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21st November 07, 11:44 AM
#21
 Originally Posted by berserkbishop
I really like the idea of using Braveheart Vs. The Bruce in a history Vs. Hollywood. Teachers seem to eat up comparison and contrast and it is a pretty specific topic. . . 12 pages should be pretty easy and fitting. . . I am going to head into the library and see what cajunscot can help help me dig up after class. Oh and I am kilted today, btw. Thanks to all for the help!
Bishop
I'll pull what we have...Mackay's biography of William Wallace comes to mind, but you may need to go down the street to Drury...I know they have Allan Young's In the footsteps of William Wallace, which is a good resource.
And yes, we do have JSTOR. 
T.
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21st November 07, 11:50 AM
#22
Well, good. Saved my life more than once, quite frankly.
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21st November 07, 11:53 AM
#23
 Originally Posted by cajunscot
Sorry, gents, for talking shop in the mess. 
cajunscot, your ability to find ways to quote _Tunes of Glory_ will never cease to amaze me.
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21st November 07, 11:55 AM
#24
 Originally Posted by Scotus
cajunscot, your ability to find ways to quote _Tunes of Glory_ will never cease to amaze me. 
Who, me?
cajunscot's not the lad tae let you down. 
T.
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21st November 07, 11:58 AM
#25
Ah, research papers. Every time I wrote one, I would start looking at a blank screen wondering how to fill those pages up. Then near the end I'd sit there wondering how to trim it to keep it within the upper limit. The thing to remember about twelve pages of a college research paper is that since it's probably double spaced it's really only six. (Which makes things seem easier at the start, but then you start hitting that upper limit.)
Last edited by Erisianmonkey; 21st November 07 at 11:58 AM.
Reason: grammar
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21st November 07, 12:02 PM
#26
Heh. I just handed a paper in yesterday with a 6 page limit. That took some careful paring.
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21st November 07, 12:17 PM
#27
Couple of suggestions. I think if you are looking at all at the making of Scottish tradition then you need to look at Hugh Trevor-Roper's work. He has a chapter on the making of highland tradition in "The Invention of Tradition" by Hobsawn and Ranger. He also has a new book by Yale U. Press "The Invention of Scotland" coming out in 2008 (too late for you, I'm afraid). He debunks a lot of myth-making! Hope that helps.
Andy in Ithaca, NY
Exile from Northumberland
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21st November 07, 01:59 PM
#28
 Originally Posted by Erisianmonkey
Ah, research papers. Every time I wrote one, I would start looking at a blank screen wondering ...
Ah, blank screens...
I remember whenever I used to start one, it was hours of staring at blank blue-lined paper...
Regards,
Old Rex.
At any moment you must be prepared to give up who you are today for who you could become tomorrow.
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21st November 07, 07:03 PM
#29
AND, if you are crazy like me, you'll get three more degrees so you can have the joy of writing research papers for years to come!
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21st November 07, 08:00 PM
#30
do your paper on the relationship between the kings of scottland and the douglasses in the middle ages, you will have sources all over and political pattles galor to add some spice
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