ssignment: How to Read Like a Writer For the department of English and Media studies. By Prof DR Sohail Ansari Dead line: 25th April (The assignments are in compliance to instruction from higher authorities so that learning remains uninterrupted despite the closure of university) (This assignment is 8th of the series of assignments calculated to initiate students into the art of reading)
A The
Quran:● harshly criticizes the inertia of a vegetative existence that lacks
critical thinking and cognition (7:179, 8:22, 10:100-101, 11:24);● puts
responsibility on every individual to personally question, analyse and verify
(39:18, 17:36, 5:105);● calls not to accept or follow anything mindlessly,
warning that doing so would lead to eventual interrogation by the course of
nature (17:36);
How to Read Like a Writer
Mike Bunn
In 1997, I was a recent college
graduate living in London for six months and working at the Palace Theatre
owned by Andrew Lloyd Webber.* The Palace was a beautiful red brick, four-story
theatre in the heart of London’s famous West End, and eight times a week it
housed a three- hour performance of the musical Les Miserables. Because of
antiquated fire-safety laws, every theatre in the city was required to have a
certain number of staff members inside watching the performance in case of an
emergency. My job (in addition to wearing a red tuxedo jacket) was to sit
inside the dark theater with the patrons and make sure nothing went wrong. It
didn’t seem to matter to my supervisor that I had no training in security and
no idea where we kept the fire extinguishers. I was pretty sure that if there
was any trouble I’d be running down the back stairs, leaving the patrons to
fend for themselves. I had no intention of dying in a bright red tuxedo. There
was a Red Coat stationed on each of the theater’s four floors, and we all
passed the time by sitting quietly in the back, reading books with tiny
flashlights. It’s not easy trying to read in the dim light of a
theatre—flashlight or no flashlight—and it’s even tougher with shrieks and shouts
and gunshots coming from the stage. I had to focus intently on each and every
word, often rereading a single sentence several times. Sometimes I got
distracted and had to re-read entire para-
As I struggled to read in this
environment, I began to realize that the way I was reading—one word at a
time—was exactly the same way that the author had written the text. I realized
writing is a word-by-word, sentence-by-sentence process. The intense
concentration required to read in the theater helped me recognize some of the
interesting ways that authors string words into phrases into paragraphs into
entire books. I came to realize that all writing consists of a series of
choices.I was an English major in college, but I don’t think I ever thought
much about reading. I read all the time. I read for my classes and on the
computer and sometimes for fun, but I never really thought about the important
connections between reading and writing, and how reading in a particular way
could also make me a better writer.
(RLW)
What Does It Mean to Read Like a Writer? When you Read Like a Writer (RLW) you work to identify some of
the choices the author made so that you can better understand how such choices
might arise in your own writing. The idea is to carefully examine the things
you read, looking at the writerly techniques in the text in order to decide if
you might want to adopt similar (or the same) techniques in your writing.
You are reading to learn about writing.
Instead of reading for content or
to better understand the ideas in the writing (which you will automatically do
to some degree anyway), you are trying to understand how the piece of writing
was put together by the author and what you can learn about writing by reading
a particular text.
As you read in this way, you
think about how the choices the author made and the techniques that he/she used
are influencing your own responses as a reader. What is it about the way this
text is written that makes you feel and respond the way you do?
The goal as you read like a
writer is to locate what you believe are the most important writerly choices
represented in the text—choices as large as the overall structure or as small
as a single word used only once—to consider the effect of those choices on
potential readers (including yourself). Then you can go one step further and
imagine what different choices the author might have made instead, and what
effect those different choices would have on readers.
Say you’re reading an essay in class that
begins with a short quote from President Barack Obama about the war in Iraq. As
a writer, what do you think of this technique? Do you think it is effective to
begin the essay with a quote? What if the essay began with a quote from someone
else? What if it was a much longer quote from President Obama, or a quote from
the President about something other than the war?
And here is where we get to the
most important part: Would you want to try this technique in your own writing?
Would you want to start your own essay with a
quote? Do you think it would be effective to begin your essay with a quote from
President Obama? What about a quote from someone else?
You could make yourself a list.
What are the advantages and dis- advantages of starting with a quote? What
about the advantages and disadvantages of starting with a quote from the
President? How would other readers respond to this technique? Would certain
readers (say Democrats or liberals) appreciate an essay that started with a
quote from President Obama better than other readers (say Republicans or
conservatives)? What would be the advantages and disadvantages of starting with
a quote from a less divisive person? What about starting with a quote from
someone more divisive?
The goal is to carefully consider
the choices the author made and the techniques that he or she used, and then
decide whether you want to make those same choices or use those same techniques
in your own writing. Author and professor Wendy Bishop explains how her reading
process changed when she began to read like a writer:
It wasn’t until I claimed the sentence as my area of
desire, interest, and expertise—until I wanted to be a writer writing
better—that I had to look underneath my initial readings.
I started asking, how—how did the writer get me to feel,
how did the writer say something so that it remains in my memory when many
other things too easily fall out, how did the writer communicate his/her
intentions about genre, about irony? (119–20)
Bishop moved from simply reporting her personal reactions to the
things she read to attempting to uncover how the author led her (and other
readers) to have those reactions. This effort to uncover how authors build
texts is what makes Reading Like a Writer so useful for student writers.
How Is RLW
Different from “Normal” Reading?
Most of the time we read for
information. We read a recipe to learn how to bake lasagna. We read the sports
page to see if our school won the game, Facebook to see who has commented on our
status update, a history book to learn about the Vietnam War, and the syllabus
to see when the next writing assignment is due.
Reading Like a Writer asks for something very different.
In 1940, a famous poet and critic
named Allen Tate discussed two different ways of reading: There are many ways
to read, but generally speaking there are two ways. They correspond to the two
ways in which we may be interested in a piece of architecture. If the building
has Corinthian columns, we can trace the origin and development of Corinthian
columns; we are interested as historians. But if we are interested as
architects, we may or may not know about the history of the Corinthian style;
we must, however, know all about the construction of the building, down to the
last nail or peg in the beams. We have got to know this if we are going to put
up buildings ourselves. (506)
While
I don’t know anything about Corinthian columns (and doubt that I will ever want
to know anything about Corinthian columns), Allen Tate’s metaphor of reading as
if you were an architect is a great way to think about RLW. When you read like
a writer, you are trying to figure out how the text you are reading was
constructed so that you learn how to “build” one for yourself.
Author David Jauss makes a similar comparison
when he writes that
“reading
won’t help you much unless you learn to read like a writer. You must look at a
book the way a carpenter looks at a house someone else built, examining the
details in order to see how it was made” (64).
Perhaps
I should change the name and call this Reading Like an Architect, or Reading
Like a Carpenter. In a way those names make perfect sense. You are reading to
see how something was constructed so that you can construct something similar
yourself.
Why Learn to Read Like a Writer?
For most students RLW is a new way to
read, and it can be difficult to learn at first.
This
is because most writing instructors are so focused on teaching writing that
they forget to show students how they want them to read.
That’s what this essay
is for.
In
addition to the fact that your instructor may expect you to read like a writer,
this kind of reading is also one of the very best ways to learn how to write
well. Reading like a writer can help you understand how the process of writing
is a series of making choices, and in doing so, can help you recognize
important decisions you might face and techniques you might want to use when
working on your own writing. Reading this way becomes an opportunity to think
and learn about writing.
Charles
Moran, a professor of English at the University of Massachusetts, urges us to
read like writers because:
When
we read like writers we understand and participate in the writing. We see the
choices the writer has made, and we see how the writer has coped with the
consequences of those choices . . . We “see” what the writer is doing because
we read as writers; we see because we have written ourselves and know the
territory, know the feel of it, know some of the moves our- selves. (61)
You
are already an author, and that means you have a built-in advantage when
reading like a writer. All of your previous writing experiences—inside the
classroom and out—can contribute to your success with RLW. Because you “have
written” things yourself, just as Moran suggests, you are better able to “see”
the choices that the author is making in the texts that you read. This in turn
helps you to think about whether you want to make some of those same choices in
your own writing, and what the consequences might be for your readers if you
do. What Are Some Questions to Ask Before You Start Reading?
As
I sat down to work on this essay, I contacted a few of my former students to
ask what advice they would give to students regarding how to read effectively
in the writing classroom and also to get their thoughts on RLW. Throughout the
rest of the essay I’d like to share some of their insights and suggestions;
after all, who is better qualified to help you learn what you need to know
about reading in writing courses than students who recently took those courses
themselves? One of the things that several students mentioned to do first, be-
fore you even start reading, is to consider the context surrounding both the
assignment and the text you’re reading. As one former student, Alison, states:
“The
reading I did in college asked me to go above and beyond, not only in breadth
of subject matter, but in depth, with regards to informed analysis and
background information on context.”
Alison was asked to think about some of the
factors that went into the creation of the text, as well as some of the factors
influencing her own experience of reading—taken together these constitute the
context of reading. Another former student, Jamie, suggests that students
“learn
about the historical context of the writings” they will read for class. Writing
professor Richard Straub puts it this way:
“You’re not going to just read a text. You’re
going to read a text within a certain context, a set of circumstances . . .
It’s one kind of writing or another, designed for one audience and purpose or
another” (138).
Among
the contextual factors you’ll want to consider before you even start reading
are:
• Do you know the author’s purpose for this
piece of writing?
•
Do you know who the intended audience is for this piece of writing?
It
may be that you need to start reading before you can answer these first two
questions, but it’s worth trying to answer them before you start. For example,
if you know at the outset that the author is trying to reach a very specific
group of readers, then his or her writerly techniques may seem more or less
effective than if he/she was trying to reach a more general audience.
Similarly—returning to our earlier example of beginning an essay with a quote
from President Obama about the war in Iraq—if you know that the author’s
purpose is to address some of the dangers and drawbacks of warfare, this may be
a very effective opening. If the purpose is to encourage Americans to wear
sunscreen while at the beach this opening makes no sense at all. One former
student, Lola, explained that most of her reading assignments in college
writing classes were designed “to provoke analysis and criticisms into the
style, structure, and purpose of the writing itself.”
In What Genre Is This
Written?
Another important thing to
consider before reading is the genre of the text. Genre means a few different
things in English classes, but it’s most often used to indicate the type of
writing: a poem, a newspaper article, an essay, a short story, a novel, a legal
brief, an instruction manual, etc. Because the conventions for each genre can
be very differ- ent (who ever heard of a 900-page newspaper article?),
techniques that are effective for one genre may not work well in another. Many
readers expect poems and pop songs to rhyme, for example, but might react negatively
to a legal brief or instruction manual that did so.
Another former student, Mike, comments on how
important the genre of the text can be for reading:
I think a lot of the way I read,
of course, depends on the type of text I’m reading. If I’m reading philosophy,
I always look for signaling words (however, therefore, furthermore, despite)
indicating the direction of the argument . . . when I read fiction or creative
nonfiction, I look for how the author inserts dialogue or character sketches
within narration or environ- mental observation. After reading To the
Lighthouse [sic] last semester, I have noticed how much more attentive I’ve
become to the types of narration (omniscient, impersonal, psychological,
realistic, etc.), and how these different approaches are utilized to achieve an
author’s overall effect.
Although Mike specifically mentions what he
looked for while reading a published novel, one of the great things about RLW
is that it can be used equally well with either published or student-produced
writing.
Is This a Published or a
Student-Produced Piece of Writing? As you read both kinds of texts you can
locate the choices the author made and imagine the different decisions that
he/she might have made.
While it might seem a little weird at first to
imagine how published texts could be written differently—after all, they were
good enough to be published—remember that all writing can be improved. Scholar
Nancy Walker believes that it’s important for students to read pub- lished work
using RLW because
“The work ceases to be a mere
artifact, a stone tablet, and becomes instead a living utterance with immediacy
and texture. It could have been better or worse than it is had the author made
different choices” (36).
As Walker suggests, it’s worth thinking
about how the published text would be different—maybe even better—if the author
had made different choices in the writing because you may be faced with similar
choices in your own work.
Is This the Kind of
Writing You Will Be Assigned to Write Yourself?
Knowing
ahead of time what kind of writing assignments you will be asked to complete
can really help you to read like a writer. It’s probably impossible (and
definitely too time consuming) to identify all of the choices the author made
and all techniques an author used, so it’s important to prioritize while
reading. Knowing what you’ll be writing yourself can help you prioritize. It
may be the case that your instructor has assigned the text you’re reading to
serve as model for the kind of writing you’ll be doing later. Jessie, a former
student, writes,
“In college writing classes, we knew we were
reading for a purpose—to influence or inspire our own work. The reading that I
have done in college writing courses has always been really specific to a certain
type of writing, and it allows me to focus and experiment on that specific
style in depth and without distraction.”
If
the text you’re reading is a model of a particular style of writing—for
example, highly-emotional or humorous—RLW is particularly helpful because you
can look at a piece you’re reading and think about whether you want to adopt a
similar style in your own writing. You might realize that the author is trying
to arouse sympathy in readers and examine what techniques he/she uses to do
this; then you can decide whether these techniques might work well in your own
writing. You might notice that the author keeps including jokes or funny
stories and think about whether you want to include them in your writing—what
would the impact be on your potential readers?
What Are Questions to
Ask As You Are Reading?
It
is helpful to continue to ask yourself questions as you read like a writer. As
you’re first learning to read in this new way, you may want to have a set of
questions written or typed out in front of you that you can refer to while
reading. Eventually—after plenty of practice—you will start to ask certain questions
and locate certain things in the text almost automatically. Remember, for most
students this is a new way of reading, and you’ll have to train yourself to do
it well. Also keep in mind that you’re reading to understand how the text was
written— how the house was built—more than you’re trying to determine the
meaning of the things you read or assess whether the texts are good or bad.
First,
return to two of the same questions I suggested that you consider before
reading:
• What is the author’s purpose for this piece
of writing? •
Who
is the intended audience?
Think
about these two questions again as you read. It may be that you couldn’t really
answer them before, or that your ideas will change while reading. Knowing why
the piece was written and who it’s for can help explain why the author might
have made certain choices or used particular techniques in the writing, and you
can assess those choices and techniques based in part on how effective they are
in fulfilling that purpose and/or reaching the intended audience.
Beyond
these initial two questions, there is an almost endless list of questions you
might ask regarding writing choices and techniques. Here are some of the
questions that one former student, Clare, asks herself:
When
reading I tend to be asking myself a million questions. If I were writing this,
where would I go with the story? If the author goes in a different direction
(as they so often do) from what I am thinking, I will ask myself, why did they
do this? What are they telling me?
Clare tries to figure out why the author might
have made a move in the writing that she hadn’t anticipated, but even more
importantly, she asks herself what she would do if she were the author.
Reading
the text becomes an opportunity for Clare to think about her own role as an
author.
Here
are some additional examples of the kinds of questions you might ask yourself
as you read:
•
How effective is the language the author uses? Is it too formal? Too informal?
Perfectly appropriate?
Depending
on the subject matter and the intended audience, it may make sense to be more
or less formal in terms of language. As you begin reading, you can ask yourself
whether the word choice and tone/ language of the writing seem appropriate.
•
What kinds of evidence does the author use to support his/her claims? Does
he/she use statistics? Quotes from famous people? Personal anecdotes or
personal stories? Does he/she cite books or articles?
•
How appropriate or effective is this evidence?
Would
a dif- ferent type of evidence, or some combination of evidence, be more
effective?
To
some extent the kinds of questions you ask should be deter- mined by the genre
of writing you are reading. For example, it’s prob- ably worth examining the
evidence that the author uses to support his/ her claims if you’re reading an
opinion column, but less important if you’re reading a short story. An opinion
column is often intended to convince readers of something, so the kinds of
evidence used are often very important. A short story may be intended to
convince readers of something, sometimes, but probably not in the same way. A
short story rarely includes claims or evidence in the way that we usually think
about them.
• Are there places in the writing that you
find confusing? What about the writing in those places makes it unclear or
confusing? It’s pretty normal to get confused in places while reading,
especially while reading for class, so it can be helpful to look closely at the
writing to try and get a sense of exactly what tripped you up. This way you can
learn to avoid those same problems in your own writing.
• How does the author move from one idea to
another in the writing? Are the transitions between the ideas effective? How
else might he/she have transitioned between ideas instead?
Notice
that in these questions I am encouraging you to question whether aspects of the
writing are appropriate and effective in addition to deciding whether you liked
or disliked them. You want to imagine how other readers might respond to the
writing and the techniques you’ve identified. Deciding whether you liked or
disliked something is only about you; considering whether a technique is
appropriate or effective lets you contemplate what the author might have been
trying to do and to decide whether a majority of readers would find the move
successful. This is important because it’s the same thing you should be
thinking about while you are writing: how will readers respond to this technique
I am using, to this sentence, to this word? As you read, ask yourself what the
author is doing at each step of the way, and then consider whether the same
choice or technique might work in your own writing.
What Should You Be Writing As You Are Reading?
The
most common suggestion made by former students—mentioned by every single one of
them—was to mark up the text, make comments in the margins, and write yourself
notes and summaries both during and after reading. Often the notes students
took while reading became ideas or material for the students to use in their
own papers. It’s important to read with a pen or highlighter in your hand so
that you can mark—right on the text—all those spots where you identify an
interesting choice the author has made or a writerly technique you might want
to use. One thing that I like to do is to highlight and underline the passage
in the text itself, and then try to answer the following three questions on my
notepad:
• What is the technique the author is using
here?
•
Is this technique effective?
•
What would be the advantages and disadvantages if I tried this same technique
in my writing?
By utilizing this same process of highlighting
and note taking, you’ll end up with a useful list of specific techniques to
have at your disposal when it comes time to begin your own writing.
What Does RLW Look Like in Action?
Let’s
go back to the opening paragraph of this essay and spend some time reading like
writers as a way to get more comfortable with the process:
In
1997, I was a recent college graduate living in London for six months and
working at the Palace Theatre owned by Andrew Lloyd Webber. The Palace was a
beautiful red brick, four-story theatre in the heart of London’s famous West
End, and eight times a week it housed a three-hour performance of the musical
Les Miserables. Because of antiquated fire-safety laws, every theatre in the
city was required to have a certain number of staff members inside watching the
performance in case of an emergency.
Let’s
begin with those questions I encouraged you to try to answer before you start
reading. (I realize we’re cheating a little bit in this case since you’ve
already read most of this essay, but this is just practice. When doing this on
your own, you should attempt to answer these questions before reading, and then
return to them as you read to further develop your answers.)
•
Do you know the author’s purpose for this piece of writing? I hope the purpose
is clear by now; if it isn’t, I’m doing a pretty lousy job of explaining how
and why you might read like a writer.
•
Do you know who the intended audience is?
Again,
I hope that you know this one by now.
• What about the genre? Is this an essay? An
article?
What
would you call it?
•
You know that it’s published and not student writing.
How does this influence your expectations for
what you will read?
•
Are you going to be asked to write something like this yourself? Probably not
in your college writing class, but you can still use RLW to learn about
writerly techniques that you might want to use in whatever you do end up
writing.
Now
ask yourself questions as you read.
In 1997, I was a recent college graduate
living in London for six months and working at the Palace Theatre owned by
Andrew Lloyd Webber. The Palace was a beautiful red brick, four-story theatre
in the heart of London’s famous West End, and eight times a week it housed a
three-hour performance of the musical Les Miserables. Because of antiquated
fire-safety laws, every theatre in the city was required to have a certain
number of staff members inside watching the performance in case of an
emergency. Since this paragraph is the very first one, it makes sense to think
about how it introduces readers to the essay. What technique(s) does the author
use to begin the text? This is a personal story about his time working in
London. What else do you notice as you read over this passage? Is the passage
vague or specific about where he worked? You know that the author worked in a
famous part of London in a beautiful theater owned by a well-known composer.
Are these details important? How different would this opening be if instead I
had written: In 1997, I was living in London and working at a theatre that
showed Les Miserables. This is certainly shorter, and some of you may prefer
this version. It’s quick. To the point. But what (if anything) is lost by
eliminating so much of the detail? I chose to include each of the details that
the revised sentence omits, so it’s worth considering why. Why did I mention
where the theater was located? Why did I explain that I was living in London
right after finishing college? Does it matter that it was after college? What
effect might I have hoped the inclusion of these details would have on readers?
Is this reference to college an attempt to connect with my audience of college
students? Am I trying to establish my credibility as an author by announcing
that I went to college? Why might I want the readers to know that this was a
theater owned by Andrew Lloyd Weber? Do you think I am just trying to mention a
famous name that readers will recognize? Will Andrew Lloyd Weber figure
prominently in the rest of the essay?
These are all reasonable questions to ask.
They are not necessarily the right questions to ask because there are no right
questions. They certainly aren’t the only questions you could ask, either. The
goal is to train yourself to formulate questions as you read based on whatever
you notice in the text. Your own reactions to what you’re reading will help
determine the kinds of questions to ask.
Now
take a broader perspective. I begin this essay—an essay about reading—by
talking about my job in a theater in London. Why? Doesn’t this seem like an odd
way to begin an essay about reading? If you read on a little further (feel free
to scan back up at the top of this essay) you learn in the third full paragraph
what the connection is between working in the theater and reading like a
writer, but why include this information at all? What does this story add to
the essay? Is it worth the space it takes up?
Think
about what effect presenting this personal information might have on readers.
Does it make it feel like a real person, some “ordinary guy,” is talking to
you? Does it draw you into the essay and make you want to keep reading?
What
about the language I use? Is it formal or more informal? This is a time when
you can really narrow your focus and look at particular words:
Because
of antiquated fire-safety laws, every theatre in the city was required to have
a certain number of staff members inside watching the performance in case of an
emergency.
What
is the effect of using the word “antiquated” to describe the fire- safety laws?
It certainly projects a negative impression; if the laws are described as
antiquated it means I view them as old-fashioned or obsolete. This is a fairly
uncommon word, so it stands out, drawing attention to my choice in using it.
The word also sounds quite formal. Am I formal in the rest of this sentence?
I
use the word “performance” when I just as easily could have writ- ten “show.”
For that matter, I could have written “old” instead of “antiquated.” You can
proceed like this throughout the sentence, thinking about alternative choices I
could have made and what the effect would be. Instead of “staff members” I
could have written “employees” or just “workers.” Notice the difference if the
sentence had been written:
Because
of old fire-safety laws, every theatre in the city was required to have a
certain number of workers inside watching the show in case of an emergency.
Which
version is more likely to appeal to readers? You can try to answer this
question by thinking about the advantages and disadvantages of using formal
language. When would you want to use formal language in your writing and when
would it make more sense to be more conversational?
As you can see from discussing just this one
paragraph, you could ask questions about the text forever. Luckily, you don’t
have to. As you continue reading like a writer, you’ll learn to notice
techniques that seem new and pay less attention to the ones you’ve thought
about before. The more you practice the quicker the process becomes until
you’re reading like a writer almost automatically.
I want to end this essay by sharing one more
set of comments by my former student, Lola, this time about what it means to
her to read like a writer:
Reading
as a writer would compel me to question what might have brought the author to
make these decisions, and then decide what worked and what didn’t. What could
have made that chapter better or easier to understand? How can I make sure I
include some of the good attributes of this writing style into my own? How can
I take aspects that I feel the writer failed at and make sure not to make the
same mistakes in my writing?
Questioning
why the author made certain decisions. Considering what techniques could have
made the text better. Deciding how to include the best attributes of what you
read in your own writing. This is what Reading Like a Writer is all about.
Are you ready to start
reading?
Respond to questions
of Discussion
1. How is
“Reading Like a Writer” similar to and/or different from the way(s) you read
for other classes?
2. What
kinds of choices do you make as a writer that readers might identify in your
written work?
3. Is there
anything you notice in this essay that you might like to try in your own
writing? What is that technique or strategy? When do you plan to try using it?
1.
What are some of the different ways that you can learn about the
context of a text before you begin reading it?
Read below one assignment of one student.
"How to Read Like a
Writer" Outline and Summary
8/26/2013
For this assignment, I read "How to
Read Like a Writer", an essay written by Mike Bunn. I was asked to write a
summary and create an outline of this essay.
Outline of "How to Read Like a Writer"
Outline of "How to Read Like a Writer"
Section 1: Mike Bunn introduces the idea that “all writing
consists of a series of choices” (72), which caused him to write this essay.
Section 2: Bunn explains the basics of reading like a writer. One must really pay close attention to the way authors write their pieces of work. Also, this will help the reader decide if they like or dislike the way the author is writing a piece, and if the reader does like that style, it can be replicated in their own writing. If not, the reader will know what types of writing they are not comfortable reading, and in turn will write according to their own preferences. Bunn also introduces the idea of using quotes at the beginning of a piece of work. Some people find that using a quote is more effective with impressing their readers, but it is not a guarantee.
Section 3: In this section, Bunn describes the differences between RLW and normal reading. Normal reading consists of the reader barely scratching the surface of a piece for information. RLW is obviously a much deeper process. When RLW, one must really think about what the author is conveying to the audience, how this information is being conveyed, and what one can do to write like the author.
Section 4: Bunn acknowledges that “for most college students RLW is a new way to read, and it can be difficult to learn at first” (75). He tells his readers that learning how to RLW will improve their writing skills, and that most college instructors assume students have this skill, though most do not. Also, because students have written papers before in their educational career, students have an advantage when RLW. Bunn states, “All of your previous writing experiences - inside the classroom and out – can contribute to your success with RLW” (75). This is because students have a basic knowledge of how to write, and how to see the way in which an author is writing.
Section 5: Bunn uses several past students to explain some of the most vital parts of RLW. The most common suggestion was for readers to examine the context around the assignment and the piece that must be read. The reader must know the author’s purpose for the piece of writing and the intended audience for the piece.
Section 6: Bunn states that readers must consider the genre of a text before reading. By genre, he means poem, article, essay, etc. One must also pay close attention to the type of text being read. Some pieces use different language than others, such as omniscient, impersonal, etc.)
Section 7: Bunn claims that “all writing can be improved” (78). Readers are encouraged to think about how the published text may be improved or different, had the author used different language or wording.
Section 8: Bunn empathizes with the inevitable argument that knowing everything the author was trying to convey is hard, and that readers will not always have that ability by stating “it’s probably impossible to identify all of the choices the author made and all techniques an author used, so it’s important to prioritize while reading” (78). He then explains that to know what to prioritize, the reader must know what they’ll be writing.
Section 9: Bunn gives examples of questions to ask while reading. He suggests having a set of questions typed out and ready to go before reading a piece. Ask yourself what different decisions you would make as the writer of the piece being read. One must consider the genre of the piece to know what questions would apply to that specific piece. He calls attention to the fact that he is “encouraging you to question whether aspects of the writing are appropriate and effective in addition to deciding whether you liked or disliked them” (81).
Section 10: Bunn suggests reading with a highlighter nearby in order to mark up the text with your own personal notes and suggestions. This will help you to write a powerful essay when the time comes because you will have given yourself pointers ahead of time and jotted down the styles and genres you like best.
Section 11: Bunn analyzes his own essay, just to walk his readers through the process of RLW. He also points out that, when asking questions while reading, “there are no right questions” (83). He concludes the essay with a simple question, “Are you ready to start reading?” (85)
Section 2: Bunn explains the basics of reading like a writer. One must really pay close attention to the way authors write their pieces of work. Also, this will help the reader decide if they like or dislike the way the author is writing a piece, and if the reader does like that style, it can be replicated in their own writing. If not, the reader will know what types of writing they are not comfortable reading, and in turn will write according to their own preferences. Bunn also introduces the idea of using quotes at the beginning of a piece of work. Some people find that using a quote is more effective with impressing their readers, but it is not a guarantee.
Section 3: In this section, Bunn describes the differences between RLW and normal reading. Normal reading consists of the reader barely scratching the surface of a piece for information. RLW is obviously a much deeper process. When RLW, one must really think about what the author is conveying to the audience, how this information is being conveyed, and what one can do to write like the author.
Section 4: Bunn acknowledges that “for most college students RLW is a new way to read, and it can be difficult to learn at first” (75). He tells his readers that learning how to RLW will improve their writing skills, and that most college instructors assume students have this skill, though most do not. Also, because students have written papers before in their educational career, students have an advantage when RLW. Bunn states, “All of your previous writing experiences - inside the classroom and out – can contribute to your success with RLW” (75). This is because students have a basic knowledge of how to write, and how to see the way in which an author is writing.
Section 5: Bunn uses several past students to explain some of the most vital parts of RLW. The most common suggestion was for readers to examine the context around the assignment and the piece that must be read. The reader must know the author’s purpose for the piece of writing and the intended audience for the piece.
Section 6: Bunn states that readers must consider the genre of a text before reading. By genre, he means poem, article, essay, etc. One must also pay close attention to the type of text being read. Some pieces use different language than others, such as omniscient, impersonal, etc.)
Section 7: Bunn claims that “all writing can be improved” (78). Readers are encouraged to think about how the published text may be improved or different, had the author used different language or wording.
Section 8: Bunn empathizes with the inevitable argument that knowing everything the author was trying to convey is hard, and that readers will not always have that ability by stating “it’s probably impossible to identify all of the choices the author made and all techniques an author used, so it’s important to prioritize while reading” (78). He then explains that to know what to prioritize, the reader must know what they’ll be writing.
Section 9: Bunn gives examples of questions to ask while reading. He suggests having a set of questions typed out and ready to go before reading a piece. Ask yourself what different decisions you would make as the writer of the piece being read. One must consider the genre of the piece to know what questions would apply to that specific piece. He calls attention to the fact that he is “encouraging you to question whether aspects of the writing are appropriate and effective in addition to deciding whether you liked or disliked them” (81).
Section 10: Bunn suggests reading with a highlighter nearby in order to mark up the text with your own personal notes and suggestions. This will help you to write a powerful essay when the time comes because you will have given yourself pointers ahead of time and jotted down the styles and genres you like best.
Section 11: Bunn analyzes his own essay, just to walk his readers through the process of RLW. He also points out that, when asking questions while reading, “there are no right questions” (83). He concludes the essay with a simple question, “Are you ready to start reading?” (85)
Summary of
"How to Read Like a Writer"
In this essay, I
learned how to properly read educational pieces of literature. Mark Bunn
takes his readers step-by step in his process of analyzing literature,
including its purpose, genre, type, context, and language. Throughout the
essay, he describes how one might analyze such things, and in the last couple
of sections, he gave good solid examples by analyzing his own work. He
encourages his readers to think about how they might improve pieces of
literature, and whether or not that would be an improvement for someone with
higher standards than the reader. He mentioned that readers must ask plenty of
questions, though there are no correct questions that are versatile enough to
apply to every piece of literature. He finally concluded the essay by trying to
encourage his readers to go out into the world and read like a writer in
whatever they do.
Exercise:
Pick any essay or an article and prepare an
outline.
A student has written a summary of an essay;
you try to critically analyze the same
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