Hello! I hope I'm posting this in the right place. I'm going to write an essay about lost media for my English 101 class about how it's important to find and preserve lost media but I need help with explaining how finding lost media is important. I know that it's important to find it but I'm not exactly sure how to word it. Here's what I have so far for my thesis and 3 topic sentences:
Thesis: Documenting Lost Media is important for many reasons. Sentence 1: Lost Media gives us a glimpse of the past 2: Lost media is an important part of history 3: Lost Media can help us find closure.
My professor said the topic sentences sound too similar to each other so I'm not really sure what to put. Any help and suggestions would be appreciated! Not asking to have people write for me, I just need suggestions and ideas ^-^
Also: are the words lost media supposed to be capitalized?
1) Define what lost media is. (A lot of people don't know offhand, unless you're going to have a sentence or two about that? But I think it's worthy of a introductory paragraph). 2) Examples of important lost media in history, and how they end up lost. I'd put a great focus on early cinema, important texts, and what we're missing out on. 3) How lost media is archived and how one can join the cause.
Idk if this helps, I used to kill at writing essays but I'm pretty rusty.
Post by theCarbonFreeze on Sept 18, 2021 1:23:35 GMT
An interesting angle might be to explore the reasons media goes lost. From lesser-loved Greek plays going extinct because there was less interest in copying them around, to the Manichaean (and other religious) texts being burned due to persecution, to accidents of war like the burning of old libraries. And compare that to now, where the primary driving force for media getting lost is copyright nonsense, carelessness of the media-holders themselves and the delicate nature of both film and digital media. (Many lost films, pre and post digital, are lost because there was only one or few copies poorly maintained.)
Another interesting angle might be the fact that those trusted with this media do a terrible job maintaining it. From the MGM studio fire to "the day the music died/burned" to Nintendo and other companies losing the various source codes for their own iconic videogames. Then maybe discuss the importance of our community/multiple, decentralized preservationist efforts and reduced terms for copyright when it comes to preserving media going forward.