understanding. So motives can
start by making the conventional viewthe view you are arguing against or
revisingexplicit. By doing this, you have not only shown yourself familiar with
what others have written about the text or with the argument you are tackling,
but have also shown that your own thesis is worth arguing. In your motive you
are sayingOften, people understand this subject like this [explain that view],
but there is something missing from this, something my own thesis adds.
Yet your motive should not set your paper up as an argument against a
straw man. A straw man is a dummy position, usually one that no seri-
ous person would really hold. A writer sets up such a straw man merely to
knock it down so they can appear to have accomplished something impor-
tant. Arguments that rely upon straw men are not interesting in the sense we
have discussed because they tell us something new only if we happen to be
someone who holds outrageous and unfounded beliefs.
Straw man arguments are bad because they do not require much of the
writer. The smarter the view you are going to be modifying or overturning,
the smarter and more interesting your own argument.
Does a motive require you to engage with a claim someone else has actually
argued? No, especially when it is an assignment that does not ask you to read
secondary sources. In these cases, your motive might point to a supercial
(but still plausible) way you could imagine someone else interpreting what
you are writing about:
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The basic principle of the motive remains: the motive establishes that your
paper will provide an interpretation different from another plausible (though
ultimately mistaken) view.
We end this section with some practical points. First, the language of motive
often begins or ends with phrases that include although or despiteas
in the sentence Despite what some observers have thought, this text is not
about _____. Second, motives need not be conned to an introductory
clause in a single sentence. Especially when your motive involves discuss-
ing another thinkers actual argument, you need to spend time (in a senior
thesis, even a few pages) on what that view entails.
THE BODY
Using and Interpreting Textual Evidence4
A motivated thesis shows that you have a claim worth arguing; to prove that
claim requires evidence. But providing evidence means more than stud-
ding your own claims with lines from what you have been reading. Using
evidence effectively means more than repeating texts-it requires interpreting
texts. To illustrate this, let us ask you a question:5
What is this?
A pig, you say? Wrong: It is an aerial view of a man wearing a sombrero and
cowboy boots. As with this picture, you should not take the meaning of a pas-
sage to be self-evident-you need to explain what you think the line or passage
4 Many of the points made in the body section are taken from Carla Marie, Travis D. Smith, and
Annie Brewer Stilz, The Students Guide to Writing in Government 10 (Cambridge: President and
Fellows of Harvard University, 2002).
5 This cartoon and the use of it to illustrate new ways of seeing come from the Vermont writer
Geoffrey Stokes; Pat Kain, who teaches in the Expository Writing Program, has used this in her
handout, Idea and the Academic Essay, to which our own explanation is indebted.
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means (and, if necessary, your reason for rejecting more obvious readings of
it). As Marie et al. write, Remember that students offering completely differ-
ent answers to the paper topic will appeal to the same text you do. Your job is
to convince the reader that the evidence supports your thesis rather than theirs.
This requires thoughtful analysis, and the reader cannot do that for you.
Interpreting a quotation involves two things: rst and briey, you need to
summarize what the author said, i.e., re-state what you think the author is
saying (and this might take a few sentences if the ideas in the quotation are
complicated). But second and more importantly, you need to analyze what
the author is saying. Unlike when you summarize, when you analyze you are
adding something to the text, not just repeating it. You analyze a passage by
noting something in it that is not on the surface: most dramatically, a con-
tradiction in it or a subtext that the author did not intend or less dramatically
(but more commonly), an interesting ramication it suggests or an implicit
connection you see it has to other points. Quotations that you use should not
be self-explanatory (just as self-evident theses are not really theses). Finally,
you need to link this interpretation back to your own argument: analysis is
merely a digression if it does not connect up with your own claim.
To sum up: Your interpretation of the quotations you use should satisfy
three aims:
(a) you should clarify in your own words what the author means in
the quoted passage;
(c) you should explain precisely how this passage supports your
argument.
Lets turn to an actual example; you will see that it takes quite a bit of space
to do justice to a piece of evidence.
Once again, we will end with some nitty-gritty tips about using quotations.
What follows is not just a matter of propriety; it is often a matter of integrity:
A Guide to Writing | 19
This sympathy that Kampan expresses toward the character of Surpanakha comes
to full owering in the next rather lengthy passage (twenty verses in length), in
which the raksasi fervently pines for Rama all night long. Here is a sample:
When [Rama] had gone, she felt her life falling away, leaving her body.
With her senses stunned, shrunken into herself, she stood there and
could hardly breathe. He has no affection for me at all, she thought,
no room in his heart for me...she felt that if she did not embrace
his chest this very day she would die...as the sky turned red...she grew
weak and anguished while the moon, high and rm in the sky, troubled
her with its long light...her precious life was burning at the touch of the
cool wind to her large, soft, sweet breast and she was seething.
With the coming of evening and the rising of the moon, the nighttime neytal
(seashore) landscape of Tamil akam poetry is established, which, for the Tamil
reader, immediately expresses the emotion of a lovers lamentation at separation
from her beloved.26 In this fashion, for the reader versed in akam aesthetics, the
very landscape screams out the same fervent lament that Surpanakha experiences
in these verses. Kampan also employs abundant similes to emphasize the
intense longing of Surpanakha for Rama, a longing that causes her to become
weak, to physically waste away, and to burn so strongly that not even the coolest
substances on the earth can alleviate it. By all of these aesthetic techniques,
Kampan helps us to experience viscerally the agonizing personal emotions of
the raksasi, thus giving us the opportunity to truly identify with this creature,
upon whom we now take pity. We realize that Surpanakhas longing is beyond
her control-just as we sometimes cannot control with whom we fall in love-and
we thus grow more sympathetic to her plight. In the readers eyes, Surpanakha is
no longer simply a bag full of lust, but rather, she is the victim of those emotions
which even the very disciplined cannot always control.
26 Seaside imagery is prescribed for the evocation of emotions of impatient lovers who must
undergo enforced separation (Study of Stolen Love x).
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a) Dene key words and explain important ideas. Often a quotation con-
tains terms and concepts that wont be familiar to the reader; before you
do anything else, you need to explain them.
b) If you reformulate another persons ideas in your own words, drawing them
from a text without quoting it directly, it is still necessary to include a citation.
f) Use ellipses sparingly. Never use ellipses to cut out a piece of text that
is inconvenient for your thesis. And never use ellipses to unite into a
single quotation passages that should be quoted separately, being signi-
cantly separated from each other in the original text.6
Once you have laid out your argument and integrated textual support, go
back to the step in which you assembled what you thought was the most
important textual evidence. Examine the bits of evidence that were difcult
to reconcile with your argument. Consider counter-arguments and alterna-
tive interpretations and try to refute the most forceful objections to your thesis.
Where is your argument weakest or most vulnerable? What criticisms might
a smart reader raise? What evidence would these people have on their side?
Why is their position less convincing than your own? You will want to ana-
lyze briey the passages that seem to indicate an alternative explanation, and
then show why these passages are less representative than the ones you have
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TOPIC SENTENCE TIPS
8 Topic Sentences and Signposting, on the Harvard Writing Centers Writing Tools webpage:
www.fas.harvard.edu/~wricntr/documents/TopicSentences.html
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chosen, or why those other passages are taken out of context, or why they do
not present an adequate view. If you have been asked to compare and contrast
two authors and you have taken one authors side, consider how the other
author might respond to the criticism you have put forward.7
Example: But how might Plantinga respond to this point about fairness?
If topic sentences indicate where that particular paragraph is going (and where
it just was), signposts indicate where the whole paper is going, summing up
where it has been in the process. They most often come at turning points in
the essay, the moment before you are about to talk about a more subtle similar-
ity between two thinkers or consider a qualication to your argument.
Both topic sentences and signposts orient your readers, preventing them
from getting lost.
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C O N C L U D I N G Y O U R E S S AY
By this point you have done a lot of work, and you may be running up against
the assigned page limit for the paper. (Actually, it is great to be somewhat over
the page limit when your rst draft is nished, since a paper that must be edited
down is always improved in the process.) Do not just tack on an extra sentence
or two and go to bed. A good conclusion is one your reader will remember. You
may want to recap the main point, but do not merely summarize the whole
paper. You may want to explain how your paper does something that other argu-
ments have not. You may want to say that you have unpacked some particularly
elusive bit of evidence. You may want to place your own thesis in a larger context.
But two things to avoid: do not make the mistake of trivializing your work in the
conclusion. Even if you mention important remaining questions, do so in a way
that points to contribution you have made. And do not end by taking the paper
in a whole new direction (But thats a question for another paper!). The conclu-
sion should consider what your paper argued from a new angle, not open up a
whole other debate. Heres an example of a good conclusion:
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A CHECKLIST FOR SUCCESSFUL WRITING9
Do Do Not
q reread the text before writing q attempt to write without a careful
review of the text
q examine the assignment question
for clues about what kind of thesis it
q select an argument that restates
requires
what is straightforwardly obvious in
q come up with an interesting the text
question your essay is attempting to
answer q quote the professors comments
from lecture
q clearly state your thesis in the
introduction. If it is a long essay also
q ignore all or part of the
mention the main points you will use
assignment question
to defend the thesis
q carefully choose evidentiary q write an introduction that does
quotes and interpret them for the not include a thesis statement
reader in the body of the paper
q make sure that every point you q use textual quotations without
make follows logically from the interpreting them for the reader
preceding one, leads logically to the
following one, and ultimately supports q write a conclusion that merely
your thesis restates the body of the paper
What distinguishes a history paper from another kind of writing? What are
historians interested in? Historians study the past, but they study it with par-
ticular questions in mind. Historians are interested in explaining how events
in the past changed over time, why they happened in the rst place, what
other trends they were connected to or what their signicance was.
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How should you proceed once you have xed on a particular question?
Many historical essays are inspired by the secondary literature: how have
particular historians interpreted the topic at hand? In other words, you
might proceed backwardsto go from secondary literature to primary. If
your topic is evangelical revival in the 19th century (for example) you will
want to know what other historians have said about this. You will want to
know the debates that characterize different historical views on this sub-
ject. Once you have a sense for how others are thinking about this topic,
you might want to start looking yourself at the primary sources (evidence)
they are arguing about. What do you think about this evidence? Have
you found other evidence from this period that might help you revise or
critique what they are saying? Do you have another interpretive angle from
which to understand this evidence?
2. Study and take notes on the debates that scholars are having about
this past event.
3. Study and take notes on the primary sources you have read on this
event.
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Yet sometimes you will want to begin not with secondary sources but with
primary ones. If you know about primary sources that are under-used (some-
times a faculty member can suggest primary sources to you) you can begin
with these. Study them and take notes. Then read secondary interpretations
on these sources or other sources related to your topic.
Whether you go from secondary to primary sources or vice versa, you will want
to establish what we have earlier called a motive: you will want to show your
reader what is interesting, new or signicant about your argument. One good
way to do this in history papers is to argue that you are contributing something
specic to the scholarly conversation about your topic-that you have a new or
slightly different answer to problems, puzzles or questions that historians have
struggled with when encountering this past event.
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Regardless of which type of argument you engage in, your claim will require
you to provide a clear account of the position in question; and this account
will often take up at least a few paragraphs.
Supporting an Argument
As with any essay, you will need to provide evidence to support your argu-
ment. But certain kinds of philosophical essays require certain emphases. If
you are arguing for a particular interpretation of an authors argument, most
of your emphasis will fall on explaining exactly what you think that authors
view is and showing how any quotations from that author supports your
reading of his or her view.
Feuerbach argues that this anguish leads the individual to yearn for the
perfect types of his nature, a being who possesses the essential human
predicates in a perfect and innite manner (281). Feuerbach writes:
But the sense of limitation is painful, and hence the individual frees
himself from it by the contemplation of the perfect Being; in this
contemplation he possesses what is otherwise wanting in him.
With the Christians God is nothing else than the immediate unity of
species and individuality, of the universal and individual being. (183)
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Note that in analyzing the quotation the author makes clear that the view in
question is Feuerbachs, not the writers own. Always be sure that it is clear to
your reader when you are stating the views of an author you are interpreting
and when you are stating your own position; this is especially important when
your own essay is so closely involved in elucidating the text in question.
Other types of arguments require different kinds of support. If you are argu-
ing that a particular view is weak or problematic, for instance, you need to
provide your reader with reasons why. These reasons might involve pointing
out internal contradictions, hidden and unjustiable presuppositions, or
objectionable consequences of the position. In both reading and writing, you
should constantly ask yourself what an authors argument takes for granted,
how each point she makes relates to others she has made, and what the
positions consequences or implications are. It may be useful to provide an
example that demonstrates the weakness of the position.
A nal note: Perhaps even more than other kinds of essays, a philosophical
essay must respond to possible objections. Just as you examine philosophical
essays for possible weaknesses, so readers will examine yours, and if you can
anticipate and defuse the major objections, you will go a long way in convinc-
ing them of the truth of what you are arguing.
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Writing the paper is only one of the kinds of writing you do for a eldwork
project. You take notes in the eld on what you are seeing and experiencing;
you record what the people you are living with say to you in response to your
questions about their lives and to your presence among them; you take notes
on what you are feeling in the eld, your fears, angers, hopes, and desires. The
paper you write eventually should be based on this prior writing in the eld.
Fieldwork means entering other peoples lives; writing what you learned
in this process poses moral challenges. How will you represent the lives
of the people you have lived among, their understandings of the worldin
their voices, in yours, in some combination? How will you protect their
anonymity? How will you handle events or circumstances that may be less
than attering of them, perhaps even downright ugly, especially if these are
people that others are inclined to be hostile to or suspicious of? You will
have handled some of these questions when you lled out the necessary
forms for research with human subjects, but other questions will come
up in the circumstances of the eld. There is no single answer to these
questions about poetics and ethics. Different anthropologists have tried
different experiments in writing up their experiences in ways that they feel
honors their own life in the eld and respects the integrity and autonomy
of the people with whom they lived. The key thing is to be thoughtful and
intentional about such matters. Above all, eldwork as practice and writ-
ing is transparent, meaning that you never use quotation marks unless you
had written a statement down when you heard it; you do not use compos-
ites; you give the context and circumstances of your conversations; you do
not ask leading questions. This ethnographic honesty means a sharp and
clear introspection too: to be attentive to your desires for the people among
whom you go to be a certain way, your fears of them, what it is that brought
you to this project in the rst place, the ways that your own life informs the
questions you are asking and the relationships you are making in the eld.
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W R I T I N G A C O M P A R AT I V E R E L I G I O N P A P E R
Writing a paper on a comparative topic in the study of religion poses a
distinct challenge. The problem is that comparison itself seems to provide a
natural framework for analysis: one presents A, then presents B, then draws
out similarities and differences between A and B. The problem is that this
natural structure produces essays that list rather than argue, essays whose
theses boil down to something like, These authors are similar in certain
ways, but theyre different in other ways.
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This thesis will move the author beyond simply listing all the similarities and
differences between the texts in question because it has a tight focus, but it
also provides a justication for the comparison itself. Without this compari-
son, without looking at Buddhas text, we might have missed this important
point about Augustines.
As with the rst example, this example does not give equal weight to the two
texts: Kings text is being used to illuminate an otherwise obscure aspect of
Gandhis. Thus, a useful metaphor for comparative essays is an optical one:
in a successful comparative essay, one text provides a lens that brings into
focus an interesting aspect of a different one. Comparative essays are not
list essays but lens essays.
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NOTES