10. Summary
Summary is indispensable in
preparing for and writing an argumentative essay. When you summarize a text (or
describe visual material), you distill the ideas of another source for use in
your own essay. Summarizing primary sources allows you to keep track of your
observations. It helps make your analysis of these sources convincing, because
it is based on careful observation of fact rather than on hazy or inaccurate
recollection. Summarizing critical sources is particularly useful during the
research and note-taking stages of writing. It gives you a record of what
you've read and helps you distinguish your ideas from those of your
sources.
Summaries you write to prepare for
an essay will generally be longer and more detailed than those you include in
the essay itself. (Only when you've established your thesis will you know the
elements most important to retain.) It is crucial to remember, though, that the
purpose of an analytical essay is only partly to demonstrate that you know and
can summarize the work of others. The
greater task is to showcase your ideas, your analysis of the source material.
Thus all forms of summary (there are several) should be tools in your essay
rather than its entirety.
True
Summary
True
summary always concisely recaps the main point and key supporting points of an
analytical source, the overall arc and most important turns of a narrative, or
the main subject and key features of a visual source. True summary neither
quotes nor judges the source, concentrating instead on giving a fair picture of
it. True summary may also outline past work done in a field; it sums up the
history of that work as a narrative. Consider including true summaryoften just
a few sentences, rarely more than a paragraphin your essay when you introduce
a new source. That way, you inform your readers of an author's argument before
you analyze it.
Immediately
after his introduction to an essay on Whittaker Chambers, a key player in the
start of the Cold War, Bradley Nash included four sentences summarizing the
foreword to his main source, Chambers's autobiography. Nash characterizes the
genre and tone of the foreword in the first two sentences before swiftly
describing, in the next two, the movement of its ideas:
The foreword to Chambers's autobiography is written
in the form of "A Letter to My Children." In this introduction,
Chambers establishes the spiritual tone that dominates the body of his book. He
initially characterizes the Cold War in a more or less standard fashion,
invoking the language of politics and describing the conflict as one between
"Communism and Freedom." But as the foreword progresses, Chambers
introduces a religious element that serves to cast the struggle between
communism and capitalism as a kind of holy war.
Every
essay also requires snippets of true summary along the way to
"orient" readersto introduce them to characters or critics they
haven't yet met, to remind them of items they need to recall to understand your
point. (The underlined phrase in the paragraph introducing Nash's summary is an
example of orienting information.) True summary is also necessary to establish
a context for your claims, the frame of reference you create in your
introduction. An essay examining the "usable past" created by the
Vietnam Veterans Memorial, for example, might begin by briefly summarizing the
history of the idea of a usable past, or by summarizing the view of a leading
theorist on the topic.
Interpretive
Summary
Sometimes
your essays will call for interpretive summarysummary or description that
simultaneously informs your reader of the content of your source and makes a
point about it. Interpretive summary
differs from true summary by putting a "spin" on the materials,
giving the reader hints about your assessment of the source. It is thus best
suited to descriptions of primary sources that you plan to analyze. (If you put
an interpretive spin on a critical source when you initially address it, you
risk distorting it in the eyes of your reader: a form of academic dishonesty.)
The
interpretive summary below comes from an essay examining a Civil War photograph
in light of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address. The essayist, Dara Horn, knew she
needed to describe the photo but that simply "walking through" its
details would bewilder and bore her readers. So she revealed the point of her
description in a pair of topic sentences (solid underline), summarized the
details of the photo (double underline), and gave the description some
interpretive "spin" (throughout).
As
skeptical moderns, we often have trouble accepting drawings or paintings as
historical records, but we tend to believe in photographs the way that we
believe in mirrors; we simply accept them as the truth. Alexander Gardner's
photograph Trossel's House, Battle-Field of Gettysburg, July, 1863 might therefore be viewed as evidence rather
than commentary. Unlike some of Gardner's other "sketches," this picture
includes no perfectly positioned rifles, no artistically angled river, no
well-posed men in uniformindeed, no people at all. The photograph's
composition could barely be more prosaic; the horizon slashes the picture in
half, and the subject, a white colonial-style house, sits smack in the center.
Yet this straightforward, almost innocent perspective sets the viewer up for
the photograph's stealthy horror. At first glance, the photograph appears
to be a portrait of a house, perhaps even a poor portrait of a house; in
a Òsketch bookÓ of war, one might flip right by it to the gory pictures before
and after. But the terror in this photograph lies in its delayed shock, the
gut-wrenching surprise when the light on the house leads the eye to the
light on the fence and the viewer notices that the backyard fence is
broken, and then that the backyard is a mess, littered withwhat
are those?horses, dead horses, twelve dead horses. What must have
happened to topple twelve nine-hundred-pound horses, and where are the people
who rode them? Crushed underneath? The viewer doesn't know, because Gardner's
picture doesn't tell us. All we see is a house, a broken fence, twelve dead
horses, and an empty sky.
Some
Cautions
Remember
that an essay that argues (rather than simply describes) uses summary only
sparingly, to remind readers periodically of crucial points. Summary should
always help build your argument. When teachers write "too much
summarymore analysis needed" in the margin, generally they mean that the
essay reports what you've studied rather than argues something about it. Two
linked problems give rise to this situation. The first is a thesis that isn't
really a thesis but rather a statement of something obvious about your
subjecta description. (The obvious cannot be argued.) A statement of the
obvious tends to force further description, which leads to the second problem,
a structure that either follows the chronology of the source text from
beginning to end or simply lists examples from the source. Neither approach
builds an argument.
Copyright
2000, Elizabeth Abrams, for the Writing Center at Harvard University