Read. Think. Write (to think further). Analyze the writing and the essay for how/why it works and what it accomplishes. This is separate from whether you like or dont like the essay, and separate fromwhether you think the essay is good or bad.Do not retell the authors content, or argue with them about their subject. Analyze the writing, the way the essay fitstogether or works, and the effects the essay achieves or is supposed to achieve. Conventions (shared rules) of critical analysis include: Write in the third person (academic voice) unless instructed otherwise.Include the authors full name and the title of the essay you are analyzing in the first paragraph of youressay. Thereafter, refer to the author by last name only. Your essay should have a thesis on the writing/essay examined, supported by points you develop in discussion, and should offer evidence from the essay in quotes, paraphrases, and t
hrough specific subject/content or summary references documented in correct MLA form. Authors make choices writing essays. Those choices include audience, purpose, thesis (subject,authors attitude toward the subject), genre and rhetorical approaches, the authors bias (attitude or point of view)and tone(diction, word choice, or overall description), voice,and style. Besides these basic choices, a student can analyze organization or structure, the flow of words, sentences, and paragraphs, or the authors message as developed from the thesis in supporting points and their discussion/development, and the kind, use, and credibility of evidenceused by the author. For this assignment, authors:How It Feels to Be Colored Me by Zora Neale Hurston. You may pursue an analysis we developed in class, or you may choose your own critical focus to develop. Support your analytic points with quotes from the essay as evidence