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Some Notes By Brian Yablon
Descriptive Writing Some Notes By Brian Yablon
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Overall Purpose You want to create an image or series of images in the reader’s mind. If done well, your reader should feel as though he/she is experiencing the world through your senses -- as though he/she were transposed onto you.
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A Basic Skill Descriptive writing is a “threshold skill.” It is the basic building block of all other forms of writing. In order to write all types of essays well, you must write well descriptively.
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Some Specific Uses To entertain To relate an experience.
Such as an amusing description of a teenager’s room. To relate an experience. Such as a description of your childhood home to convey a sense of wealth or poverty you grew up in.
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More Specific Uses To express feelings
Such as a description of your favorite outdoor spot so that your reader clearly understands why you enjoy that place so very much. To inform (for a reader unfamiliar with a subject). Such as a description of a newborn calf for a reader who has never seen one.
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Still More Specific Uses
To persuade, to convince readers that some music videos degrade women. Such as a description of a degrading music video. To clarify, to clear up a misconception. Such as the descriptions of two people, objects, places, or ideas.
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Where Can Descriptive Writing Be Found?
By itself Narratives Exemplifications Comparison-contrasts Arguments Definitions Division-classifications Cause-effect
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How Do You Begin? First, figure out two things:
Your purpose -- what are you trying to achieve with this description? Your audience -- who are you directing your description toward. Your purpose and audience determine WHAT you say and HOW you say it.
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Then What? Generate as many ideas, details, examples, and images as you can -- more than you think you’ll need. Select which of those you want to use. You cannot use everything; it’s too much -- and you want to avoid sounding like a laundry list.
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Focus on a Dominant Impression
Support the dominant impression with specific, vivid, precise details that all lead toward that overall image.
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Getting Organized There are three ways to organize a descriptive essay. Keep in mind that organization patterns tend to overlap.
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Spatial Organization This is organizing your images in physical space:
Top to bottom Front to back Left to right Near to far Head to toe Bumper to bumper
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Chronological Organization
Sequential order First to last Morning-noon-night First, second, third Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday September, October, November 1999, 2000, 2001
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Emphatic Organization
Order of importance Least to most Most to least
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Then What? Express and explain your details in length and in depth.
Avoid creating a laundry list of characteristics. Use sensory language. We are sensory creatures and experience our world with our senses. Hearing Taste Touch Sight Smell
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Be Aware of: The power of words.
Denotation (literal, dictionary definitions) Connotation (associations we make with words) They are often not the same -- and sometimes opposite!
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You Gotta Be Smooth, Baby!
Be aware of transitions; they help your reader move between ideas. They’re connectors between sentences and between paragraphs.
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Do You Feel Like I Do? Use sensory language:
Hearing Tasting Touching Smelling Seeing Be aware that sensory language enlivens your writing but also slows it down. Use it well but sparingly.
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Precision, Precision… Always be vivid, specific, and precise with details. Use concrete details instead of amorphous, vague ideas.
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Figurative Language Try to use: Metaphors Similes Personification
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Sentences Vary sentence Length Structure Short Medium long Simple
Complex Compound Compound-Complex
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Focus Remember that descriptive writing is focused on images NOT EVENTS. Think of it as flipping through a photo album. Each image is static yet tells a story.
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