Although the assignment may say “compare,” the assumption is that you will consider both the similarities and differences; in other words, you will compare and contrast.
The assignment sheet may say exactly what you need to compare, or it may ask you to come up with a basis for comparison yourself.
Once you know your basis for comparison, think critically about the similarities and differences between the items you are comparing, and compile a list of them.
For example, you might decide that in Great Expectations, being a true gentleman is not a matter of manners or position but morality, whereas in The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, being a true gentleman is not about luxury and self-indulgence but hard work and productivity.
The list you have generated is not yet your outline for the essay, but it should provide you with enough similarities and differences to construct an initial plan.
Once you have listed similarities and differences, decide whether the similarities on the whole outweigh the differences or vice versa. Create a thesis statement that reflects their relative weights. A more complex thesis will usually include both similarities and differences. Here are examples of the two main cases:
While Callaghan’s “All the Years of Her Life” and Mistry’s “Of White Hairs and Cricket” both follow the conventions of the coming-of-age narrative, Callaghan’s story adheres more closely to these conventions by allowing its central protagonist to mature. In Mistry’s story, by contrast, no real growth occurs.
Although Darwin and Lamarck came to different conclusions about whether acquired traits can be inherited, they shared the key distinction of recognizing that species evolve over time.
A | Paragraph 1 in body | new technology and the French Revolution |
B | Paragraph 2 in body | new technology and the Russian Revolution |
A | Paragraph 3 in body | military strategy and the French Revolution |
B | Paragraph 4 in body | military strategy and the Russian Revolution |
A | Paragraph 5 in body | administrative system and the French Revolution |
B | Paragraph 6 in body | administrative system and the Russian Revolution |
A | Paragraphs 1–3 in body | How the French Revolution encouraged or thwarted innovation |
B | Paragraphs 4–6 in body | How the Russian Revolution encouraged or thwarted innovation |