Title: The Writing Process Part 2
1The Writing Process Part 2
- Dr Desmond Thomas,
- University of Essex
2What does being a successful writer involve?
- Planning what, when, how, where
- Monitoring achieving distance
- Awareness of the writing process of drafting,
re-drafting, editing, revising - Self-motivation
- Self-discipline
3Some concepts to unpack
- Clarity what is clear writing? Does it mean
coherence at sentence level? - Coherence is it something built in to a text or
in the mind of the reader? - Structure how is this different from coherence?
- Conciseness the same as clarity?
- Style do the demands of academic style clash
with clarity coherence?
4Step 1 Clarity at sentence level
- Decisions in regard to the administration of
medication despite the inability of irrational
patients voluntarily appearing in Trauma Centres
to provide legal consent rest with a physician
alone. - Our lack of knowledge about local conditions
precluded determination of committee action
effectiveness in fund allocation to those areas
in greatest need of assistance. - (See Williams, J. 1995, Style, U.of Chicago)
5Sentence 1 problems of clarity/coherence
- We have to sort out and mentally reassemble
actions expressed as abstract nouns - Distortion of their underlying sequence
- Ambiguity of who does what
- Distance between subject and verb
- Ambiguity of despite
- Grammatical subject not the real subject
6Sentence 2 problems of clarity/coherence
- Not clear who the main characters are. The
subject is an abstraction our lack of
knowledge - Not clear what the main action is precluded?
- Are we part of the committee or not?
7The sentences re-written
- When a patient voluntarily appears at a Trauma
Centre but behaves so irrationally that he cannot
legally consent to treatment, only a physician
can decide whether to administer medication. - Because we knew nothing about local conditions,
we could not determine how effectively the
committee had allocated funds to areas that most
needed assistance.
8Williams principles of clear writing at sentence
level
- When prose seems turgid, abstract, too complex
locate the cast of characters and the actions
that those characters perform (or are the objects
of). If the characters are not subjects and their
actions not verbs, then revise.
9Problem areas?
- English has no convenient indefinite pronoun for
when the agent is unclear. One? We?
Nominalizations and use of the passive can avoid
this. - The Institutional Passive some academics and
teachers in some disciplines want to avoid . I
will show .. We may cite .We may begin by
10Step 2 Coherence principles at paragraph level
- Put at the beginning of a sentence those ideas
that you have already mentioned, referred to, or
implied, or concepts that you can reasonably
assume your reader is already familiar with, and
will readily recognize. - Put at the end of your sentence the newest, the
most surprising, the most significant
information information that you want to stress
perhaps the information that you will expand on
in your next sentence. (Williams 1995 48)
11And most important of all
- A reader will feel that a paragraph is
coherent if (s)he can read a sentence that
specifically articulates its point. - (Williams 1995)
12Structure without coherence?
- Soil is a serious problem in many countries.
Besides, around 7 million hectares of fertile
land are lost in the world each year. On the
contrary, about 10 million hectares of forest are
being lost. Therefore, the consequences are
indeed serious .
13Coherence without structure?
- The net bulged with the force of the shot. The
referee blew his whistle and signalled. Offside.
The goalkeeper sighed with relief. The crowd
started to jeer. Soon the slow handclapping
started again
14Coherence at core chapter level
- Need for the main points writers position to
be articulated at the beginning - Headings and subheadings should act as a test of
coherence - Need for one idea per paragraph rule
- Need for topic sentences (usually the first
sentence(s) of each paragraph) - Need for interim summaries at the end of a
section to reinforce arguments
15Consequences of breaking the rules of coherence
dont let them happen!
- Reader confused doesnt know what to expect
- Reader misled expects something different
- Reader impatient forced to re-read sections
- Reader loses the plot totally misunderstanding
the main arguments - Reader loses faith and gives up
16Obeying the demands of style
- The first attribute of the art object is that it
creates a discontinuity between itself and the
unsynthesised manifold. -
- http//www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2006/dec/0
4/1
17A prize-winning text!
- Dialectical critical realism may be seen under
the aspect of Foucauldian strategic reversal--of
the unholy trinity of Parmenidean/Platonic/Aristot
elean provenance of the Cartesian-Lockean-Humean-
Kantian paradigm, of foundationalisms (in
practice, fideistic foundationalisms) and
irrationalisms (in practice, capricious exercises
of the will-to-power or some other ideologically
and/or psycho-somatically buried source) new and
old alike of the primordial failing of western
philosophy, ontological monovalence, and its
close ally, the epistemic fallacy with its ontic
dual of the analytic problematic laid down by
Plato, which Hegel served only to replicate in
his actualist monovalent analytic reinstatement
in transfigurative reconciling dialectical
connection, while in his hubristic claims for
absolute idealism he inaugurated the Comtean,
Kierkegaardian and Nietzschean eclipses of
reason, replicating the fundaments of positivism
through its transmutation route to the
superidealism of a Baudrillard. - Bhaskar, R. 1994 Plato etcThe Problems of
Philosophy and Their Resolution (Verso)
18We do need to consider what makes a text look
academic
- Conventions such as the use of quotations
referencing, use of statistical and other
evidence to support arguments, use of hedging. - Style preferring abstract nouns to verbs,
preferring passive voice to active voice
19But we have to get the balance right
Clarity coherence
20Editing issues
- Check for content
- Check for structure
- Check for coherence style
- Proof-read referencing, spelling, punctuation,
grammatical accuracy, sentence and paragraph
lengths, labelling of charts and diagrams,
bibliography details