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  1. October 2004
  2. As E. B. White said, "good writing is rewriting." I didn't
  3. realize this when I was in school. In writing, as in math and
  4. science, they only show you the finished product.
  5. You don't see all the false starts. This gives students a
  6. misleading view of how things get made.Part of the reason it happens is that writers don't want
  7. people to see their mistakes. But I'm willing to let people
  8. see an early draft if it will show how much you have
  9. to rewrite to beat an essay into shape.Below is the oldest version I can find of
  10. The Age of the Essay
  11. (probably the second or third day), with
  12. text that ultimately survived in
  13. red and text that later
  14. got deleted in gray.
  15. There seem to be several categories of cuts: things I got wrong,
  16. things that seem like bragging, flames,
  17. digressions, stretches of awkward prose, and unnecessary words.I discarded more from the beginning. That's
  18. not surprising; it takes a while to hit your stride. There
  19. are more digressions at the start, because I'm not sure where
  20. I'm heading.The amount of cutting is about average. I probably write
  21. three to four words for every one that appears in the final
  22. version of an essay.(Before anyone gets mad at me for opinions expressed here, remember
  23. that anything you see here that's not in the final version is obviously
  24. something I chose not to publish, often because I disagree
  25. with it.)
  26. Recently a friend said that what he liked about
  27. my essays was that they weren't written the way
  28. we'd been taught to write essays in school. You
  29. remember: topic sentence, introductory paragraph,
  30. supporting paragraphs, conclusion. It hadn't
  31. occurred to me till then that those horrible things
  32. we had to write in school were even connected to
  33. what I was doing now. But sure enough, I thought,
  34. they did call them "essays," didn't they?Well, they're not. Those things you have to write
  35. in school are not only not essays, they're one of the
  36. most pointless of all the pointless hoops you have
  37. to jump through in school. And I worry that they
  38. not only teach students the wrong things about writing,
  39. but put them off writing entirely.So I'm going to give the other side of the story: what
  40. an essay really is, and how you write one. Or at least,
  41. how I write one. Students be forewarned: if you actually write
  42. the kind of essay I describe, you'll probably get bad
  43. grades. But knowing how it's really done should
  44. at least help you to understand the feeling of futility
  45. you have when you're writing the things they tell you to.
  46. The most obvious difference between real essays and
  47. the things one has to write in school is that real
  48. essays are not exclusively about English literature.
  49. It's a fine thing for schools to
  50. teach students how to
  51. write. But for some bizarre reason (actually, a very specific bizarre
  52. reason that I'll explain in a moment),
  53. the teaching of
  54. writing has gotten mixed together with the study
  55. of literature. And so all over the country, students are
  56. writing not about how a baseball team with a small budget
  57. might compete with the Yankees, or the role of color in
  58. fashion, or what constitutes a good dessert, but about
  59. symbolism in Dickens.With obvious
  60. results. Only a few people really
  61. care about
  62. symbolism in Dickens. The teacher doesn't.
  63. The students don't. Most of the people who've had to write PhD
  64. disserations about Dickens don't. And certainly
  65. Dickens himself would be more interested in an essay
  66. about color or baseball.How did things get this way? To answer that we have to go back
  67. almost a thousand years. Between about 500 and 1000, life was
  68. not very good in Europe. The term "dark ages" is presently
  69. out of fashion as too judgemental (the period wasn't dark;
  70. it was just different), but if this label didn't already
  71. exist, it would seem an inspired metaphor. What little
  72. original thought there was took place in lulls between
  73. constant wars and had something of the character of
  74. the thoughts of parents with a new baby.
  75. The most amusing thing written during this
  76. period, Liudprand of Cremona's Embassy to Constantinople, is,
  77. I suspect, mostly inadvertantly so.Around 1000 Europe began to catch its breath.
  78. And once they
  79. had the luxury of curiosity, one of the first things they discovered
  80. was what we call "the classics."
  81. Imagine if we were visited
  82. by aliens. If they could even get here they'd presumably know a
  83. few things we don't. Immediately Alien Studies would become
  84. the most dynamic field of scholarship: instead of painstakingly
  85. discovering things for ourselves, we could simply suck up
  86. everything they'd discovered. So it was in Europe in 1200.
  87. When classical texts began to circulate in Europe, they contained
  88. not just new answers, but new questions. (If anyone proved
  89. a theorem in christian Europe before 1200, for example, there
  90. is no record of it.)For a couple centuries, some of the most important work
  91. being done was intellectual archaelogy. Those were also
  92. the centuries during which schools were first established.
  93. And since reading ancient texts was the essence of what
  94. scholars did then, it became the basis of the curriculum.By 1700, someone who wanted to learn about
  95. physics didn't need to start by mastering Greek in order to read Aristotle. But schools
  96. change slower than scholarship: the study of
  97. ancient texts
  98. had such prestige that it remained the backbone of
  99. education
  100. until the late 19th century. By then it was merely a tradition.
  101. It did serve some purposes: reading a foreign language was difficult,
  102. and thus taught discipline, or at least, kept students busy;
  103. it introduced students to
  104. cultures quite different from their own; and its very uselessness
  105. made it function (like white gloves) as a social bulwark.
  106. But it certainly wasn't
  107. true, and hadn't been true for centuries, that students were
  108. serving apprenticeships in the hottest area of scholarship.Classical scholarship had also changed. In the early era, philology
  109. actually mattered. The texts that filtered into Europe were
  110. all corrupted to some degree by the errors of translators and
  111. copyists. Scholars had to figure out what Aristotle said
  112. before they could figure out what he meant. But by the modern
  113. era such questions were answered as well as they were ever
  114. going to be. And so the study of ancient texts became less
  115. about ancientness and more about texts.The time was then ripe for the question: if the study of
  116. ancient texts is a valid field for scholarship, why not modern
  117. texts? The answer, of course, is that the raison d'etre
  118. of classical scholarship was a kind of intellectual archaelogy that
  119. does not need to be done in the case of contemporary authors.
  120. But for obvious reasons no one wanted to give that answer.
  121. The archaeological work being mostly done, it implied that
  122. the people studying the classics were, if not wasting their
  123. time, at least working on problems of minor importance.And so began the study of modern literature. There was some
  124. initial resistance, but it didn't last long.
  125. The limiting
  126. reagent in the growth of university departments is what
  127. parents will let undergraduates study. If parents will let
  128. their children major in x, the rest follows straightforwardly.
  129. There will be jobs teaching x, and professors to fill them.
  130. The professors will establish scholarly journals and publish
  131. one another's papers. Universities with x departments will
  132. subscribe to the journals. Graduate students who want jobs
  133. as professors of x will write dissertations about it. It may
  134. take a good long while for the more prestigious universities
  135. to cave in and establish departments in cheesier xes, but
  136. at the other end of the scale there are so many universities
  137. competing to attract students that the mere establishment of
  138. a discipline requires little more than the desire to do it.High schools imitate universities.
  139. And so once university
  140. English departments were established in the late nineteenth century,
  141. the 'riting component of the 3 Rs
  142. was morphed into English.
  143. With the bizarre consequence that high school students now
  144. had to write about English literature-- to write, without
  145. even realizing it, imitations of whatever
  146. English professors had been publishing in their journals a
  147. few decades before. It's no wonder if this seems to the
  148. student a pointless exercise, because we're now three steps
  149. removed from real work: the students are imitating English
  150. professors, who are imitating classical scholars, who are
  151. merely the inheritors of a tradition growing out of what
  152. was, 700 years ago, fascinating and urgently needed work.Perhaps high schools should drop English and just teach writing.
  153. The valuable part of English classes is learning to write, and
  154. that could be taught better by itself. Students learn better
  155. when they're interested in what they're doing, and it's hard
  156. to imagine a topic less interesting than symbolism in Dickens.
  157. Most of the people who write about that sort of thing professionally
  158. are not really interested in it. (Though indeed, it's been a
  159. while since they were writing about symbolism; now they're
  160. writing about gender.)I have no illusions about how eagerly this suggestion will
  161. be adopted. Public schools probably couldn't stop teaching
  162. English even if they wanted to; they're probably required to by
  163. law. But here's a related suggestion that goes with the grain
  164. instead of against it: that universities establish a
  165. writing major. Many of the students who now major in English
  166. would major in writing if they could, and most would
  167. be better off.It will be argued that it is a good thing for students to be
  168. exposed to their literary heritage. Certainly. But is that
  169. more important than that they learn to write well? And are
  170. English classes even the place to do it? After all,
  171. the average public high school student gets zero exposure to
  172. his artistic heritage. No disaster results.
  173. The people who are interested in art learn about it for
  174. themselves, and those who aren't don't. I find that American
  175. adults are no better or worse informed about literature than
  176. art, despite the fact that they spent years studying literature
  177. in high school and no time at all studying art. Which presumably
  178. means that what they're taught in school is rounding error
  179. compared to what they pick up on their own.Indeed, English classes may even be harmful. In my case they
  180. were effectively aversion therapy. Want to make someone dislike
  181. a book? Force him to read it and write an essay about it.
  182. And make the topic so intellectually bogus that you
  183. could not, if asked, explain why one ought to write about it.
  184. I love to read more than anything, but by the end of high school
  185. I never read the books we were assigned. I was so disgusted with
  186. what we were doing that it became a point of honor
  187. with me to write nonsense at least as good at the other students'
  188. without having more than glanced over the book to learn the names
  189. of the characters and a few random events in it.I hoped this might be fixed in college, but I found the same
  190. problem there. It was not the teachers. It was English.
  191. We were supposed to read novels and write essays about them.
  192. About what, and why? That no one seemed to be able to explain.
  193. Eventually by trial and error I found that what the teacher
  194. wanted us to do was pretend that the story had really taken
  195. place, and to analyze based on what the characters said and did (the
  196. subtler clues, the better) what their motives must have been.
  197. One got extra credit for motives having to do with class,
  198. as I suspect one must now for those involving gender and
  199. sexuality. I learned how to churn out such stuff well enough
  200. to get an A, but I never took another English class.And the books we did these disgusting things to, like those
  201. we mishandled in high school, I find still have black marks
  202. against them in my mind. The one saving grace was that
  203. English courses tend to favor pompous, dull writers like
  204. Henry James, who deserve black marks against their names anyway.
  205. One of the principles the IRS uses in deciding whether to
  206. allow deductions is that, if something is fun, it isn't work.
  207. Fields that are intellectually unsure of themselves rely on
  208. a similar principle. Reading P.G. Wodehouse or Evelyn Waugh or
  209. Raymond Chandler is too obviously pleasing to seem like
  210. serious work, as reading Shakespeare would have been before
  211. English evolved enough to make it an effort to understand him. [sh]
  212. And so good writers (just you wait and see who's still in
  213. print in 300 years) are less likely to have readers turned
  214. against them by clumsy, self-appointed tour guides.
  215. The other big difference between a real essay and the
  216. things
  217. they make you write in school is that a real essay doesn't
  218. take a position and then defend it. That principle,
  219. like the idea that we ought to be writing about literature,
  220. turns out to be another intellectual hangover of long
  221. forgotten origins. It's often mistakenly believed that
  222. medieval universities were mostly seminaries. In fact they
  223. were more law schools. And at least in our tradition
  224. lawyers are advocates: they are
  225. trained to be able to
  226. take
  227. either side of an argument and make as good a case for it
  228. as they can. Whether or not this is a good idea (in the case of prosecutors,
  229. it probably isn't), it tended to pervade
  230. the atmosphere of
  231. early universities. After the lecture the most common form
  232. of discussion was the disputation. This idea
  233. is at least
  234. nominally preserved in our present-day thesis defense-- indeed,
  235. in the very word thesis. Most people treat the words
  236. thesis
  237. and dissertation as interchangeable, but originally, at least,
  238. a thesis was a position one took and the dissertation was
  239. the argument by which one defended it.I'm not complaining that we blur these two words together.
  240. As far as I'm concerned, the sooner we lose the original
  241. sense of the word thesis, the better. For many, perhaps most,
  242. graduate students, it is stuffing a square peg into a round
  243. hole to try to recast one's work as a single thesis. And
  244. as for the disputation, that seems clearly a net lose.
  245. Arguing two sides of a case may be a necessary evil in a
  246. legal dispute, but it's not the best way to get at the truth,
  247. as I think lawyers would be the first to admit.
  248. And yet this principle is built into the very structure of
  249. the essays
  250. they teach you to write in high school. The topic
  251. sentence is your thesis, chosen in advance, the supporting
  252. paragraphs the blows you strike in the conflict, and the
  253. conclusion--- uh, what it the conclusion? I was never sure
  254. about that in high school. If your thesis was well expressed,
  255. what need was there to restate it? In theory it seemed that
  256. the conclusion of a really good essay ought not to need to
  257. say any more than QED.
  258. But when you understand the origins
  259. of this sort of "essay", you can see where the
  260. conclusion comes from. It's the concluding remarks to the
  261. jury.
  262. What other alternative is there? To answer that
  263. we have to
  264. reach back into history again, though this time not so far.
  265. To Michel de Montaigne, inventor of the essay.
  266. He was
  267. doing something quite different from what a
  268. lawyer does,
  269. and
  270. the difference is embodied in the name. Essayer is the French
  271. verb meaning "to try" (the cousin of our word assay),
  272. and an "essai" is an effort.
  273. An essay is something you
  274. write in order
  275. to figure something out.Figure out what? You don't know yet. And so you can't begin with a
  276. thesis, because you don't have one, and may never have
  277. one. An essay doesn't begin with a statement, but with a
  278. question. In a real essay, you don't take a position and
  279. defend it. You see a door that's ajar, and you open it and
  280. walk in to see what's inside.If all you want to do is figure things out, why do you need
  281. to write anything, though? Why not just sit and think? Well,
  282. there precisely is Montaigne's great discovery. Expressing
  283. ideas helps to form them. Indeed, helps is far too weak a
  284. word. 90%
  285. of what ends up in my essays was stuff
  286. I only
  287. thought of when I sat down to write them. That's why I
  288. write them.So there's another difference between essays and
  289. the things
  290. you have to write in school. In school
  291. you are, in theory,
  292. explaining yourself to someone else. In the best case---if
  293. you're really organized---you're just writing it down.
  294. In a real essay you're writing for yourself. You're
  295. thinking out loud.But not quite. Just as inviting people over forces you to
  296. clean up your apartment, writing something that you know
  297. other people will read forces you to think well. So it
  298. does matter to have an audience. The things I've written
  299. just for myself are no good. Indeed, they're bad in
  300. a particular way:
  301. they tend to peter out. When I run into
  302. difficulties, I notice that I
  303. tend to conclude with a few vague
  304. questions and then drift off to get a cup of tea.This seems a common problem.
  305. It's practically the standard
  306. ending in blog entries--- with the addition of a "heh" or an
  307. emoticon, prompted by the all too accurate sense that
  308. something is missing.And indeed, a lot of
  309. published essays peter out in this
  310. same way.
  311. Particularly the sort written by the staff writers of newsmagazines. Outside writers tend to supply
  312. editorials of the defend-a-position variety, which
  313. make a beeline toward a rousing (and
  314. foreordained) conclusion. But the staff writers feel
  315. obliged to write something more
  316. balanced, which in
  317. practice ends up meaning blurry.
  318. Since they're
  319. writing for a popular magazine, they start with the
  320. most radioactively controversial questions, from which
  321. (because they're writing for a popular magazine)
  322. they then proceed to recoil from
  323. in terror.
  324. Gay marriage, for or
  325. against? This group says one thing. That group says
  326. another. One thing is certain: the question is a
  327. complex one. (But don't get mad at us. We didn't
  328. draw any conclusions.)Questions aren't enough. An essay has to come up with answers.
  329. They don't always, of course. Sometimes you start with a
  330. promising question and get nowhere. But those you don't
  331. publish. Those are like experiments that get inconclusive
  332. results. Something you publish ought to tell the reader
  333. something he didn't already know.
  334. But what you tell him doesn't matter, so long as
  335. it's interesting. I'm sometimes accused of meandering.
  336. In defend-a-position writing that would be a flaw.
  337. There you're not concerned with truth. You already
  338. know where you're going, and you want to go straight there,
  339. blustering through obstacles, and hand-waving
  340. your way across swampy ground. But that's not what
  341. you're trying to do in an essay. An essay is supposed to
  342. be a search for truth. It would be suspicious if it didn't
  343. meander.The Meander is a river in Asia Minor (aka
  344. Turkey).
  345. As you might expect, it winds all over the place.
  346. But does it
  347. do this out of frivolity? Quite the opposite.
  348. Like all rivers, it's rigorously following the laws of physics.
  349. The path it has discovered,
  350. winding as it is, represents
  351. the most economical route to the sea.The river's algorithm is simple. At each step, flow down.
  352. For the essayist this translates to: flow interesting.
  353. Of all the places to go next, choose
  354. whichever seems
  355. most interesting.I'm pushing this metaphor a bit. An essayist
  356. can't have
  357. quite as little foresight as a river. In fact what you do
  358. (or what I do) is somewhere between a river and a roman
  359. road-builder. I have a general idea of the direction
  360. I want to go in, and
  361. I choose the next topic with that in mind. This essay is
  362. about writing, so I do occasionally yank it back in that
  363. direction, but it is not all the sort of essay I
  364. thought I was going to write about writing.Note too that hill-climbing (which is what this algorithm is
  365. called) can get you in trouble.
  366. Sometimes, just
  367. like a river,
  368. you
  369. run up against a blank wall. What
  370. I do then is just
  371. what the river does: backtrack.
  372. At one point in this essay
  373. I found that after following a certain thread I ran out
  374. of ideas. I had to go back n
  375. paragraphs and start over
  376. in another direction. For illustrative purposes I've left
  377. the abandoned branch as a footnote.
  378. Err on the side of the river. An essay is not a reference
  379. work. It's not something you read looking for a specific
  380. answer, and feel cheated if you don't find it. I'd much
  381. rather read an essay that went off in an unexpected but
  382. interesting direction than one that plodded dutifully along
  383. a prescribed course.So what's interesting? For me, interesting means surprise.
  384. Design, as Matz
  385. has said, should follow the principle of
  386. least surprise.
  387. A button that looks like it will make a
  388. machine stop should make it stop, not speed up. Essays
  389. should do the opposite. Essays should aim for maximum
  390. surprise.I was afraid of flying for a long time and could only travel
  391. vicariously. When friends came back from faraway places,
  392. it wasn't just out of politeness that I asked them about
  393. their trip.
  394. I really wanted to know. And I found that
  395. the best way to get information out of them was to ask
  396. what surprised them. How was the place different from what
  397. they expected? This is an extremely useful question.
  398. You can ask it of even
  399. the most unobservant people, and it will
  400. extract information they didn't even know they were
  401. recording. Indeed, you can ask it in real time. Now when I go somewhere
  402. new, I make a note of what surprises me about it. Sometimes I
  403. even make a conscious effort to visualize the place beforehand,
  404. so I'll have a detailed image to diff with reality.
  405. Surprises are facts
  406. you didn't already
  407. know.
  408. But they're
  409. more than that. They're facts
  410. that contradict things you
  411. thought you knew. And so they're the most valuable sort of
  412. fact you can get. They're like a food that's not merely
  413. healthy, but counteracts the unhealthy effects of things
  414. you've already eaten.
  415. How do you find surprises? Well, therein lies half
  416. the work of essay writing. (The other half is expressing
  417. yourself well.) You can at least
  418. use yourself as a
  419. proxy for the reader. You should only write about things
  420. you've thought about a lot. And anything you come across
  421. that surprises you, who've thought about the topic a lot,
  422. will probably surprise most readers.For example, in a recent essay I pointed out that because
  423. you can only judge computer programmers by working with
  424. them, no one knows in programming who the heroes should
  425. be.
  426. I
  427. certainly
  428. didn't realize this when I started writing
  429. the
  430. essay, and even now I find it kind of weird. That's
  431. what you're looking for.So if you want to write essays, you need two ingredients:
  432. you need
  433. a few topics that you think about a lot, and you
  434. need some ability to ferret out the unexpected.What should you think about? My guess is that it
  435. doesn't matter. Almost everything is
  436. interesting if you get deeply
  437. enough into it. The one possible exception
  438. are
  439. things
  440. like working in fast food, which
  441. have deliberately had all
  442. the variation sucked out of them.
  443. In retrospect, was there
  444. anything interesting about working in Baskin-Robbins?
  445. Well, it was interesting to notice
  446. how important color was
  447. to the customers. Kids a certain age would point into
  448. the case and say that they wanted yellow. Did they want
  449. French Vanilla or Lemon? They would just look at you
  450. blankly. They wanted yellow. And then there was the
  451. mystery of why the perennial favorite Pralines n' Cream
  452. was so appealing. I'm inclined now to
  453. think it was the salt.
  454. And the mystery of why Passion Fruit tasted so disgusting.
  455. People would order it because of the name, and were always
  456. disappointed. It should have been called In-sink-erator
  457. Fruit.
  458. And there was
  459. the difference in the way fathers and
  460. mothers bought ice cream for their kids.
  461. Fathers tended to
  462. adopt the attitude of
  463. benevolent kings bestowing largesse,
  464. and mothers that of
  465. harried bureaucrats,
  466. giving in to
  467. pressure against their better judgement.
  468. So, yes, there does seem to be material, even in
  469. fast food.What about the other half, ferreting out the unexpected?
  470. That may require some natural ability. I've noticed for
  471. a long time that I'm pathologically observant. ....[That was as far as I'd gotten at the time.]Notes[sh] In Shakespeare's own time, serious writing meant theological
  472. discourses, not the bawdy plays acted over on the other
  473. side of the river among the bear gardens and whorehouses.The other extreme, the work that seems formidable from the moment
  474. it's created (indeed, is deliberately intended to be)
  475. is represented by Milton. Like the Aeneid, Paradise Lost is a
  476. rock imitating a butterfly that happened to get fossilized.
  477. Even Samuel Johnson seems to have balked at this, on the one
  478. hand paying Milton the compliment of an extensive biography,
  479. and on the other writing of Paradise Lost that "none who read it
  480. ever wished it longer."