Due November 13, 2022
On Monday, November 13, students will submit by email a 3-5 page typed, double-spaced essay on a topic concerning modern US diplomatic history provided to them in class on Thursday, Nov. 9. All essays must include references to the Herring book, properly cited using Chicago-style footnotes. Outside research is allowed but not required. Essays will be graded on depth of analysis, use of evidence, and quality of prose. Late essays will be penalized up to 5 points each day.
- According to George Herring, “Unilateralism gave way to multilateralism” in US foreign policy during the early years of the Cold War. Agree or disagree with this statement and assess the significance of the changes that did occur during the period from 1945 to 1960.
- Was Franklin Roosevelt a Wilsonian in his approach to diplomatic policy and US national security?
- Please open your paper with a descriptive title, byline (name), and a clear introductory paragraph with thesis statement –and don’t just restate the question
- Organize your essay in a way that respects chronology and historical context.
- As with any essential question, make sure to define terms, consider the landscape of opinion, and demonstrate respect for complexity and change over time
- Be specific. Use examples, dates, statistics and snippets of quotation to support your claims.
- All essays must include material from Herring’s book properly cited with Chicago-style footnotes. Students should also feel encouraged to use relevant material from the course syllabus or the course site discussion pages, especially primary sources. Outside research is allowed but not required.
- Use past tense except when describing modern scholarship
- Avoid first person pronouns, including “our”
- Prof. Pinsker is available to review drafts by email (until Sunday evening) and you may utilize the Writing Center but do not consult with other students in the course
- Late essays will be penalized up to 5 points per day.
Sample Footnotes
According to George Herring, it was “unilateralism” and not isolationism which “formed a powerful and enduring strain in U.S. foreign policy.” [1] Any subsequent citation to Herring can be abbreviated with only author’s last name and page number.[2]
[1] George C. Herring, From Colony to Superpower: U.S. Foreign Relations Since 1776 (New York: Oxford University Press, 2008), 6.
[2] Herring, 118.
Additional Guidelines
- Make sure to address a question and devise a thesis statement that can be effectively argued in a short paper. Consult the Methods Center handout on How to Write a Thesis Statement
- Make sure you are using and formatting your footnotes correctly. Provide footnotes for all quotations and highly specific information (such as statistics). See the models below as well as this methods handout on How to Use Footnotes and consult as needed with the library’s Chicago-style guide, but make sure to use sample footnote models for formatting and NOT bibliography examples.
- Take to care to evaluate your sources as you deploy them in your essay. See this methods post on Evaluating Sources for a helpful overall framework.
- Don’t underestimate the importance of integrating your quoted evidence with some degree of fluidity. Awkwardly inserting quotations is one of the hallmarks of mediocre undergraduate essays. Consult this handout from the methods center for a range of good tips.
- Also, please guard against plagiarism. Remember our discussion from the very first day of the semester. Never write your own words while looking directly at your sources, especially secondary sources –unless you are quoting them.
- And finally, always remember to proofread your work by printing it out and reading it aloud, slowly. See our methods handout on How to Proofreed [sic]