How We WorkMarla Morris, Mary Aswell Doll, William F. Pinar P. Lang, 1999 - 279 pagina's How We Work is a collection of essays by writers from across the disciplines on the ways they produce work. Each writer offers a description of the processes and quirks of putting thoughts into form. Some of the essays are humorous, confessing to the ways writers confront the terror of the blank page. Others are helpful, offering hints and analyses. All give personal reflection on how creating is both horizontal and vertical, involving the writer with places, sensual experiences, and other bodies, as well as with other parts of the self. Deliberately interdisciplinary and multicultural, this collection contains the work of curriculum theorists, fiction writers, poets, musicians, and professors of mathematics, English, philosophy, and women's studies. We hope to encourage readers to become more aware of their own creative potential by reading these essays. |
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Pagina 144
... poem the idea finds further complication . Although the initial idea and the early com- plications are never truly left behind , they never become a plan be- yond the poem but remain a continual part of its process by " way , " not by ...
... poem the idea finds further complication . Although the initial idea and the early com- plications are never truly left behind , they never become a plan be- yond the poem but remain a continual part of its process by " way , " not by ...
Pagina 145
... poem ; the cultural resonances and the many ways to acknowledge and play with these ; and so forth . When these ... poem . There is also something which might loosely be called an agendum of a poem . For instance , " I am going to ...
... poem ; the cultural resonances and the many ways to acknowledge and play with these ; and so forth . When these ... poem . There is also something which might loosely be called an agendum of a poem . For instance , " I am going to ...
Pagina 146
... poets . ) The first type of process , writing an entire poem in one sitting , is most notable in poets who seem to share a sense that the fully atten- tive , and perhaps unmediated , mind in its activities is worthy of artis- tic ...
... poets . ) The first type of process , writing an entire poem in one sitting , is most notable in poets who seem to share a sense that the fully atten- tive , and perhaps unmediated , mind in its activities is worthy of artis- tic ...
Inhoudsopgave
The Web and the Work | 1 |
Curriculum as Musical Text | 11 |
The Fire Sermon | 19 |
Copyright | |
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