Worldview…
Feed: Evangel
Posted on: Saturday, September 10, 2011 3:30 PM
Author: Gene Fant
Subject: On Graceful Writing
On Graceful Writing Rachel Toor has a fine essay at The Chronicle of Higher Education, "The Problem Is: You Write Too Well" (full text for subscribers only), which outlines a complaint that is heard with amazing frequency: your writing is too easy to read. As Toor states,
I personally had one of these experiences. One of my professors met with me about a seminar paper and he gave me what I thought was going to be a compliment. He complimented my writing and then told me to stop writing so well. He said something like this:
You can imagine my thoughts as I received this comment. This advice ran contrary to everything I had been taught by previous professors and contradicted the advice I gave to my own students in composition classes. I was really confused and brought it up to someone else in the department who clued me in.
When my next paper came due, I anticipated his concerns and wrote a painfully complicated essay which he liked very much. After all, I'm a big believer in the concept of audience and wanted to communicate effectively with him, my sole audience for that paper. But after that course, I went back to what I believed to be a superior rhetorical style. I believed, and still do, that effective communication is an attempt to overcome the brokenness of language that is the result of fallenness. In this way, clear writing is a foretaste of grace, that wonderful concept that reminds us that something must bridge the gap between us and perfection, the gap that divides us from other persons as well as God. Worldview affects everything, doesn't it? Even the way we approach our writing. |
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