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3.5: Writing a Personal Response- Looking Inward

  • Page ID
    57040
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    Dillard’s ideas will have certainly provoked a response in your mind, so if you have some clear thoughts about how you feel about the essay this is the time to write them down. As you look at the quotes you have selected and your explanation of their meaning, begin to create your personal response to the essay. You may begin by using some of these strategies:

    1. Tell a story. Has Dillard’s essay reminded you of an experience
    you have had? Write a story in which you illustrate a point that
    Dillard makes or hint at an idea that is connected to her essay.

    2. Focus on an idea from Dillard’s essay that is personally important
    to you. Write down your thoughts about this idea in a
    first person narrative and explain your perspective on the issue.

    3. If you are uncomfortable writing a personal narrative or using
    “I” (you should not be), reflect on some of her ideas that seem
    important and meaningful in general. Why were you struck
    by these ideas?

    4. Write a short letter to Dillard in which you speak to her about
    the essay. You may compliment her on some of her ideas by
    explaining why you like them, ask her a question related to her
    essay and explain why that question came to you, and genuinely
    start up a conversation with her.

    This stage in critical thinking is important for establishing your relationship with a text. What do I mean by this “relationship,” you may ask? Simply put, it has to do with how you feel about the text. Are you amazed by how true the ideas seem to be, how wise Dillard sounds? Or are you annoyed by Dillard’s let-me-tell-you-how-to-live approach and disturbed by the impractical ideas she so easily prescribes? Do you find Dillard’s voice and style thrilling and engaging or merely confusing? No matter which of the personal response options you select, your initial reaction to the text will help shape your views about it.


    3.5: Writing a Personal Response- Looking Inward is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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