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Published byErika Hamilton Modified over 9 years ago
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Considerations for Writing
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What is it? (Your own; unique; unlike any other’s) What affects it? Your own personality Your own experiences Your own perspective
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What is it? (Ours, shared, over-reaching all) What affects it? The human condition The human experience Shared commonalities
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It’s all about love. It’s all about death.
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Uses the individual… To comment on the universal.
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By taking one’s own experiences, view, perspective and sharing it— With an eye/ear to the larger human experience.
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Cold hard truth: The reader doesn’t care about you. The reader cares about himself. If your writing is only individual navel gazing, it is not good writing. BUT… If your you can share your own experience to help others see their own lives more clearly, you have accomplished a good and worthy thing.
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Learn to capture your individual experience With an eye to the universal. Need some examples? Of course!
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Individual I couldn’t find my daughter’s shoe before her Christmas concert. Universal We all fall short We all need forgiveness
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Individual – making a prank phone call to my parents’ home when I was in junior high Universal – feeling ashamed
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Individual – A student looked like she was paying attention when in fact she wasn’t. Universal – We think we’re a little better than we are, then realize we’re not.
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Individual – Helped my husband fix the crossing over a creek (connecting two fields). Universal – Staying connected in a relationship takes work.
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Universal – Life lurches forward. Individual – Someone asked me if I had grandchildren.
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Universal – renewal in nature Individual – tending a baby fawn
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Universal - Satisfaction follows effort Individual - Running Dam-2-Dam
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Universal – Disappointment follows effort Individual – Not making All-State
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Universal – Choose 3 of the 5 following “universals” and think of individual experiences (your own) that express the theme. Sometimes we hurt those we love. A small act of kindness can turn a day around. Overcoming fear can be satisfying/exhilarating. Regret lingers. Embarrassment is a part of living.
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Think of three strong memories. Identify two “universals” that might come from those memories. Ex: I was called “String Bean” at Girl Scout camp. Embracing a “new” identity Worries about acceptance Value of a close childhood friendship
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Part I: Choose 3 of the 5 “universals”; for each, write 3-4 sentences about an experience that speaks to that theme. Part II: Think of 3 strong memories. Write two “universal themes” that are connected to the memory/experience. DUE: Before class Tuesday, Sept. 2)
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