“Your pier-glass or extensive surface of polished steel made to be rubbed by a housemaid, will be minutely and multitudinously scratched in all directions; but place now against it a lighted candle as a centre of illumination, and lo! The scratches will seem to arrange themselves in a fine series of concentric circles round the little sun. It is demonstrable that the scratches are going everywhere impartially, and it is only your candle which produces the flattering illusion of a concentric arrangement, its light falling with an exclusive optical selection. These things are a parable. The scratches are events, and the candle is the egoism of any person now absent..." ~ George Eliot

February 24, 2012

Exercises for writing



I have recently been introduced to some awesome exercises for writing by some of my amazing colleagues. I completed the following exercises for a book project, but I think they would also work equally well for articles or dissertations.

Exercise #1: X,Y,Z

Can you distill your project into the following formula:

My book is about x. I argue y about x. The significance of discovering y about x is z.

I found it helpful to begin by creating a list of keywords, then use those words to fill in the x,y,z. To really make this activity useful do at least 5 different iterations of these three sentences, jumbling up the order of what you put in the x,y,z slots and even introducing different concepts for one of the x,y,z slots.

Exercise #2: The Fairytale

That's right. Forget Academic Prose. Plot out your project in terms of a fairytale. Tell the story of your idea. Who are the main actors? Who are the villains? What does the action consist of? What are the conflicts? How are they resolved? Here is a quick blurb from the fairytale I wrote about my project:

Once upon a time there lived a fair maiden named Sympatica. Everyone said she was the most gentle and kind woman in the land. She helped the poor and downtrodden. no one knew why but somehow she just made them feel better about themselves when they were around her. Everyone wanted to be her friend. Well, almost everyone.

There was another girl in the land, Godsib, who whispered evil things about Sympatica to everyone. She came with horrible stories about how Sympatica was not really helping the poor but actually hurting them. Godsib even went so far as to say Sympatica was creating animosity between people who were and were not her friend. Godsib did her best to break up these categories of insiders and outsiders, but no one would take her seriously. Well, almost no one.

Exercise #3: The Table of Contents

I now understand that the table of contents is one of the gears that makes the book project run (along with the story that you tell and your argument: all three are different gears churning in different ways, but when moving together they form the book). The TOC is not your argument, nor does it have to follow the order of your argument. The TOC should echo the framework of the book and should provide the arc of the story you will tell. I found it much easier to construct a TOC when I thought of it in terms of tracing how I am going to tell a story rather than as some kind of index of chapters.

I think it's useful to create a TOC at various moments in your project, as a way of staying attuned to how you are telling the story of your argument.

February 5, 2012

Classifieds

Looking for church home, willing to split rent. I am generally a quiet, neat person who does not raise her hands while singing (though I wish I did). I know how to follow all the rules (though I wish I didn’t). I do have a lot of a baggage, but can just put it in storage. I prefer contemporary worship music, but not like a rock band. Maybe just a guitar. Includes deep teaching of the bible in its historical context. Please no “life application” moments that turn the biblical narrative into Aesop’s fables. Should include women in leadership roles. Preferably not as back-up singer or Sunday school superintendent. Clear mission for helping others. Africa or India would be great, but maybe better the house with a sagging roof just down the street. Accessible by foot for people without $60,000 suburbans. Or maybe if it is only accessible by a $60,000 dollar suburban it actually transports the little girl sitting on the porch of the broken house down the street. No theology statement necessary. Living out heaven here on earth completely necessary. Congregation made up of – not those who are “in” – but those who go out. Comes complete with: the poor, the mourning, the meek, the hungry, the merciful. Please call me if you know of anything like this.