The Courtroom Analogy in Writing Argument Papers
by George Brosi
There are several aspects of the way that a trial attorney proceeds which are
advantageous to others advancing an argument, including those supporting a
thesis in academic writing.
The trial attorney ordinarily begins to prepare for a trial knowing absolutely
nothing of the case. The attorney focuses upon how each aspect of the case
supports either one thesis--the guilt of the client--or the other--innocence.
Both sides must be examined with equal care, so that one can be advanced and
the other critiqued. Once it comes time to articulate the case in court,
however, the attorney is in command, expressing everything as a personal
conviction, regardless of how totally convincing the case may be or how much of
the case rests upon the knowledge or insights of an informant or another
person.
The case begins and ends with a statement by the attorney. This is the chance
for the lawyer to be confident and impressive in a commanding voice without
relying upon other authorities. The opening and closing statements compare to
the opening or closing sections--or paragraphs--of a research paper.
The attorney carefully organizes the case into parts which the jury can sort
out and understand. These basic aspects of the case are like the sub-headings
of a research paper. For example, the attorney may assert a client's innocence
by establishing 1. good character, 2. absence from the scene of the crime, 3.
incompatibility with the physical evidence and 4. lack of motive.
The good writer uses sources much like the good lawyer uses witnesses, seeking
the most credible and compelling, and checking out several possibilities before
deciding upon the most appropriate. This is time well spent, not wasted,
because good witnesses are crucial to the case. Before letting the witness
speak, the attorney explains to the jury how the testimony connects to the case
and advances it. Similarly the scholarly writer will begin each paragraph with
a personal statement connecting the material to come with the overall case.
The academic writer must introduce all sources, clarifying why they are
particularly apt. The jury can tell by looking and listening when the witness
is talking and when the attorney is, but the academic writer must indicate by
an introduction or by subsequently simply calling forth the source's last name
that the voice is now that of the source, not the writer. In the research
paper, parenthetical documentation is the indication that the witness has
stepped down from the stand and that the writer is back in control.
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