Second, I don’t expect a lengthy discussion for each article that you cite. You might
spend a page talking about Article A and a sentence or two on Article B. The amount of
time you spend describing an article should be proportional to how important that article
is in helping you defend your argument. If an article you read simply supports a general
idea that ties into your argument, you can easily mention it in a sentence or two without
delving into a lot of detail. Tell a good story in your literature review, but only go into
detail about plot elements that have a direct bearing on your argument! Again, look at the
literature review articles that you are citing. How did those authors set up their literature
reviews, and how did they summarize the studies they read for their literature reviews?
Want a valuable hint? Look at their in-text citations, too. Sometimes they cite four
different studies in the same sentence. You can do the same, as long as the citations have
the same general information. That is four citations taken care of all on a single sentence
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