Indian cultural approciation

Make sure to use your introduction to introduce your selected reading, and give a brief synopsis. Remember that an introduction is the place to explain what you aim to achieve with your paper (“I want to argue why the reasoning in article X is faulty/why I strongly disagree with the posed thesis/I want to formulate some important counterarguments/…”) Keep your conclusions for the conclusion of the paper. Your explanation should come in the body of the paper, not the introduction. Introductions are brief and explain to your reader why you are writing your paper.

There will be more than one way to write your paper. You can defend or oppose the article. It might be possible to argue your case, presenting two different scenarios. You can explain why you strongly (dis)agree with the paper, and bring arguments why this is the case (e.g. you feel the article misrepresents the situation, only gives one side of the argument, overlooks something you think is important to take into consideration,…). It is possible you want to indicate you are not sure about how to deal with certain aspects, but to try and see both sides of the argument, showing empathy for both opponents and proponents to the problem discussed. Show you can think about Indian culture, Indian context, and explain, based upon the knowledge you gathered, why you are making the decisions you are making.