Invention
"A writer keeps surprising himself... he doesn't know what
he is saying until he sees it on the page."
-- Thomas Williams
When you sit down to write...
- Does your mind turn blank?
- Are you sure you have nothing to say?
If so, you're not alone! Everyone experiences this at some time
or other, but some people have strategies or techniques to get them
started. When you are planning to write something, try some of the
following suggestions.
EXPLORE the problem -- not the topic
1. Who is your reader?
2. What is your purpose?
3. Who are you, the writer? (What image or persona do you want to
project?)
MAKE your goals operational
1. How can you achieve your purpose?
2. Can you make a plan?
GENERATE some ideas
1. Brainstorm
- keep writing
- don't censor or evaluate
- keep returning to the problem
2. Talk to your reader
- What questions would they ask?
- What different kinds of readers might you have?
3. Ask yourself questions
A. Journalistic questions
Who? What? Where? When? Why? How? So What?
B. Classical topics (patterns of argument) Definition
- How does the dictionary define ____?
- What do I mean by ____?
- What group of things does ____ belong to?
- How is ____ different from other things?
- What parts can ____ be divided into?
- Does ____ mean something now that it didn't years ago? If so,
what?
- What other words mean about the same as ____?
- What are some concrete examples of ____?
- When is the meaning of ____ misunderstood? Comparison/Contrast
- What is ____ similar to? In what ways?
- What is ____ different from? In what ways?
- ____ is superior (inferior) to what? How?
- ____ is most unlike (like) what? How? Relationship - What causes ____?
- What are the effects of ____?
- What is the purpose of ____? - What is the consequence of ____?
- What comes before (after) ____? Testimony - What have I heard
people say about ____?
- What are some facts of statistics about ____?
- Can I quote any proverbs, poems, or sayings about ____?
- Are there any laws about ____? Circumstance - Is ____ possible
or impossible?
- What qualities, conditions, or circumstances make ____ possible
or impossible?
- When did ____ happen previously?
- Who can do ____?
- If ____ starts, what makes it end?
- What would it take for ____ to happen now?
- What would prevent ___ from happening?
C. Tagmemics Contrastive features - How is ____ different
from things similar to it?
- How has ____ been different for me? Variation - How much can
____ change and still be itself?
- How is ____ changing?
- How much does ____ change from day to day?
- What are the different varieties of ____? Distribution - Where
and when does ____ take place?
- What is the larger thing of which ___ is a part?
- What is the function of ____ in this larger thing?
D. Cubing (considering a subject from six points of view)
1. *Describe* it (colors, shapes, sizes, etc.)
2. *Compare* it (What is it similar to?)
3. *Associate* it (What does it make you think of?)
4. *Analyze* it (Tell how it's made)
5. *Apply* it (What can you do with it? How can it be used?)
6. *Argue* for or against it
E. Make an analogy Choose an activity from column A to
explain it by describing it in terms of an activity from column
B
(or vice-versa).
A
B
------------
---------------
playing cards
writing essays
changing a tire
growing up
selling
growing old
walking
rising in the world
sailing
studying
skiing
meditating
plowing
swindling
launching rockets
teaching
running for office
learning
hunting
failing
Russian roulette
quarreling
brushing teeth
making peace
REST AND INCUBATE!
(Adapted from Linda Flower's Problem-Solving Strategies for Writing,
Gregory and Elizabeth Cowan's Writing, and Gordon Rohman and Albert
Wlecke's Prewriting.) Copyright (C)1999 by Purdue University. All
rights reserved. This document may be distributed as long as it
is done entirely with all attributions to organizations and authors.
Commercial distribution is strictly prohibited. Portions of this
document may be copyrighted by other organizations.
This document is part of a collection of instructional materials
used in the Purdue University Writing Lab. The online version is
part of OWL (online Writing Lab), a project of the Purdue University
Writing Lab, funded by the School of Liberal Arts at Purdue. |