I want you to review all the texts we’ve read so far and map connections and relationships between and among them. The readings are the Nussbaum, Borowski, Amery, Levi, and Korn.
Basics: While I want you to arrange your texts in relation to each other, I do not mean that you must link every text to every other text. I simply want you to constellate them so that all are IN some kind of relationship(s). You may choose to pair or group the readings however you like. The only requirement is that you must utilize all the texts and identify three kinds of relationships: stylistic, conceptual, and thematic.
Stylistic relationships refer to the unique ways the writers practice their craft — their syntax, imagery, voice, point of view, and tone. Look up these elements if you do not know what they are.
Conceptual relationships refer to the creation and advancement of philosophical positions and the relevance of such positions in a work of literary art.
Thematic relationships refer to connections between/among writers’ subjects.
Very important: relationships can be either contrasts or comparisons. You may, for example, choose to discuss how different two or more writers are in their style, for example. You need not look exclusively for similarities; you should also consider linking texts in terms of their dissimilarities.
It is essential that you use short quotations from each text to support your argument about there being relationships between/among texts. Use MLA in-text citations, i.e., “This is a sample sentence” (Nussbaum 4).
Form: you should write an opening paragraph that introduces your paper. Here, you should explain what you intend to do in the paper and how you are going to go about it.
After your introduction, you should have three sections, each with its own bold-face sub-heading. Your bold-face subheadings should be flush left, initial cap only. Start your section on the very next line. Each subhead will indicate the kind of relationship you will cover in that section: conceptual, stylistic, or thematic. Within each section, you should group and show relationships between or among texts that demonstrate that section’s relationship type. For example, in your style section, you will map textual relationships based primarily on style — how writers actually write in terms of the ways they assemble their words on the page. You’ll do the same thing for your conceptual and thematic subsections. Each subsection should be arranged into separate paragraphs; always start a new paragraph when you begin a new idea. Do not render each section as one long paragraph.
Then, write a concluding graf in which you summarize your paper — the kinds of relationships you found, the contrasts and comparisons you made, and any other concluding comments that you believe will help your reader understand what you’ve achieved in your paper.
I will attach the all sources you need