ESSAI
Volume 16 (2018)
Created in 2002 by a cross-disciplinary faculty, ESSAI, The College of DuPage Anthology of Academic Writing Across the Curriculum is an annual academic journal that represents a unique but inclusive discourse community of student writers; it fosters student success through writing across the curriculum and in all levels of learning at College of DuPage. It rests on our belief that writing empowers and prepares our students for meaningful careers and advanced academic pursuits and that, to realize such goals, the entire college community is responsible for incorporating writing into their courses as a vital part of the academic experience at our college.
Like all the past volumes, this Volume XVI continues to harvest our belief in fertile cooperation with our cross-disciplinary faculty who implement writing to learn and promote discipline in their teaching. Some of the published essays, therefore, have resulted because our students made use of journals, logs, microthemes, and other informal writing assignments encouraged in the classroom. In this way, students wrote frequently and improved their writing skills enabling them to comprehend better and to retain information longer. Others – expository work such as reports, article reviews, criticisms, research papers – attest to students’ successful participation in academic discourse according to the conventions of language use and style expected in specific disciplines.
That we practice the philosophy of student success through good writing will become even more apparent in the journal’s name. It harkens back and pays homage to Michel de Montaigne whose seminal style of writing “essais” connoted one of trials and attempts. Thus ESSAI chronicles our students’ intellectual trials wherein they dialogically encounter diverse culturescapes, critically weigh various issues at hand and then engage in analytical exercises, while each evolving from a personal to a public writing self. The resulting published work is their expanded cultural and epistemological self endowed with talent, sophistication, and fresh scholarship, all expressed with clarity, eloquence, and grace.
We continue our editorial tradition in making the best selections for publication. The most exemplary of the year’s submissions are those that:
- Are completed according to assignments’ purposes
- Have mechanics, grammar, and other technical points in place
- Are imaginative, creative, logical, and risk-taking with respect to assignments’ purposes
- Exhibit clarity of writing with respect to purposes
- Follow the disciplinary format
- Include relevant literature reviews where required
- Demonstrate analytical abilities
- Generate interest
Join with us in honoring the exceptional talents of our student authors and our student artist whose graphic design adorns our cover. And watch for Volume XVII of ESSAI which will be published in 2020. We appreciate your readership. Through your interest and support, our anthology will keep growing.
Prefatory Notes
Front Cover
Marcia Garcia
Selections
Service Learning
Ariane Cando
Copernican Heliocentrism
Benjamin Cavanaugh
Sam Peckinpah as Film Auteur
Jules Cherie
Why Good People Commit Evil Acts
Nico Dituri
The Battle of Algiers
Eric Durkin
The People, The Revolution
Mary Farley
The Silent Killer of the Periodic Table
Axel Gallegos
History of the Miasma Theory of Disease
Ajesh Kannadan
Is Woody Allen a Hedonist? A Look through the Lens of Film-Philosophy at Crimes and Misdemeanors
Kate Keiser
The Need for Tolerance & Self Acceptance
Samira Khorfan
Peleus' Kids
Mikey Lawson
When the Levee Bursts
Mike LeClaire
Gentrification and Chicago
Jordan Marks
Land of the Free -- Carceral State Edition
Evelyn Martinez
Static Universe
Evelyn Martinez
Good Theory Gone Bad -- Preformationism
Tiffany Wang
Effects of Geospatial Factors on Male Red-Winged Blackbird Territorial Behavior and Abundance
Gabriella Zaffer
Dementia: Current Understanding and Prospects for the Future
Ewa Zapart Placek
Back Matter
Editors
- Graphic Design
- Brian Blevins
- English
- Franz Burnier
- Chemistry
- Richard Jarmin
- English
- Kris Kowal
- English
- Sarah Magin
- History
- Sam Mitrani
- Biology
- Lynda Randa
- History
- Ben Whisenhunt