User talk:Brittabarre

Rhetorical Analysis
I looked at the article for Modernismo.

The article provides an understandable, neutral, clear overview of the movement and refers to reliable sources. However, the article is not very developed and does not give more detail on the differences between modernismo in Latin America and modernism in Britain and the U.S. Also, some seminal authors for the movement are not mentioned.

There appears to be one editor, TheGrappler, who created the page in 2010. There was a minor edit by the same person in 2010 as well.

There are no dates on the talk page, nor are there users. The article doesn’t even have an importance or quality rating. It is part of WikiProject Spain and WikiProject Latin America.

I restructured the first sentence of the article so that the tense would be consistent throughout. Brittabarre (talk) 14:15, 31 March 2017 (UTC)

Brainstorming Possible topics
Chambao--exists Alex Phillips Jr. Latifundio--exists The Wave Pictures--exists "A Temporary Matter"--exists within page Christian Rex Van Minnen Sea of Trolls --exists Johnny Pye and the Fool-Killer--exists as musical, but not short story Read With Me Arnaud Lajeunie Hen pronoun--exists Nadsat--exists

There is little information on Alex Phillips Jr., and his movies are not that notable. Christian Rex Van Minnen has been mentioned on numerous art sites, so he is verifiable and his work is notable, but finding biographical information may be difficult, which is a similar case to Arnaud Lajeunie. "Johnny Pye and the Fool-Killer" may be the best because it only exists as a page based on a book by Mark St. Germain, even though it is also a short story by Stephen Vincent Benét, who is a considerably notable short story writer. I will have to find out for sure if the story is based on the book (or vice versa) or if they are two separate works. Literary criticism and anthologies with the story could be good starting places, as well as a bio of Benét. Other possible sources could be sources about the Broadway Musical, which may have helpful information or helpful bibliographies. I may link this page to the musical, the book, and Mark St. Germain, if he based his book on the story. Brittabarre (talk) 12:55, 5 April 2017 (UTC)