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Organization:
Grocery Lists
Most people start a paper with a list: it's comforting,
it tells the writer he's going somewhere, it gives control by suggesting
limits, and it doesn't take too much time. When the lists are too short or too
long, however, the writer may feel frustrated. The paper feels wrong, somehow,
even though it has obeyed the rules. Though the writer may bravely go ahead
and try to pretend that writing will correct the problem later, he may be
asking for trouble.
List-making needs the same balanced treatment of
freedom and discipline described above as rough magic. Proceed steadily and
quickly, putting down everything that might be important, and then examine the
list. Are all the ingredients here? Okay. Do you need them all? (Well, maybe I
don't need to put in that bit about my trip to Hawaii, after all, this paper
is on Dostoyevsky....) Did I leave anything out? (Is my section on Hobbes too
nasty, brutish, and short?)
After you've made your list and checked it twice, write
your first draft with one item to a paragraph. It's okay if the paragraphs
look long and unwieldy; before the rewrite you'll examine them for proper
balance and consistency. For now, the list is telling you simply to put things
down.
Using
The Paper Topic
Rough
Magic
Grocery
Lists
Up
Against The Wall
Paragraph
Outline
Building
On Evidence
Traditional
Outlines
Starting
With Last Paragraph
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