Nigel
New member
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2026
- Messages
- 17
Comparative essays used to be my worst nightmare. I'd either end up writing two separate essays glued together (all about Text A, then all about Text B) OR I'd jump back and forth so chaotically that neither argument made sense. Finding the balance is HARD.
After some trial and error (and a lot of feedback), I found two structures that work. Which one you pick depends on your argument.
Option 1: The Block Method (Good for shorter essays or when you need to establish context)
After some trial and error (and a lot of feedback), I found two structures that work. Which one you pick depends on your argument.
Option 1: The Block Method (Good for shorter essays or when you need to establish context)
- Introduction: Thesis that establishes the basis for comparison.
- Body Paragraphs 1-2: All about Text A. Lay out its key points, arguments, or themes.
- Body Paragraphs 3-4: All about Text B. Lay out its corresponding points.
- Body Paragraph 5: Direct comparison and contrast. Now that you've presented both separately, you can analyze them together. Where do they align? Where do they diverge? Why does it matter?
- Conclusion: Synthesize and restate the significance.
- Introduction: Thesis that establishes the basis for comparison.
- Body Paragraph 1 (Point A): Discuss Point A in Text A, then immediately discuss Point A in Text B, then analyze the comparison.
- Body Paragraph 2 (Point B): Discuss Point B in Text A, then immediately discuss Point B in Text B, then analyze.
- Body Paragraph 3 (Point C): Same structure.
- Conclusion: Synthesize and restate the significance.