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- October 2004
- As E. B. White said, "good writing is rewriting." I didn't
- realize this when I was in school. In writing, as in math and
- science, they only show you the finished product.
- You don't see all the false starts. This gives students a
- misleading view of how things get made.Part of the reason it happens is that writers don't want
- people to see their mistakes. But I'm willing to let people
- see an early draft if it will show how much you have
- to rewrite to beat an essay into shape.Below is the oldest version I can find of
- The Age of the Essay
- (probably the second or third day), with
- text that ultimately survived in
- red and text that later
- got deleted in gray.
- There seem to be several categories of cuts: things I got wrong,
- things that seem like bragging, flames,
- digressions, stretches of awkward prose, and unnecessary words.I discarded more from the beginning. That's
- not surprising; it takes a while to hit your stride. There
- are more digressions at the start, because I'm not sure where
- I'm heading.The amount of cutting is about average. I probably write
- three to four words for every one that appears in the final
- version of an essay.(Before anyone gets mad at me for opinions expressed here, remember
- that anything you see here that's not in the final version is obviously
- something I chose not to publish, often because I disagree
- with it.)
- Recently a friend said that what he liked about
- my essays was that they weren't written the way
- we'd been taught to write essays in school. You
- remember: topic sentence, introductory paragraph,
- supporting paragraphs, conclusion. It hadn't
- occurred to me till then that those horrible things
- we had to write in school were even connected to
- what I was doing now. But sure enough, I thought,
- they did call them "essays," didn't they?Well, they're not. Those things you have to write
- in school are not only not essays, they're one of the
- most pointless of all the pointless hoops you have
- to jump through in school. And I worry that they
- not only teach students the wrong things about writing,
- but put them off writing entirely.So I'm going to give the other side of the story: what
- an essay really is, and how you write one. Or at least,
- how I write one. Students be forewarned: if you actually write
- the kind of essay I describe, you'll probably get bad
- grades. But knowing how it's really done should
- at least help you to understand the feeling of futility
- you have when you're writing the things they tell you to.
- The most obvious difference between real essays and
- the things one has to write in school is that real
- essays are not exclusively about English literature.
- It's a fine thing for schools to
- teach students how to
- write. But for some bizarre reason (actually, a very specific bizarre
- reason that I'll explain in a moment),
- the teaching of
- writing has gotten mixed together with the study
- of literature. And so all over the country, students are
- writing not about how a baseball team with a small budget
- might compete with the Yankees, or the role of color in
- fashion, or what constitutes a good dessert, but about
- symbolism in Dickens.With obvious
- results. Only a few people really
- care about
- symbolism in Dickens. The teacher doesn't.
- The students don't. Most of the people who've had to write PhD
- disserations about Dickens don't. And certainly
- Dickens himself would be more interested in an essay
- about color or baseball.How did things get this way? To answer that we have to go back
- almost a thousand years. Between about 500 and 1000, life was
- not very good in Europe. The term "dark ages" is presently
- out of fashion as too judgemental (the period wasn't dark;
- it was just different), but if this label didn't already
- exist, it would seem an inspired metaphor. What little
- original thought there was took place in lulls between
- constant wars and had something of the character of
- the thoughts of parents with a new baby.
- The most amusing thing written during this
- period, Liudprand of Cremona's Embassy to Constantinople, is,
- I suspect, mostly inadvertantly so.Around 1000 Europe began to catch its breath.
- And once they
- had the luxury of curiosity, one of the first things they discovered
- was what we call "the classics."
- Imagine if we were visited
- by aliens. If they could even get here they'd presumably know a
- few things we don't. Immediately Alien Studies would become
- the most dynamic field of scholarship: instead of painstakingly
- discovering things for ourselves, we could simply suck up
- everything they'd discovered. So it was in Europe in 1200.
- When classical texts began to circulate in Europe, they contained
- not just new answers, but new questions. (If anyone proved
- a theorem in christian Europe before 1200, for example, there
- is no record of it.)For a couple centuries, some of the most important work
- being done was intellectual archaelogy. Those were also
- the centuries during which schools were first established.
- And since reading ancient texts was the essence of what
- scholars did then, it became the basis of the curriculum.By 1700, someone who wanted to learn about
- physics didn't need to start by mastering Greek in order to read Aristotle. But schools
- change slower than scholarship: the study of
- ancient texts
- had such prestige that it remained the backbone of
- education
- until the late 19th century. By then it was merely a tradition.
- It did serve some purposes: reading a foreign language was difficult,
- and thus taught discipline, or at least, kept students busy;
- it introduced students to
- cultures quite different from their own; and its very uselessness
- made it function (like white gloves) as a social bulwark.
- But it certainly wasn't
- true, and hadn't been true for centuries, that students were
- serving apprenticeships in the hottest area of scholarship.Classical scholarship had also changed. In the early era, philology
- actually mattered. The texts that filtered into Europe were
- all corrupted to some degree by the errors of translators and
- copyists. Scholars had to figure out what Aristotle said
- before they could figure out what he meant. But by the modern
- era such questions were answered as well as they were ever
- going to be. And so the study of ancient texts became less
- about ancientness and more about texts.The time was then ripe for the question: if the study of
- ancient texts is a valid field for scholarship, why not modern
- texts? The answer, of course, is that the raison d'etre
- of classical scholarship was a kind of intellectual archaelogy that
- does not need to be done in the case of contemporary authors.
- But for obvious reasons no one wanted to give that answer.
- The archaeological work being mostly done, it implied that
- the people studying the classics were, if not wasting their
- time, at least working on problems of minor importance.And so began the study of modern literature. There was some
- initial resistance, but it didn't last long.
- The limiting
- reagent in the growth of university departments is what
- parents will let undergraduates study. If parents will let
- their children major in x, the rest follows straightforwardly.
- There will be jobs teaching x, and professors to fill them.
- The professors will establish scholarly journals and publish
- one another's papers. Universities with x departments will
- subscribe to the journals. Graduate students who want jobs
- as professors of x will write dissertations about it. It may
- take a good long while for the more prestigious universities
- to cave in and establish departments in cheesier xes, but
- at the other end of the scale there are so many universities
- competing to attract students that the mere establishment of
- a discipline requires little more than the desire to do it.High schools imitate universities.
- And so once university
- English departments were established in the late nineteenth century,
- the 'riting component of the 3 Rs
- was morphed into English.
- With the bizarre consequence that high school students now
- had to write about English literature-- to write, without
- even realizing it, imitations of whatever
- English professors had been publishing in their journals a
- few decades before. It's no wonder if this seems to the
- student a pointless exercise, because we're now three steps
- removed from real work: the students are imitating English
- professors, who are imitating classical scholars, who are
- merely the inheritors of a tradition growing out of what
- was, 700 years ago, fascinating and urgently needed work.Perhaps high schools should drop English and just teach writing.
- The valuable part of English classes is learning to write, and
- that could be taught better by itself. Students learn better
- when they're interested in what they're doing, and it's hard
- to imagine a topic less interesting than symbolism in Dickens.
- Most of the people who write about that sort of thing professionally
- are not really interested in it. (Though indeed, it's been a
- while since they were writing about symbolism; now they're
- writing about gender.)I have no illusions about how eagerly this suggestion will
- be adopted. Public schools probably couldn't stop teaching
- English even if they wanted to; they're probably required to by
- law. But here's a related suggestion that goes with the grain
- instead of against it: that universities establish a
- writing major. Many of the students who now major in English
- would major in writing if they could, and most would
- be better off.It will be argued that it is a good thing for students to be
- exposed to their literary heritage. Certainly. But is that
- more important than that they learn to write well? And are
- English classes even the place to do it? After all,
- the average public high school student gets zero exposure to
- his artistic heritage. No disaster results.
- The people who are interested in art learn about it for
- themselves, and those who aren't don't. I find that American
- adults are no better or worse informed about literature than
- art, despite the fact that they spent years studying literature
- in high school and no time at all studying art. Which presumably
- means that what they're taught in school is rounding error
- compared to what they pick up on their own.Indeed, English classes may even be harmful. In my case they
- were effectively aversion therapy. Want to make someone dislike
- a book? Force him to read it and write an essay about it.
- And make the topic so intellectually bogus that you
- could not, if asked, explain why one ought to write about it.
- I love to read more than anything, but by the end of high school
- I never read the books we were assigned. I was so disgusted with
- what we were doing that it became a point of honor
- with me to write nonsense at least as good at the other students'
- without having more than glanced over the book to learn the names
- of the characters and a few random events in it.I hoped this might be fixed in college, but I found the same
- problem there. It was not the teachers. It was English.
- We were supposed to read novels and write essays about them.
- About what, and why? That no one seemed to be able to explain.
- Eventually by trial and error I found that what the teacher
- wanted us to do was pretend that the story had really taken
- place, and to analyze based on what the characters said and did (the
- subtler clues, the better) what their motives must have been.
- One got extra credit for motives having to do with class,
- as I suspect one must now for those involving gender and
- sexuality. I learned how to churn out such stuff well enough
- to get an A, but I never took another English class.And the books we did these disgusting things to, like those
- we mishandled in high school, I find still have black marks
- against them in my mind. The one saving grace was that
- English courses tend to favor pompous, dull writers like
- Henry James, who deserve black marks against their names anyway.
- One of the principles the IRS uses in deciding whether to
- allow deductions is that, if something is fun, it isn't work.
- Fields that are intellectually unsure of themselves rely on
- a similar principle. Reading P.G. Wodehouse or Evelyn Waugh or
- Raymond Chandler is too obviously pleasing to seem like
- serious work, as reading Shakespeare would have been before
- English evolved enough to make it an effort to understand him. [sh]
- And so good writers (just you wait and see who's still in
- print in 300 years) are less likely to have readers turned
- against them by clumsy, self-appointed tour guides.
- The other big difference between a real essay and the
- things
- they make you write in school is that a real essay doesn't
- take a position and then defend it. That principle,
- like the idea that we ought to be writing about literature,
- turns out to be another intellectual hangover of long
- forgotten origins. It's often mistakenly believed that
- medieval universities were mostly seminaries. In fact they
- were more law schools. And at least in our tradition
- lawyers are advocates: they are
- trained to be able to
- take
- either side of an argument and make as good a case for it
- as they can. Whether or not this is a good idea (in the case of prosecutors,
- it probably isn't), it tended to pervade
- the atmosphere of
- early universities. After the lecture the most common form
- of discussion was the disputation. This idea
- is at least
- nominally preserved in our present-day thesis defense-- indeed,
- in the very word thesis. Most people treat the words
- thesis
- and dissertation as interchangeable, but originally, at least,
- a thesis was a position one took and the dissertation was
- the argument by which one defended it.I'm not complaining that we blur these two words together.
- As far as I'm concerned, the sooner we lose the original
- sense of the word thesis, the better. For many, perhaps most,
- graduate students, it is stuffing a square peg into a round
- hole to try to recast one's work as a single thesis. And
- as for the disputation, that seems clearly a net lose.
- Arguing two sides of a case may be a necessary evil in a
- legal dispute, but it's not the best way to get at the truth,
- as I think lawyers would be the first to admit.
- And yet this principle is built into the very structure of
- the essays
- they teach you to write in high school. The topic
- sentence is your thesis, chosen in advance, the supporting
- paragraphs the blows you strike in the conflict, and the
- conclusion--- uh, what it the conclusion? I was never sure
- about that in high school. If your thesis was well expressed,
- what need was there to restate it? In theory it seemed that
- the conclusion of a really good essay ought not to need to
- say any more than QED.
- But when you understand the origins
- of this sort of "essay", you can see where the
- conclusion comes from. It's the concluding remarks to the
- jury.
- What other alternative is there? To answer that
- we have to
- reach back into history again, though this time not so far.
- To Michel de Montaigne, inventor of the essay.
- He was
- doing something quite different from what a
- lawyer does,
- and
- the difference is embodied in the name. Essayer is the French
- verb meaning "to try" (the cousin of our word assay),
- and an "essai" is an effort.
- An essay is something you
- write in order
- to figure something out.Figure out what? You don't know yet. And so you can't begin with a
- thesis, because you don't have one, and may never have
- one. An essay doesn't begin with a statement, but with a
- question. In a real essay, you don't take a position and
- defend it. You see a door that's ajar, and you open it and
- walk in to see what's inside.If all you want to do is figure things out, why do you need
- to write anything, though? Why not just sit and think? Well,
- there precisely is Montaigne's great discovery. Expressing
- ideas helps to form them. Indeed, helps is far too weak a
- word. 90%
- of what ends up in my essays was stuff
- I only
- thought of when I sat down to write them. That's why I
- write them.So there's another difference between essays and
- the things
- you have to write in school. In school
- you are, in theory,
- explaining yourself to someone else. In the best case---if
- you're really organized---you're just writing it down.
- In a real essay you're writing for yourself. You're
- thinking out loud.But not quite. Just as inviting people over forces you to
- clean up your apartment, writing something that you know
- other people will read forces you to think well. So it
- does matter to have an audience. The things I've written
- just for myself are no good. Indeed, they're bad in
- a particular way:
- they tend to peter out. When I run into
- difficulties, I notice that I
- tend to conclude with a few vague
- questions and then drift off to get a cup of tea.This seems a common problem.
- It's practically the standard
- ending in blog entries--- with the addition of a "heh" or an
- emoticon, prompted by the all too accurate sense that
- something is missing.And indeed, a lot of
- published essays peter out in this
- same way.
- Particularly the sort written by the staff writers of newsmagazines. Outside writers tend to supply
- editorials of the defend-a-position variety, which
- make a beeline toward a rousing (and
- foreordained) conclusion. But the staff writers feel
- obliged to write something more
- balanced, which in
- practice ends up meaning blurry.
- Since they're
- writing for a popular magazine, they start with the
- most radioactively controversial questions, from which
- (because they're writing for a popular magazine)
- they then proceed to recoil from
- in terror.
- Gay marriage, for or
- against? This group says one thing. That group says
- another. One thing is certain: the question is a
- complex one. (But don't get mad at us. We didn't
- draw any conclusions.)Questions aren't enough. An essay has to come up with answers.
- They don't always, of course. Sometimes you start with a
- promising question and get nowhere. But those you don't
- publish. Those are like experiments that get inconclusive
- results. Something you publish ought to tell the reader
- something he didn't already know.
- But what you tell him doesn't matter, so long as
- it's interesting. I'm sometimes accused of meandering.
- In defend-a-position writing that would be a flaw.
- There you're not concerned with truth. You already
- know where you're going, and you want to go straight there,
- blustering through obstacles, and hand-waving
- your way across swampy ground. But that's not what
- you're trying to do in an essay. An essay is supposed to
- be a search for truth. It would be suspicious if it didn't
- meander.The Meander is a river in Asia Minor (aka
- Turkey).
- As you might expect, it winds all over the place.
- But does it
- do this out of frivolity? Quite the opposite.
- Like all rivers, it's rigorously following the laws of physics.
- The path it has discovered,
- winding as it is, represents
- the most economical route to the sea.The river's algorithm is simple. At each step, flow down.
- For the essayist this translates to: flow interesting.
- Of all the places to go next, choose
- whichever seems
- most interesting.I'm pushing this metaphor a bit. An essayist
- can't have
- quite as little foresight as a river. In fact what you do
- (or what I do) is somewhere between a river and a roman
- road-builder. I have a general idea of the direction
- I want to go in, and
- I choose the next topic with that in mind. This essay is
- about writing, so I do occasionally yank it back in that
- direction, but it is not all the sort of essay I
- thought I was going to write about writing.Note too that hill-climbing (which is what this algorithm is
- called) can get you in trouble.
- Sometimes, just
- like a river,
- you
- run up against a blank wall. What
- I do then is just
- what the river does: backtrack.
- At one point in this essay
- I found that after following a certain thread I ran out
- of ideas. I had to go back n
- paragraphs and start over
- in another direction. For illustrative purposes I've left
- the abandoned branch as a footnote.
- Err on the side of the river. An essay is not a reference
- work. It's not something you read looking for a specific
- answer, and feel cheated if you don't find it. I'd much
- rather read an essay that went off in an unexpected but
- interesting direction than one that plodded dutifully along
- a prescribed course.So what's interesting? For me, interesting means surprise.
- Design, as Matz
- has said, should follow the principle of
- least surprise.
- A button that looks like it will make a
- machine stop should make it stop, not speed up. Essays
- should do the opposite. Essays should aim for maximum
- surprise.I was afraid of flying for a long time and could only travel
- vicariously. When friends came back from faraway places,
- it wasn't just out of politeness that I asked them about
- their trip.
- I really wanted to know. And I found that
- the best way to get information out of them was to ask
- what surprised them. How was the place different from what
- they expected? This is an extremely useful question.
- You can ask it of even
- the most unobservant people, and it will
- extract information they didn't even know they were
- recording. Indeed, you can ask it in real time. Now when I go somewhere
- new, I make a note of what surprises me about it. Sometimes I
- even make a conscious effort to visualize the place beforehand,
- so I'll have a detailed image to diff with reality.
- Surprises are facts
- you didn't already
- know.
- But they're
- more than that. They're facts
- that contradict things you
- thought you knew. And so they're the most valuable sort of
- fact you can get. They're like a food that's not merely
- healthy, but counteracts the unhealthy effects of things
- you've already eaten.
- How do you find surprises? Well, therein lies half
- the work of essay writing. (The other half is expressing
- yourself well.) You can at least
- use yourself as a
- proxy for the reader. You should only write about things
- you've thought about a lot. And anything you come across
- that surprises you, who've thought about the topic a lot,
- will probably surprise most readers.For example, in a recent essay I pointed out that because
- you can only judge computer programmers by working with
- them, no one knows in programming who the heroes should
- be.
- I
- certainly
- didn't realize this when I started writing
- the
- essay, and even now I find it kind of weird. That's
- what you're looking for.So if you want to write essays, you need two ingredients:
- you need
- a few topics that you think about a lot, and you
- need some ability to ferret out the unexpected.What should you think about? My guess is that it
- doesn't matter. Almost everything is
- interesting if you get deeply
- enough into it. The one possible exception
- are
- things
- like working in fast food, which
- have deliberately had all
- the variation sucked out of them.
- In retrospect, was there
- anything interesting about working in Baskin-Robbins?
- Well, it was interesting to notice
- how important color was
- to the customers. Kids a certain age would point into
- the case and say that they wanted yellow. Did they want
- French Vanilla or Lemon? They would just look at you
- blankly. They wanted yellow. And then there was the
- mystery of why the perennial favorite Pralines n' Cream
- was so appealing. I'm inclined now to
- think it was the salt.
- And the mystery of why Passion Fruit tasted so disgusting.
- People would order it because of the name, and were always
- disappointed. It should have been called In-sink-erator
- Fruit.
- And there was
- the difference in the way fathers and
- mothers bought ice cream for their kids.
- Fathers tended to
- adopt the attitude of
- benevolent kings bestowing largesse,
- and mothers that of
- harried bureaucrats,
- giving in to
- pressure against their better judgement.
- So, yes, there does seem to be material, even in
- fast food.What about the other half, ferreting out the unexpected?
- That may require some natural ability. I've noticed for
- 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
- discourses, not the bawdy plays acted over on the other
- side of the river among the bear gardens and whorehouses.The other extreme, the work that seems formidable from the moment
- it's created (indeed, is deliberately intended to be)
- is represented by Milton. Like the Aeneid, Paradise Lost is a
- rock imitating a butterfly that happened to get fossilized.
- Even Samuel Johnson seems to have balked at this, on the one
- hand paying Milton the compliment of an extensive biography,
- and on the other writing of Paradise Lost that "none who read it
- ever wished it longer."
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