A guide to critical thinking provides coverage of classic and contemporary approaches to argumentation, in an updated edition featuring a new chapter on the rhetorical analysis of pop culture as well as additional research and writing strategies.
Sylvan Barnet is an American literary critic and Shakespearean scholar. He is a Fletcher Professor of English Emeritus at Tufts University.
Barnet is the author of numerous books and articles on Shakespeare. He is the general editor of the Signet Classics Shakespeare,[1] the author of A Short Guide to Shakespeare,[2] and has written many textbooks. He is the co-author with William Burto of occasional essays on aspects of Japanese art.[3] He has also written books about the art of writing.
I don't think I ever devoured a book as much as I did this. I probably highlighted close to 20 percent of it (and it was not a short one). To me, the best part about this book is that with all the guides the writer provides, he also provides ample examples- which honestly is not very common in many of the writing guides I have read so far. The essays were diverse, and to the academic level you would expect from a college essay. Then after each essay you find some notes from the author; it was like a voice guiding you through every thought that came to the writer's mind as they wrote their essays. I can tell you; it's not easy forming an argument, but the guides and exercises provided in this book, will get you on the track of writing the best essays you ever did, all in a matter of weeks!
Tedious. The essay selections as examples of what the author was trying to get across were fine, but rarely necessary to read. Ended up half-heartedly skimming a lot of the later chapters, but enough that I'll call this fairly read. Desperately needed a good editor.