The combination of the class discussion and the feedback from the two teachers has provided me good guidance. I feel that I now I have structure for the remainder of my paper. Some of the written reviews of my first draft indicated that the draft started off slow and long-winded. There were a lot of individual sections that contained solid material. However, the aggregate of these sections lacked a clear direction. Or at the very least, the material left the reader wondering why they were included. Thus, I not only plan to edit out excess material, but I also added qualifying statements to the openings of certain paragraphs to clarify the purpose of the follow on section. For example, for my Hentsch material that looked at European fascination with the outside world, I plan to add in the following statement: “By virtue of the fact that someone who claimed to be T.S. was writing this account on a foreign land, we can ascertain that he had some sort of an audience in mind, which indicates that the imaginations of the English had become fascinated by stories of encounters with the outside world. In fact, during this time period, there was an “insatiable exploration of the planet” with many accounts of explorations of non-European lands”.
The second overarching critique I received was on the dual track nature of my paper. Most people recommended that I concentrate on either route. Due to both interest and ability to include primary source material, I decided to focus my efforts on the slave or captivity narrative. Because there were legitimate concerns about the validity of T.S., I plan to still include a quick assessment about his narrative. However, I intent to greatly shorten the section that details both justifications and motivations for false narratives in general. This material came from secondary sources, and so I want to edit it out. Instead, I plan to take Professor Kollmann’s advice and then just say that we cannot ever completely resolve this issue because it’s a captivity narrative and by definition they usually have fantastical elements.
I think that reading Billy’s first draft certainly contributed to my paper. Based off his articulation of the Baconian method for evaluating foreign lands, I even added a quip in contrasting that method and then T.S.’ style. Furthermore, the discussions on other topics also proved useful to me, because they provided me with necessary frameworks. For example, Alice’s topic included information on captivity narratives that I found useful as background context.