Definition of Expository Essay
Expose
means to uncover or lay something bare, or to discover something in a
way that others know what it is. Expository is derived from
exposition, which is a
noun of ‘expose.’ An expository
essay is a
genre
of writing which tends to explain, illustrate, clarify, or explicate
something in a way that it becomes clear for readers. Therefore, it
could be an investigation, evaluation, or even argumentation about an
idea for clarification.
Types of Expository Essay
Expository essay is further divided into five major
categories.
- Descriptive Essay: A descriptive essay describes something, some place, some experience, or some situation through sensory information.
- Process Essay: A process essay explains or shows a process of making or doing something.
- Comparison Essay: A comparison essay makes comparison and contrasts between two things.
- Cause/Effect Essay: A cause and effect essay finds out the cause of something and then its effects on something else.
- Problem/Solution Essay: A problem/solution essay presents a problem and its solution for readers.
Difference Between an Expository Essay and an Argumentative Essay
As
is clear, an expository essay is an exposition, explanation,
investigation, or illustration for the purpose of clarification,
therefore, its
tone is often kept neutral. However, in an
argumentative essay, a clear position about something is taken before the
argument is presented. There is no issue of objectivity or neutrality.
Examples of Expository Essay in Literature
Example #1: How Chinese Mothers are Superior (by Amy Chua)
“I’m
using the term ‘Chinese mother’ loosely. I know some Korean, Indian,
Jamaican, Irish and Ghanaian parents who qualify too. Conversely, I know
some mothers of Chinese heritage, almost always born in the West, who
are not Chinese mothers, by choice or otherwise. I’m also using the term
‘Western parents’ loosely. Western parents come in all varieties. All
the same, even when Western parents think they’re being strict, they
usually don’t come close to being Chinese mothers. For example, my
Western friends who consider themselves strict make their children
practice their instruments 30 minutes every day. An hour at most. For a
Chinese mother, the first hour is the easy part. It’s hours two and
three that get tough.”
This is an excerpt from a comparison/
contrast
essay by Amy Chua, which explains how mothers are different in
different cultures. This paragraph compares mothers from Chinese,
Iranian, Jamaican, and Irish contexts.
Example #2: Learning to Read (by Malcolm X)
“It was because of my letters that I happened to stumble upon starting to acquire some kind of a homemade education.
I
became increasingly frustrated at not being able to express what I
wanted to convey in letters that I wrote, especially those to Mr. Elijah
Muhammad. In the street, I had been the most articulate hustler out
there. I had commanded attention when I said something. But now, trying
to write simple English, I not only wasn’t articulate, I wasn’t even
functional. How would I sound writing in slang, the way I would say it, something such as, ‘Look, daddy, let me pull your coat about a cat, Elijah Muhammad — ‘
Many
who today hear me somewhere in person, or on television, or those who
read something I’ve said, will think I went to school far beyond the
eighth grade. This impression is due entirely to my prison studies.”
This
passage has been taken from a process essay. In this essay, Malcolm X
tells the process of his learning. In this paragraph, he gives full
detail how he learns letters.
Example #3: Summer Ritual (by Ray Bradbury)
“About
seven o’clock you could hear the chairs scraping from the tables,
someone experimenting with a yellow-toothed piano, if you stood outside
the dining-room window and listened. Matches being struck, the first
dishes bubbling in the suds and tinkling on the wall racks, somewhere,
faintly, a phonograph playing. And then as the evening changed the hour,
at house after house on the twilight streets, under the immense oaks
and elms, on shady porches, people would begin to appear, like those
figures who tell good or bad weather in rain-or-shine clocks.
Uncle
Bert, perhaps Grandfather, then Father, and some of the cousins; the
men all coming out first into the syrupy evening, blowing smoke, leaving
the wSWomen’s voices behind in the cooling-warm kitchen to set their
universe aright. Then the first male voices under the porch brim, the
feet up, the boys fringed on the worn steps or wooden rails where
sometime during the evening something, a boy or a geranium pot, would
fall off.”
This is an example of a passage from a
descriptive essay. It has full description which tells us about sounds
and colors; a type of sensory information.
Functions of an Expository Essay
The
function of an expository essay is to clarify and expose things, ideas,
persons, and places through description, process, comparison/contrast,
or through problem solution. The objective of this type of essay is to
make readers aware of things given in the essay. It proves full and
detailed information in a way that readers become knowledgeable about
the topic.
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