20/21 hindsight: comps are an outdated hazing ritual, but it& #39;s a good practice-run for trying to synthesize your unique argument out of a whole buncha discourse. It& #39;s hard. And I can& #39;t help with the content.

But I can help with organizational tips:
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Echoing others, yes to Zotero: you can make notes and each has a URL. (I& #39;ve found these to be helpful when I& #39;ve wanted to share these note-files with collaborators or even build a public-facing bibliography.)

I& #39;ve use Evernote for this too (which can also internally hyperlink).
To help you in the long-term, aim for an expanded annotated bibliography:

1. paraphrase their argument
2. summarize their lineage (building on who? previous args?)
3. explain key interventions, define terms
4. note limitations
5. write your takeaways/reactions
If relevant, select *a* quotation but be very choosy.
As in, pick one.

This way, you can reference these readings later and get a gist of the text without having to reread the whole thing. It& #39;s meant to give you just enough context you can use your notes in the exam and beyond.
If you already know some of the keywords or the concepts you& #39;ll be working with, build in a tagging system.

This can be as fancy as hashtags, but it can also be as quotidian as a bolded list at the end of your notes so that you can use command-f. This way, you& #39;ll code as you go.
Name all your digital texts in the same way for easy managing. I usually do author last name, year, title. If a keyword is buried somewhere in-text, I& #39;ll add it in parenthesis for easy searching later on.

e.g. Barad_2007_meeting the universe halfway (intra-action).pdf
And of course, the pincher: when I read non-digital texts, I rely heavily on color-coded post-it notes: one color for the author& #39;s theoretical concepts, one for their methodological approach, one for my "notes to self", one for my argument. I use the same colors in digital notes.
This is definitely not the only way to make sense of academic chatter, but I& #39;m hoping some of these tips will help #gradstudents as comps season approaches. And as you figure out a system that works *for you*, do that.

#thatdoctorallyfe #AcademicChatter #YouGotThis
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