Roberto Vargas
rvargas1@swarthmore.edu
Research Paper
Annotated Bibliography
Only a Summary
A book review
+Integrated analysis of scholarly writing
+Can be arranged thematically, chronologically or by questions
- A summary + an analysis
+Makes judgements on the literature:
- Identifies inconsistencies, gaps and contradictions in the literature
+Is guided by your perspective
i.e. If you write a lit review chronologically, you might be emphasizing how your topic has changed over time
- Highlights key findings
+Demonstrates why the topic is significant to anthropology
+Discovers relationships between ideas/research
+Provides clues for future research
- Ensures that researches do not duplicate work that has already been done
-Areas to focus
+Demonstrates you are familiar with the topic
Why is it important?
How is it Organized?
How does it relate to other work?
Methods
Headings/Subheadings
Critically analyze the research
Important trends
Present your connections
Indicate any further research
Summarize evidence
Organize your Lit Review Body
Chronological
Methodological
Thematic
"... how many sources do you need to establish the importance of a theme? Twenty?... in a database containing millions of sentences, full-text search can turn up twenty examples of anything... this might strengthen confirmation bias."
-Ted Underwood,
Theorizing Research Practices We Forgot to Theorize Twenty Years Ago
Roberto Vargas
rvargas1@swarthmore.edu
http://guides.library.vcu.edu/lit-review
http://libguides.uwf.edu/c.php?g=215199&p=1420475
https://laverne.libguides.com/c.php?g=34942&p=222060
Big thanks to the following libguides: