Sweat, by Lynn Nottage, is a compelling play that won the 2017 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Nottage uses numerous characters to grapple with significant societal and personal challenges including race, economics, and relationships, and their importance, impact, and implications on people’s daily existence: the human truths we have noted as the enduring core at the heart of literature, art, and life. You must involve five to seven secondary sources to inform your analysis, four of which must come from the SBCC Luria Library Databases(provided in the pdf below). Google searches are not the same and will not be counted, nor will AI-generated text. You will be required to submit the links to your sources through your Works Cited at the end of your paper; make sure your links work, and that your reader is not sent to a blank, inaccessible page.
if you choose an academic journal that is 100 pages long, and would be a challenge for graduate students, you would be graded accordingly. If you chose a 425 word article from USA Today, that is minimal/lacking in analysis and academic rigor, and meant for the casual bystander, you would also be assessed accordingly.