This handout describes some steps for planning and writing papers  about fiction texts. For information on writing about other kinds of  literature, please see the Writing Center's handouts on writing about  drama and poetry explications.  
Demystifying the process
Writing an analysis of a piece of fiction can be a mystifying  process. First, literary analyses (or papers that offer an  interpretation of a story) rely on the assumption that stories must mean  something. How does a story mean something? Isn’t a story just an  arrangement of characters and events? And if the author wanted to convey  a meaning, wouldn’t he or she be much better off writing an essay just  telling us what he or she meant?
It’s pretty easy to see how at least some stories convey clear  meanings or morals. Just think about a parable like the prodigal son or a  nursery tale about "crying wolf." Stories like these are reduced down  to the bare elements, giving us just enough detail to lead us to their  main points, and because they are relatively easy to understand and tend  to stick in our memories, they’re often used in some kinds of  education.
But if the meanings were always as clear as they are in parables, who  would really need to write a paper analyzing them? Interpretations of  fiction would not be interesting if the meanings of the stories were  clear to everyone who reads them. Thankfully (or perhaps regrettably,  depending on your perspective) the stories we’re asked to interpret in  our classes are a good bit more complicated than most parables. They use  characters, settings, and actions to illustrate issues that have no  easy resolution. They show different sides of a problem, and they can  raise new questions. In short, the stories we read in class have  meanings that are arguable and complicated, and it’s our job to sort  them out.
It might seem that the stories do have specific meanings, and the  instructor has already decided what those meanings are. Not true.  Instructors can be pretty dazzling (or mystifying) with their  interpretations, but that’s because they have a lot of practice with  stories and have developed a sense of the kinds of things to look for.  Even so, the most well-informed professor rarely arrives at conclusions  that someone else wouldn’t disagree with. In fact, most professors are  aware that their interpretations are debatable and actually love a good  argument. But let’s not go to the other extreme. To say that there is no  one answer is not to say that anything we decide to say about a novel  or short story is valid, interesting, or valuable. Interpretations of  fiction are often opinions, but not all opinions are equal.
So what makes a valid and interesting opinion? A good interpretation of fiction will:
- avoid the obvious (in other words, it won’t argue a conclusion  that most readers could reach on their own from a general knowledge of  the story)
- support its main points with strong evidence from the story
- use careful reasoning to explain how that evidence relates to the main points of the interpretation.
The following steps are intended as a guide through the  difficult process of writing an interpretive paper that meets these  criteria. Writing tends to be a highly individual task, so adapt these  suggestions to fit your own habits and inclinations.
 
Writing a paper on fiction in 9 steps
1. Become familiar with the text.
There’s no substitute for a good general knowledge of your story. A  good paper inevitably begins with the writer having a solid  understanding of the work that he or she interprets. Being able to have  the whole book, short story, or play in your head—at least in a general  way—when you begin thinking through ideas will be a great help and will  actually allow you to write the paper more quickly in the long run. It's  even a good idea to spend some time just thinking about the story. Flip  back through the book and consider what interests you about this piece  of writing—what seemed strange, new, or important?
2. Explore potential topics
Perhaps your instructor has given you a list of topics to choose, or  perhaps you have been asked to create your own. Either way, you'll need  to generate ideas to use in the paper—even with an assigned topic,  you'll have to develop your own interpretation. Let's assume for now  that you are choosing your own topic.
After reading your story, a topic may just jump out at you, or you  may have recognized a pattern or identified a problem that you’d like to  think about in more detail. What is a pattern or a problem?
A pattern can be the recurrence of certain kinds of imagery or  events. Usually, repetition of particular aspects of a story (similar  events in the plot, similar descriptions, even repetition of particular  words) tends to render those elements more conspicuous. Let’s say I’m  writing a paper on Mary Shelley’s novel Frankenstein. In the course of  reading that book, I keep noticing the author’s use of biblical imagery:  Victor Frankenstein anticipates that "a new species would bless me as  its creator and source" (52) while the monster is not sure whether to  consider himself as an Adam or a Satan. These details might help me  interpret the way characters think about themselves and about each  other, as well as allow me to infer what the author might have wanted  her reader to think by using the Bible as a frame of reference. On  another subject, I also notice that the book repeatedly refers to types  of education. The story mentions books that its characters read and the  different contexts in which learning takes place.
A problem, on the other hand, is something in the story that bugs you  or that doesn’t seem to add up. A character might act in some way  that’s unaccountable, a narrator may leave out what we think is  important information (or may focus on something that seems trivial), or  a narrator or character may offer an explanation that doesn’t seem to  make sense to us. Not all problems lead in interesting directions, but  some definitely do and even seem to be important parts of the story. In  Frankenstein, Victor works day and night to achieve his goal of bringing  life to the dead, but once he realizes his goal, he is immediately  repulsed by his creation and runs away. Why? Is there something wrong  with his creation, something wrong with his goal in the first place, or  something wrong with Victor himself? The book doesn’t give us a clear  answer but seems to invite us to interpret this problem.
If nothing immediately strikes you as interesting or no patterns or  problems jump out at you, don’t worry. Just start making a list of  whatever you remember from your reading, regardless of how insignificant  it may seem to you now. Consider a character’s peculiar behavior or  comments, the unusual way the narrator describes an event, or the  author’s placement of an action in an odd context. (Step 5 will cover  some further elements of fiction that you might find useful at this  stage as well.)
There’s a good chance that some of these intriguing moments and  oddities will relate to other points in the story, eventually revealing  some kind of pattern and giving you potential topics for your paper.  Also keep in mind that if you found something peculiar in the story  you’re writing about, chances are good that other people will have been  perplexed by these moments in the story as well and will be interested  to see how you make sense of it all. It's even a good idea to test your  ideas out on a friend, a classmate, or an instructor since talking about  your ideas will help you develop them and push them beyond obvious  interpretations of the story. And it's only by pushing those ideas that  you can write a paper that raises interesting issues or problems and  that offers creative interpretations related to those issues.
3. Select a topic with a lot of evidence
If you’re selecting from a number of possible topics, narrow down  your list by identifying how much evidence or how many specific details  you could use to investigate each potential issue. Do this step just off  the top of your head. Keep in mind that persuasive papers rely on ample  evidence and that having a lot of details to choose from can also make  your paper easier to write.
It might be helpful at this point to jot down all the events or  elements of the story that have some bearing on the two or three topics  that seem most promising. This can give you a more visual sense of how  much evidence you will have to work with on each potential topic. It’s  during this activity that having a good knowledge of your story will  come in handy and save you a lot of time. Don’t la
unch  into a topic without considering all the options first because you may  end up with a topic that seemed promising initially but that only leads  to a dead end.
4. Write out a working thesis
Based on the evidence that relates to your topic—and what you  anticipate you might say about those pieces of evidence—come up with a  working thesis. Don’t spend a lot of time composing this statement at  this stage since it will probably change (and a changing thesis  statement is a good sign that you’re starting to say more interesting  and complex things on your subject). At this point in my Frankenstein  project, I’ve become interested in ideas on education that seem to  appear pretty regularly, and I have a general sense that aspects of  Victor’s education lead to tragedy. Without considering things too  deeply, I’ll just write something like "Victor Frankenstein’s tragic  ambition was fueled by a faulty education."
5. Make an extended list of evidence
Once you have a working topic in mind, skim back over the story and  make a more comprehensive list of the details that relate to your point.  For my paper about education in Frankenstein, I’ll want to take notes  on what Victor Frankenstein reads at home, where he goes to school and  why, what he studies at school, what others think about those studies,  etc. And even though I’m primarily interested in Victor’s education, at  this stage in the writing, I’m also interested in moments of education  in the novel that don’t directly involve this character. These other  examples might provide a context or some useful contrasts that could  illuminate my evidence relating to Victor. With this goal in mind, I’ll  also take notes on how the monster educates himself, what he reads, and  what he learns from those he watches. As you make your notes keep track  of page numbers so you can quickly find the passages in your book again  and so you can easily document quoted passages when you write without  having to fish back through the book.
At this point, you want to include anything, anything, that might be  useful, and you also want to avoid the temptation to arrive at definite  conclusions about your topic. Remember that one of the qualities that  makes for a good interpretation is that it avoids the obvious. You want  to develop complex ideas, and the best way to do that is to keep your  ideas flexible until you’ve considered the evidence carefully. A good  gauge of complexity is whether you feel you understand more about your  topic than you did when you began (and even just reaching a higher state  of confusion is a good indicator that you’re treating your topic in a  complex way).
When you jot down ideas, you can focus on the observations from the  narrator or things that certain characters say or do. These elements are  certainly important. It might help you come up with more evidence if  you also take into account some of the broader components that go into  making fiction, things like plot, point of view, character, setting, and  symbols.
Plot is the string of events that go into the narrative. Think of  this as the "who did what to whom" part of the story. Plots can be  significant in themselves since chances are pretty good that some action  in the story will relate to your main idea. For my paper on education  in Frankenstein, I’m interested in Victor’s going to the University of  Ingolstadt to realize his father’s wish that Victor attend school where  he could learn about a another culture. Plots can also allow you to make  connections between the story you’re interpreting and some other  stories, and those connections might be useful in your interpretation.  For example, the plot of Frankenstein, which involves a man who desires  to bring life to the dead and creates a monster in the process, bears  some similarity to the ancient Greek story of Icarus who flew too close  to the sun on his wax wings. Both tell the story of a character who  reaches too ambitiously after knowledge and suffers dire consequences.
Your plot could also have similarities to whole groups of other  stories, all having conventional or easily recognizable plots. These  types of stories are often called genres. Some popular genres include  the gothic, the romance, the detective story, the bildungsroman (this is  just a German term for a novel that is centered around the development  of its main characters), and the novel of manners (a novel that focuses  on the behavior and foibles of a particular class or social group).  These categories are often helpful in characterizing a piece of writing,  but this approach has its limitations. Many novels don’t fit nicely  into one genre, and others seem to borrow a bit from a variety of  different categories. For example, given my working thesis on education,  I am more interested in Victor's development than in relating  Frankenstein to the gothic genre, so I might decide to treat the novel  as a bildungsroman.
And just to complicate matters that much more, genre can sometimes  take into account not only the type of plot but the form the novelist  uses to convey that plot. A story might be told in a series of letters  (this is called an epistolary form), in a sequence of journal entries,  or in a combination of forms (Frankenstein is actually told as a journal  included within a letter).
These matters of form also introduce questions of point of view, that  is, who is telling the story and what do they or don’t they know. Is  the tale told by an omniscient or all-knowing narrator who doesn’t  interact in the events, or is it presented by one of the characters  within the story? Can the reader trust that person to give an objective  account, or does that narrator color the story with his or her own  biases and interests?
Character refers to the qualities assigned to the individual figures  in the plot. Consider why the author assigns certain qualities to a  character or characters and how any such qualities might relate to your  topic. For example, a discussion of Victor Frankenstein’s education  might take into account aspects of his character that appear to be  developed (or underdeveloped) by the particular kind of education he  undertakes. Victor tends to be ambitious, even compulsive about his  studies, and I might be able to argue that his tendency to be  extravagant leads him to devote his own education to writers who  asserted grand, if questionable, conclusions.
Setting is the environment in which all of the actions take place.  What is the time period, the location, the time of day, the season, the  weather, the type of room or building? What is the general mood, and who  is present? All of these elements can reflect on the story’s events,  and though the setting of a story tends to be less conspicuous than plot  and character, setting still colors everything that’s said and done  within its context. If Victor Frankenstein does all of his experiments  in "a solitary chamber, or rather a cell, at the top of the house, and  separated from all the other apartments by a staircase" (53) we might  conclude that there is something anti-social, isolated, and stale, maybe  even unnatural about his project and his way of learning.
Obviously, if you consider all of these elements, you’ll probably  have too much evidence to fit effectively into one paper. Your goal is  merely to consider each of these aspects of fiction and include only  those that are most relevant to your topic and most interesting to your  reader. A good interpretive paper does not need to cover all elements of  the story—plot, genre, narrative form, character, and setting. In fact,  a paper that did try to say something about all of these elements would  be unfocused. You might find that most of your topic could be supported  by a consideration of character alone. That’s fine. For my Frankenstein  paper, I’m finding that my evidence largely has to do with the setting,  evidence that could lead to some interesting conclusions that my reader  probably hasn’t recognized on his or her own.
6. Select your evidence
Once you’ve made your expanded list of evidence, decide which  supporting details are the strongest. First, select the facts which bear  the closest relation to your thesis statement. Second, choose the  pieces of evidence you’ll be able to say the most about. Readers tend to  be more dazzled with your interpretations of evidence than with a lot  of quotes from the book. It would be useful to refer to Victor  Frankenstein’s youthful reading in alchemy, but my reader will be more  impressed by some analysis of how the writings of the alchemists—who  pursued magical principles of chemistry and physics—reflect the ambition  of his own goals. Select the details that will allow you to show off  your own reasoning skills and allow you to help the reader see the story  in a way he or she may not have seen it before.
7. Refine your thesis
Now it's time to go back to your working thesis and refine it so that  it reflects your new understanding of your topic. This step and the  previous step (selecting evidence) are actually best done at the same  time, since selecting your evidence and defining the focus of your paper  depend upon each other. Don't forget to consider the scope of your  project: how long is the paper supposed to be, and what can you  reasonably cover in a paper of that length? In rethinking the issue of  education in Frankenstein, I realize that I can narrow my topic in a  number of ways: I could focus on education and culture (Victor’s  education abroad), education in the sciences as opposed to the  humanities (the monster reads Milton, Goethe, and Plutarch), or  differences in learning environments (e.g. independent study, university  study, family reading). Since I think I found some interesting evidence  in the settings that I can interpret in a way that will get my reader’s  attention, I’ll take this last option and refine my working thesis  about Victor’s faulty education to something like this: "Victor  Frankenstein’s education in unnaturally isolated environments fosters  his tragic ambition."
8. Organize your evidence
Once you have a clear thesis you can go back to your list of selected  evidence and group all the similar details together. The ideas that tie  these clusters of evidence together can then become the claims that  you’ll make in your paper. As you begin thinking about what claims you  can make (i.e. what kinds of conclusion you can come to) keep in mind  that they should not only relate to all the evidence but also clearly  support your thesis. Once you’re satisfied with the way you’ve grouped  your evidence and with the way that your claims relate to your thesis,  you can begin to consider the most logical way to organize each of those  claims. To support my thesis about Frankenstein, I’ve decided to group  my evidence chronologically. I’ll start with Victor’s education at home,  then discuss his learning at the University, and finally address his  own experiments. This arrangement will let me show that Victor was  always prone to isolation in his education and that this tendency gets  stronger as he becomes more ambitious.
There are certainly other organizational options that might work  better depending on the type of points I want to stress. I could  organize a discussion of education by the various forms of education  found in the novel (for example, education through reading, through  classrooms, and through observation), by specific characters (education  for Victor, the monster, and Victor's bride, Elizabeth), or by the  effects of various types of education (those with harmful, beneficial,  or neutral effects).
9. Interpret your evidence
Avoid the temptation to load your paper with evidence from your  story. Each time you use a specific reference to your story, be sure to  explain the significance of that evidence in your own words. To get your  readers’ interest, you need to draw their attention to elements of the  story that they wouldn’t necessarily notice or understand on their own.  If you’re quoting passages without interpreting them, you’re not  demonstrating your reasoning skills or helping the reader. In most  cases, interpreting your evidence merely involves putting into your  paper what is already in your head. Remember that we, as readers, are  lazy—all of us. We don’t want to have to figure out a writer’s reasoning  for ourselves; we want all the thinking to be done for us in the paper.
General hints
The previous nine steps are intended to give you a sense of the tasks  usually involved in writing a good interpretive paper. What follows are  just some additional hints that might help you find an interesting  topic and maybe even make the process a little more enjoyable.
1. Make your thesis relevant to your readers
You’ll be able to keep your readers' attention more easily if you  pick a topic that relates to daily experience. Avoid writing a paper  that identifies a pattern in a story but doesn’t quite explain why that  pattern leads to an interesting interpretation. Identifying the biblical  references in Frankenstein might provide a good start to a paper—Mary  Shelley does use a lot of biblical allusions—but a good paper must also  tell the reader why those references are meaningful. So what makes an  interesting paper topic? Simply put, it has to address issues that we  can use in our own lives. Your thesis should be able to answer the  brutal question "So what?" Does your paper tell your reader something  relevant about the context of the story you’re interpreting or about the  human condition?
Some categories, like race, gender, and social class, are dependable  sources of interest. This is not to say that all good papers necessarily  deal with one of these issues. My thesis on education in Frankenstein  does not. But a lot of readers would probably be less interested in  reading a paper that traces the instances of water imagery than in  reading a paper that compares male or female stereotypes used in a story  or that takes a close look at relationships between characters of  different races. Again, don’t feel compelled to write on race, gender,  or class. The main idea is that you ask yourself whether the topic  you’ve selected connects with a major human concern, and there are a lot  of options here (for example, issues that relate to economics, family  dynamics, education, religion, law, politics, sexuality, history, and  psychology, among others).
Also, don’t assume that as long as you address one of these issues,  your paper will be interesting. As mentioned in step 2, you need to  address these big topics in a complex way. Doing this requires that you  don’t go into a topic with a preconceived notion of what you’ll find. Be  prepared to challenge your own ideas about what gender, race, or class  mean in a particular text.
2. Select a topic of interest to you
Though you may feel like you have to select a topic that sounds like  something your instructor would be interested in, don’t overlook the  fact that you’ll be more invested in your paper and probably get more  out of it if you make the topic something pertinent to yourself. Pick a  topic that might allow you to learn about yourself and what you find  important.
Of course, your topic can’t entirely be of your choosing. We’re  always at the mercy of the evidence that’s available to us. For example,  your interest may really be in political issues, but if you’re reading  Frankenstein, you might face some difficulties in finding enough  evidence to make a good paper on that kind of topic. If, on the other  hand, you’re interested in ethics, philosophy, science, psychology,  religion, or even geography, you’ll probably have more than enough to  write about and find yourself in the good position of having to select  only the best pieces of evidence.
3. Make your thesis specific
The effort to be more specific almost always leads to a thesis that  will get your reader’s attention, and it also separates you from the  crowd as someone who challenges ideas and looks into topics more deeply.  A paper about education in general in Frankenstein will probably not  get my reader’s attention as much as a more specific topic about the  impact of the learning environment on the main character. My readers may  have already thought to some extent about ideas of education in the  novel, if they have read it, but the chance that they have thought  through something more specific like the educational environment is  slimmer.
(taken from http://writingcenter.unc.edu/resources/handouts-demos/writing-for-specific-fields/literature-fiction)