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2.4: Your Writing Process

  • Page ID
    315234
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    In all of this talk about organization and audience, don’t forget about “you” and your voice as an author. As the author of the essay, you decide what to include and omit, and it’s here that creativity and self-expression have some space to make their appearance (though you do want to be certain that your adventurousness will work within the stated parameters of the assignment). You decide how you are framing and presenting your ideas. Even in a dense, informative essay packed with obscure knowledge, you are giving context for that information and explaining it to your audience.

    As the modern idea of the essay was being formalized, it was seen as a unique way to bring the author’s own feelings, attitudes, and knowledge to a subject. What do I know about this subject? (And here we are reminded of Montaigne’s motto, “What do I know?” which we encountered at the beginning of this chapter.) What can I add to the conversation? Essays were seen as a way to influence public consciousness, and in all of the examples in this chapter we can see the author in the essay. A resume is literally “you.” In writing it, you are merely presenting a tailored version of “you.”

    The abnormal psych essay would be your interpretation of how psychology understands the mind of a mass murderer. Don’t be afraid to have an opinion or take a stand on an issue in your essay; that’s the whole point of writing an essay. But, you need to support those opinions with facts. Solid reasoning, effective organization, appropriate tone and writing style, and a carefully considered topic will all add depth and weight to your point of view.

    As you can see, the “simple” essay contains quite a few moving parts and complex ideas which can seem overwhelming at times, especially as you are staring at a blank screen the night before an essay is due. How do you juggle a sufficiently-narrowed topic, a precise thesis statement, strong supporting points, and clear structure? Well, just as the essay is laid out in a systematic way, with a beginning, middle, and end, so too is the process of writing an essay. We will begin discussing that process in Chapter 2.


    This page titled 2.4: Your Writing Process is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Mindy Trenary.