Thursday, 20 June 2013

ESSAY PLAN!!

This is what I'm hoping my completed essay will look like. Obviously it's very much in draft form and subject to change... but I feel that this structure will address the question adequately. I'll try and keep editing this as I go.


Question: To what extent was The Aeneid a propaganda text for Caesar Augustus?

Introduction:
-       The Aeneid is widely considered to be a propaganda text
o   Evidence for this statement
-       There are a number of reasons why this statement might be accurate
o   Especially excerpts from book 6, where the story of the glorified future of Rome is narrated to Aeneas by his father, Anchises
o   More evidence to come
-       However, given the brevity of these comments, (and more evidence to come), it’s hardly fair to say that this was the defining feature of the poem)
-       Also, it had a variety of other purposes:
o   Entertainment (evidence to come)
o   Virgil’s masterwork (evidence to come)
o   Creation story
-       But the most important reason it was written was as a religious text
o   Describes the omnipotence of the immortals
o   Creates an archetypal Roman
o   Discusses mortality and the human condition (esp. at the end of book 12)
-       Therefore, it is fair to say that The Aeneid was written as a propaganda text to some extent, but that its main purpose was as a religious text, providing both guidelines for the Roman way of life, details of the immortals and an image of the archetypal Roman.

Paragraph 1: Reasons why The Aeneid might, to a reasonable extent, have been written as a propaganda text
- Excerpts from the poem, especially from book 6, strongly present The Aeneid as a propaganda text for the emperor Caesar Augustus.

Paragraph 2: Reasons why these reasons are flawed, and reasons why it is unfair to suggest that The Aeneid was solely written to be a propaganda text
- There are a variety of reasons, however, why the above elements of the poem ought not to be said to influence the overall purpose of The Aeneid, and why it is therefore only fair to say that The Aeneid was a propaganda text for Caesar Augustus to a small extent.

Paragraph 3: Reasons why The Aeneid might, to a great extent, have been written as a religious text
- As a result of a number of different elements of the poem, especially its conclusion, it is more accurate to suggest that The Aeneid was written as a religious text than as a propaganda text.

Conclusion!

2 comments:

  1. Just look at purpose vs function. The structure of the plan with the paragraphs is fine. You might look at a few more paragraphs as it is up 800 words on your usual length. Perhaps divisions of what is there, especailly Paragraph 3.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Add a specific log page to the blog.

    ReplyDelete