One good way to begin a writing task is by asking questions. These questions can begin as personal responses (Do I like this? Why or why not?) or comprehension questions (What does this mean? What else do I need to know here?), but your goal should be to move from internally focused questions to questions that will help you discuss what you’re reading with other people in your disciplinary community (your classmates, your professors, other scholars who study similar subjects). This semester, we will get in the habit of asking questions, both as a way of engaging with what we’re reading, and to providing starting points for writing projects.
Assignment description
Since provocation questions are so important to engaging critically with anything you read, you’ll be responsible for writing a substantive provocation question about one of the course readings each week. These provocation questions will provide a jumping-off point for the close reading assignments you’ll write over the course of the semester, as well as for class discussion.
What provocation questions do
As we’ve discussed, the first step in the close reading process is reading carefully and paying attention to details and individual words, rather than jumping straight to interpretation. In other words, instead of starting by asking what a text means, focus first on what it says, and then, once you’ve figured that out, begin to ask why a text says what it says, why it says something in a particular way, and what the effect of saying something in that way might be. That’s where the provocation question comes in.
How to write a provocation question
Remember that your question is intended to help you analyze the reading. As such, it should be substantial, detailed, and specific. It should pose one of the why or how questions that you ask after you’ve completed a careful close reading of a text.
Begin with several sentences (at least 2, but no more than 4) that describe what you noticed in your reading that led you to ask your question. Be specific and detailed in describing the situation as clearly as you can. If your question is prompted by contextual or historical information, include that in your description, but remember, your question should focus primarily on what’s happening on the page. Include any relevant short quotations that show the words or phrases that are important to your observations, but be judicious with your use of quotation. The provocation question should demonstrate your ideas and queries; it should not repeat large sections of the text. Be sure to cite page numbers for each quotation in parentheses after the quotation marks.
Once you’ve described in 2-4 sentences what you observed in your reading, pose your question. It should be a why or a how question that addresses what is happening in the text. You don’t need to have an answer to your question, although you should have a few ideas.
Some example provocation questions
When describing Amy, the narrator emphasizes what Amy’s friends think of her. She is “much admired” because she can “read French without mispronouncing more than two-thirds of the words,” and “her long words were considered ‘perfectly elegant’” (39). What does the narrator’s emphasis on other people’s perceptions indicate about Amy? To what extent does the narrator’s wry or amused tone in this passage undermine the surface description?
The description of Jo’s cast-off doll emphasizes its deformities and mutilations. It “led a tempestuous life,” and has “no top to its head,” or arms and legs (38). How does the description of the doll’s condition and Beth’s attempts to repair it illuminate the relationship between Jo and Beth?
Much of the narrator’s description of Beth emphasizes what other people do not see. No one knows how she takes care of Jo’s cast-off doll, and “nobody saw Beth wipe the tears off the yellow keys” (38-39). What does this description establish about the narrator’s position in relation to the characters, and to the reader?
Questions to avoid
Again, provocation questions are intended to provoke discussion. This means that they should require considerably more than a yes or no answer. Other types of questions that are not appropriate for provocation questions include:
Questions that are a matter of taste or opinion
Isn’t Amy the worst? Isn’t this description kind of boring?
Questions of fact or definition
What is a “coal-hod”? What was “The Vicar of Wakefield”?
Questions beyond the scope of the text
Did dropping Amy into the coal-hod actually flatten her nose?
Questions that are clearly answered by the text
Do Beth and Jo get along well?
Questions only the author’s ghost can answer
Why did Alcott make Amy so obnoxious? Why does Alcott undermine her description of Amy?
How not to disturb the author’s ghost
Note that the last question to avoid is very similar to the first example close reading question above. Framing something in terms of why an author did something a certain way is often tempting, but that sort of question doesn’t get us very far. Since we usually can’t ask the author him or herself, all we can do is speculate, which isn’t all that helpful. And even if we could ask the author, the answer would just be the beginning of a series of more important questions: Do we think the author’s answer is supported by the details of the text? How, if at all, does this change our reading of the text? Ultimately, what the author might have to say is less important than how what’s happening on the page affects the way we read and engage with the text, and that’s what you want your questions to focus on.
Grading
Provocation questions are worth two points each and will be graded on a check plus/check/check minus basis. A question will receive a check minus if it fails to meet the minimum requirements of the assignment: if it lacks a substantive description, if it fails to focus on a single passage in the text, or if it asks a question on the list of questions to avoid. A provocation question that receives a check plus is one that asks a particularly insightful, striking or otherwise unexpected question, or one that notices something especially interesting and significant in the text; in other words, a question that goes well beyond the expectations of the assignment.
A check plus is equal to 1 points, a check to 0.8 points, and a check minus to 0.5 points. Over the course of the term, you will submit twelve provocation questions; I will average the top eleven.