Librarian's Corner

Think of a research topic that you feel strongly about.

As scholars, how can you engage with current research on the topic?

How can you add to the body of knowledge on this field?

Brainstorm potential ideas relating to what you have found most interesting in the course materials.

My research topic: In Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye, the central character, Pecola Breedlove, struggles with her racial identity and self esteem as she contends with an anti-Blackness that diminishes her sense of self. Ironically, it is the sexually radical women of the novel- China, Miss Marie, and Poland who function as alternative mother figures and uplift Pecola's sense of self using acts of caregiving. In my paper, I will examine the three sex workers in The Bluest Eye, putting Morrison's work in conversation with Alexis Gumbs's work "m/other ourselves: A Black Queer feminist genealogy for radical mothering." Using Gumbs work as a framework, I will analyze how the three sex workers function as marginalized figures who counter anti-Blackness with radical caregiving that also helps to nurture the wounded figure of Pecola Breedlove.

Research Plan

The research process is a series of multiple steps. Look at creating a research plan. Your instructor may have given you a topic/question to research or the freedom to come up with your own topic/question. Just take a few moments to think about the following: 

  1. What am I trying to accomplish?
  2. How interested am I in this idea?
  3. How much time do I have?
  4. What information and resources are available? 
  5. Does your issue have sub-topics that you need to know more about? 
  6. What is the assigned length of the research paper?

 

Research Process

Research strategy: Finding information efficiently

  1. Identify your broader topic.
  2. Narrow the focus of your topic.  Pick what aspect of your broader topic you wish to focus on.
  3. Become more familiar with your topic.  List out all relevant core concepts. These will become your search terms!
  4. Discover secondary sources:  books at Cornell
  5. Discover secondary sources:  articles in journals, magazines, and newspapers
  6. Putting it together:  evaluate, manage, and cite your sources.

Developing a Research Question

From Questions to Keywords