Choose ONE of the sins listed in the Inferno and write a 4-6-page essay as to wh

Choose ONE of the sins listed in the Inferno and write a 4-6-page essay as to wh

Choose ONE of the sins listed in the Inferno and write a 4-6-page essay as to whether the punishment is appropriate to the sin. Research “contrapasso.” Do not simply regurgitate what you read from the internet. 
Cite specific references from the text that you elaborate on. 
It may require that you do some background research on a few things, such as the medieval understanding of Christianity or the historical context (ex. WHY the popes in hell are suffering the way that they are based on what did on Earth).  
Explain how the punishment is an inversion of the sin. 
Discuss why/how the encounter is important for the pilgrim Dante. Why is it important for him to speak with this person? How does it affect his development as a “hero?” 
Provide a Work Cited page
Use our required textbook page numbers only. 
Do not use any generative text AI to compose, edit, or revise. 
See the Rubric in the COURSE RESOURCES module to evaluate your work. 
Also, the book you need to use is from the Norton anthology World Literature Volume B page 394-547. The only source can be this book

Format: 12 pt., Times New Roman, Double spaced, 1 inch margins on all sides. Pa

Format: 12 pt., Times New Roman, Double spaced, 1 inch margins on all sides. Pa

Format: 12 pt., Times New Roman, Double spaced, 1 inch margins on all sides. Page numbers in upper right corner with your last name. NO EXTRA SPACINGS.
Assignment: Craft an essay in which you discuss how Chaucer uses the Wife of Bath to support and/or refute the long tradition of misogyny or anti-feminism in literature that presents women as morally corrupt and lustful. Use specific passages to use as evidence to support your argument.
Structure: Each essay should include a clear introduction, body, and conclusion. The last sentence of the introduction should contain a clear thesis statement. For example, your thesis might be a statement of how you see Chaucer using the Wife Bath to reject misogyny by doing a, b, and c. All body paragraphs should begin with clear topic sentences that help guide the reader through the essay. All paragraphs should be between 5 and 8 sentences and must contain direct references to the epic in which your chosen characters appear. Direct quotations must not be longer than 3 typed lines (you may use slashes to denote breaks in lines) and must be cited in MLA 9th edition format. The conclusion should remind the reader of your essay’s point and bring the essay to a close.
Notes: You should ONLY write about The Wife of Bath. You may use “The General Prologue”, “The Wife of Bath’s Prologue”, and “The Wife’s Tale” to make your case. DO NOT SUMMARIZE the readings. You should ONLY USE YOUR TEXT for this paper. NO secondary sources or work from other authors are permitted. Plot summary will earn a grade of zero. Plagiarized papers will receive a grade of zero and will be reported as Academic Misconduct. This includes “borrowing” passages from sites like Spark Notes/Cliffs Notes/Shmoop, etc. Don’t try it. I will catch it.

Dear Class, A thoughtful post on all questions is expected in this forum, with d

Dear Class,
A thoughtful post on all questions is expected in this forum, with d

Dear Class,
A thoughtful post on all questions is expected in this forum, with direct quotes (cited) from the videos/text as well as reading of other students’ posts.
You will respond to the following prompts (you will be able to see other posts after you have posted yours).
Please respond to the following prompts in your first post
1. Everyone:
From the following two resources, What religions were new to you? What religions interest you to study?
Let’s Look at World Religions (post at least one direct quote from the video)20 minutes
Timeline: Origins of Major Religions –
2. a.Why Study Religion Video
From the Why Study Religion video why should we study religions? Give at least two direct quotes with your new learning/insights.
Why Study Religion? 4.28 minute
b. Website – Why Study Religion
From the WebSite point of view, why should we study religion? Why should people from your course of study/career study religion?
Give at least one direct quote from the website.
Why Study Religion? WebSite
3. Everyone: From the TextBook Part 1 and share at least two direct quotes that represents new learning or confirms what you knew.
Part I Text: Introduction, About Religion, Sacred places, Sacred Text
4. Reflect” on new learning (with one direct quote) from
.The Academic Study of Religion Explained 4:24 minutes
5. When you have completed your own post, please read all of your classmates posts and respond briefly to one or more other student’s posts with what you learned from their post (using proper netiquette) .
Respond to assigned prompts (above) thoughtfully, reference the reading, videos and resources with quotes including your new learning in your post (without revealing your own religion or non-religion), responded to other student(s).Remember to use netiquette .

The story I have to write about is “the life of a sensuous woman”. Choosing a

The story I have to write about is “the life of a sensuous woman”.
Choosing a

The story I have to write about is “the life of a sensuous woman”.
Choosing a symbolic element.
Categorize what kind of symbol it is. Explain what the symbol represents. Explain its larger significance.

include your thoughts about any aspect of the readings that interest you AND the

include your thoughts about any aspect of the readings that interest you AND the

include your thoughts about any aspect of the readings that interest you AND the questions you have after reading or watching the film materials. You are strongly encouraged to response to your classmates’ posts. In your reading responses, here are four types of questions: 1) What is the assigned reading text about? 2) What is this text/film trying to achieve? 3) what materials does the author rely on to make his/ her argument? 4) what analytics or methodologies does the author use?

BASIC REQUIREMENTS Select 2 or 3 consecutive lines from one of the following poe

BASIC REQUIREMENTS
Select 2 or 3 consecutive lines from one of the following poe

BASIC REQUIREMENTS
Select 2 or 3 consecutive lines from one of the following poems by Jorge Luis Borges posted on Canvas: “Rain” OR “Adam Cast Forth.”
Write a 500-to-600-word discussion board post that interprets your chosen lines through close reading and analyzes what your chosen lines reveal about Borges’s philosophy.
In your post, clearly and meaningfully engage with the lecture videos on Borges in the Week 3 module.
Write substantial 50-word comments on three of your classmates’ posts.
Submit your post and comments correctly and by the deadline to the “Writing Assignment #1” discussion board in the Week 3 module in Canvas.
Your post and three comments are worth 15 points total and will be assessed through the Writing Assignment #1 Rubric Download Writing Assignment #1 Rubric, which is available in the Week 3 module in Canvas.
Read the rest of this assignment carefully, as it offers in-depth explanations of each of the requirements mentioned above.
ACADEMIC HONESTY
As stated on the syllabus and in our welcome video, the use of generative AI (artificial intelligence) is strictly forbidden for your work in this class. You are not allowed to use tools like ChatGPT, Google Bard, or Grammarly Go, among many other AI tools. If we discern that your discussion board post or comments have employed AI, or any other means of plagiarism, your assignment will receive zero points and you will be reported to USM’s Office of Academic Integrity. In addition, depending on your violation, you might possibly earn an F or XF in the course.
INTERPRETING THE LINES THROUGH CLOSE READING
Once you have selected 2 or 3 consecutive lines from “Rain” OR “Adam Cast Forth,” you must interpret what those lines mean by close reading them. A close reading requires that you examine the individual components of a brief passage as if under a microscope: you will scrutinize diction (word choice, both in the way words sound as well as what they mean), syntax (the order in which words are arranged, including punctuation and line length), and imagery (especially the use of figurative language like metaphor and simile). A close reading does not merely restate, paraphrase, or summarize the lines. See the “questions to consider as you start your assignment” section at the end of this document for guidance in generating your close reading.
ANALYZING HOW THE LINES REVEAL BORGES’S PHILOSOPHY
What do your chosen lines—specifically their diction, syntax, and/or imagery—reveal about Borges’s philosophy, such as how the world works, how art works, OR how human beings work? Your chosen passage should allow you to discern and analyze some aspect of Borges’s philosophy in precise and specific ways—not in broad generalizations. For instance, rather than saying Borges believes “life is a mystery” [he doesn’t], you might say “Borges shows us we can only see the world in relation to ourselves.” (Do not use these exact words if you decide to analyze Borges’s philosophy about the relationship between the world and the self. Papers that use this sentence will receive zero credit due to plagiarism.) See the “questions to consider as you start your assignment” section at the end of this document for guidance in analyzing your chosen lines.
MEANINGFULLY ENGAGE WITH LECTURE VIDEOS
Your analysis must clearly refer to and build on material from one or more of Week 3’s lecture videos. “Rain” and “Adam Cast Forth” are not directly addressed in the lecture videos; however, there are many ways to use the lecture material to deepen your analysis of your chosen lines. Some of you may choose to refer to one or more of Borges’s recurring motifs, like mirrors, mazes, and dreams. You might focus on a theme like the unreliability of story, interconnected journeys, or multiple personas. You could even decide to include information about how your chosen lines connect with Borges’s innovations: the invention of hypertext, his theory of art, or the relevance of existentialism to his philosophy. Make sure that you extend and enhance, rather than simply repeat, what is in the lectures. You may also choose to very briefly reference (in 1-2 sentences) other assigned texts by Borges in order to deepen your analysis of “Rain” or “Adam Cast Forth.” If you do briefly reference another text by Borges, remember that your post’s focus must stay on “Rain” or “Adam Cast Forth.”
THREE COMMENTS ON CLASSMATES’ POSTS
After you post to the discussion board, you must comment substantively on at least three of your classmates’ posts. Each comment must be a minimum of 50 words, and you must go far beyond saying “Great job!” or “I disagree.” Instead, you might indicate if your classmate’s post taught you something, or made you think about the topic at hand in a new way. If you think a classmate’s post is strong, explain why you think it’s strong. If you agree or disagree with a classmate, explain why you agree or disagree. You also might want to indicate how your classmate’s post relates to your own. Do you have a similar or different approach to the text and/or the topic? All three of these comments must be completed by the deadline on Sunday, Feb. 4. If any comments are made in the late window (after 11:59 p.m. on Sunday, Feb. 4 and before 11:59 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 7), the assignment will be designated late and will lose one point as a late penalty.
Please note: rude or unprofessional comments will result in an automatic zero for your entire assignment. We want you to engage with your peers, but in a respectful fashion.
FORMAT & LENGTH
At the very beginning of your post, quote the 2-3 consecutive lines from “Rain” or “Adam Cast Forth” that you analyze in your post. You must use the version/translation of the poem from the pdf posted to Canvas. Your analysis must be at least 500 words long, and shouldn’t go longer than 600 words. Note: the length of your quotation does not count towards your post’s word count.
Example start of a post:
“The afternoon has brightened up at last
For rain is falling, sudden and minute.
Falling or fallen. There is no dispute:”
These opening three lines from Borges’s poem “Rain”…[rest of analysis would follow]
SUBMISSION
To receive credit for this assignment, students must submit it correctly. The post and comments must be submitted to “Writing Assignment #1: Close Reading Discussion Board,” linked to in the Week 3 Canvas module. Once in this discussion board, write your post directly into the text box, and click “post reply” to submit your post. You cannot submit your post and/or comments any other way (such as by email, Canvas message, or as an attachment to a post or to a submission comment). Remember to proofread your post before you submit it; it should be well written and relatively free of grammatical errors and typos.
DUE DATE & LATE WORK
This assignment—the post and all three comments—is due by 11:59 p.m. (CT) on Sunday, February 4. Because this assignment requires that you respond to your peers, we ask that you try to complete and post your original response as soon as possible, ideally by Friday, February 2.
Late assignments will be accepted only for 72 hours immediately following the due date and time. The late deadline is 11:59 p.m. (CT) on Wednesday, February 7. No submissions will be accepted after the late deadline on Feb. 7.
If any part of the assignment is submitted during the late window (including one or more comments), then the whole assignment will be marked late. All late assignments will receive a 1-point deduction for lateness; the same late penalty applies whether the assignment is 1 hour late or 72 hours late.
SUPPORT & EXTRA CREDIT
If you have questions about this assignment, you can ask them in the designated Q & A Forum in the Week 3 Module in Canvas; message the course coordinator, Ms. Hannah Mummert; or attend Ms. Mummert’s office hours from 2:00-4:00 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays. You can earn extra credit by attending a Writing Center appointment to work on this assignment. Ask the Writing Center to email Ms. Mummert a record of your appointment. Consult the syllabus for more information on this extra credit opportunity.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER AS YOU START YOUR ASSIGNMENT
What aspect of Borges’s philosophy do your 2-3 lines seem to be addressing: how the world works, how art works, how the human mind works? Does he answer one of those big questions—like his explanation for the significance of dreams in the human mind in “Ragnarök”—or does he leave you with more questions than before, as with the way the world works in “The Garden of Forking Paths”? What is the significance of this answer or the lack thereof?
What specific information do readers learn from the 2-3 lines you’ve chosen?
What effect does the word choice have on the meaning of those lines; that is, are any of the words unusual or unique? How does their meaning or the way they sound contribute to the meaning of the 2-3 lines? Are any words repeated or capitalized; if so, how does drawing attention to those words help you to interpret the lines?
Are the chosen lines of equal length, or is there variation in line length? Where do the lines use punctuation: at the end of the lines, in the middle of the lines? Aside from showing us where to pause as we read aloud, what does that punctuation placement show us about what the poem is emphasizing?
Are there any unusual images in the 2-3 lines, especially ones which you might not immediately associate with rain (in “Rain”) or Adam (in “Adam Cast Forth”)? How are those images described; is there figurative or sensory language in the 2-3 lines? How do those images help us to understand why the rain or Adam is significant to Borges? Do the rain or Adam symbolize something else?
Have you seen any of the characteristics of diction, syntax, and/or imagery from “Rain” or “Adam Cast Forth” in Borges’s other works? For instance, in the lecture video on identity in “Borges and I” and “That One,” Dr. Cochran points out that those two texts both mention hourglasses, maps, and Buenos Aires. How is it significant that you might recognize something in your chosen lines from a different Borges text(s)? Remember that he did not make much distinction between short stories, poems, and essays, so you may think about any of his assigned texts.
Do your 2-3 lines contain any of the recurring symbols or ideas we’ve seen before in Borges’s texts? For instance, if you identify the symbol of a mirror in your chosen lines, is it a mirror that accurately reflects (like in “The Art of Poetry”) or one that obscures a clear reflection (as in “Sleep”)?