Reference no: EM132373094
Annotated Bibliography
This assignment requires you to research globalization and global citizenship. Theseare terms that refer to the spread of Western culture and values across the globe. Your job is to find ten sources that define globalizationand global citizenship.
You can use the same author multiple times, but you can't pull more than one quote per book. Follow the format below. You can use journals, but NO WEBSITES.
Note: 2 quotes for globalization and 3 for global citizenship.
The template shown below shows how your source should be cited, and how to write your annotation. Follow the format EXACTLY.
Steps to follow:
1. The book has to be academic book and peer reviewed.
2. No fragments sentences in the quotes.
3. The quote has to be original and not a para phrase of another quote.
4. Follow the template line by line and word by word.
5. Full stops and commas are very important and 5 points will be deducted for each punctuation and grammar mistake.
Template:
1. Last Name, First Name. Title of Book in Italics. Publisher, Year.
The first sentence of your annotation should summarize what the book is about. The second sentence in your annotation should explain what the thesis is, or lay out the focus of the book. The third sentence will be the quote you pull: "Be sure your quote is grammatically complete, that is does not have a period inside the quotation marks, and that you provide the author last name and page number in the parenthesis that follows" (Last Name 100). The fourth sentence in your annotation should be an explanation of the quote in your own words. The fifth and final sentence in the annotation should include why the book is important according to book reviews, which can often be found at the beginning of the book or the back cover, as well as the blurbs before you view the book online.
Example:
1. Gonzalez, R.F. Chinese Gong Fu: Toward a Body-Centered Understanding. McFarland, 2019.
Chinese Gong Fu: Toward a Body-Centered Understandingis about how the science of embodiment and cognitive science can be applied to the martial arts. The focus of this book is Chinese gong fu, and how this ancient martial art utilizes embodiment to relay, preserve, and transmit body-texts between master and pupil. R.F. Gonzalez has stated that embodiment has been a part of Chinese martial culture for millennia: "The first instances of embodiment can be traced back to the ancient shamanistic culture of China, to the Shang Dynasty (1600-1046 BCE), when the Shang kings ruled in accordance with a shamanistic worldview" (Gonzalez 4). Gonzalez's research shows how embodiment, a contemporary scientific concept, is actually an intuitive framework and way of being in the world which has been around for thousands of years in the Chinese culture. Chinese Gong Fuis important because it is the first book of its kind to connect current research in cognition and behavior to ancient martial arts practices.