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Zack Bergamini Greene Journal Works Cited: Greene, Stuart.

"Argument as Conversation: The Role of Inquiry in Writing a Researched Argument." The Subject Is Research: Processes and Practices. Portsmouth: Boynton/Cook, 145-56. Print. Summary In this article by Stuart Greene discusses about how to create an effective argument. He talks about how you can be in an argument, written or orally. Entering a conversation you have to answer few questions in order to have a good argument. Those answers are answered when you identify the issue, the situation of the writing and framing a question. Greene went onto discuss that framing which is like a perspective which writers present their arguments. This requires research. This then requires critical inquiry. Greene gives an example of Richard Rodriguezs memoir, Hunger of Memory, which discusses about his concept of a scholarship boy and then arguments are carried out about that. Then there was an excerpt from a students writing and thus Greene gives his opinions on that and how arguments are given out and then critiques her story. He ends it by saying that you can research two different ways and it can be either the process of collecting info or can be seen as a discovery of new information. Understanding a conversation can help begin research and that it can provide an argument. He says that research can changed the views of readers worldwide. Analysis Now before even reading this article I knew arguments were important because that causes debates and cause more discussions and research that will lead a person to a right answer. I just had no idea that there were this much going into the research end writing an article. This actually will be good for our next project we are doing, which is the annotative bib because all that entails is researching and then breaking it down and putting that research into contexts that will be easy to read and understand, but has the correct information in it. Also the framework for an article is really important to Greene. If there is no framework than there is no argument or no content. Also, if there is a good question to be answered than the argument put forth will be easier to put together and therefore the research will come together much easier as well. These tips should help for this next project because I really did not have a starting point at all how to research this topic considering all the texts there are for Disney Parks, but now I can sort of narrow it down a little bit more thanks to this article.

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