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First, you study your subject generally. Then you ferret out the issues around your interests within the frame of your understanding. Next, you hypothesize about an issue on the subject. Following, you track down available sources and more detailed references. Then you flesh-out a pattern on what you can write on and what you want to say. Finally, you distill that outline of ideas to a central theme--that is your thesis statement. Now you are ready to write.

Perhaps: Industrial technology at the day of the presentation of the early video reproduction equipment was not ready for the television as it was invented, so color had to wait.

If you aren't prepared to describe this, however, it won't work. What works will be what you are able to demonstrate from available or discernable sources. Your thesis statement depends on you and what you have to work with.

2006-11-08 03:37:16 · answer #1 · answered by Rabbit 7 · 0 0

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