does anyone have tips for outline the actual Major Work? I've got a paragraph on a major issue, then with historians and smaller points underneath. is that right?
(my focus question: to what extent was repression evident or expressed in Soviet agricultural policy? relate to the policy for the first-five year plan)
Hey samsclaire!
By an outline do you mean a bit like an essay plan? If so I'd say that that is probably a pretty good way of going about it - I'd also make sure that you have some historiographical concepts floating around in there as well. I was more of a write now think later kinda gal, rarely ever had a plan in mind, just wrote and re-wrote and re-wrote until I was happy. I felt like in extension having a strict plan for me didn't really work, as my ideas often changed through writing and further research. Not to say that having a plan is a bad thing! Just that there is not much else I can really suggest haha.
On the topic of historiography, just an observation on your question - I think it's a bit too "history". What do I mean by that? Well the major work isn't meant to be a history essay, it is meant to be a historiography essay. You're not looking at the hows and whys of history, but the hows and whys of the
interpretations of history, thus in a historiography essay whether repression was evident or not is irrelevant - what is important is what the historians say about repression and why they say what they say. With that is mind, if I were you I'd probably want to revaluate my question to include more explicit reference to historiography (if you need any help with this let me know!). You can still keep it in the general topic of soviet agricultural policy, most people have a case study - just make sure that the overall focus of your essay is historiography and not history.
Susie