Learning To Write: Repetition, Imitation, Relaxation

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I had a great English teacher in high school‚ Charles “Chuck” Ashman. We had a reading list of 40 books from 19th and 20th Century British and American writers — Austen, Dickens, Thackeray, the Brontës, Melville, and so on. Every week, we had to write a paper, no more than two pages. One week, we had to write about a quote he would give us. On the other week, we had to write about any two books on the reading list.

There are a lot of great things about this assignment. Mostly, it kept us writing. The papers weren’t long so that was never the issue. There was no research to do. This let us focus on writing. There were no drafts, no rewrites. If you flummoxed one week, you had another chance the next week to get it right.

What was perhaps most impressive was that Mr. Ashman handed the papers back the next day. You could hand the paper in late — 10:00 — by sliding it in a bag hung from his front door (if you could figure out how to get in the building). And he had a lot of students. But sure enough, the next day, voilà: there was your paper waiting for you in class. There would be very few comments, very few editorial notes. There was a grade and one summary comment that somehow always nailed it.

I remember two papers quite clearly. One was on a quote — “Tis an ill wind that blows none good.” I tried arguing that quote was about the fact that there is always something good but that the Vietnam War was, indeed, an ill wind that offered no good whatsoever. To this day, his comment resonates with me: “Your politics interfered with your claims.” Booya! Humbling, as I imagined myself both smart and political — a young, stoned, horny Trotsky.

And then there was the paper I wrote on Oliver Twist. Now, to be honest, I hadn’t read Oliver Twist. In fact, of the 40 books on the list, I read nine. This was more than most people read; Cliff Notes were the go-to strategy. But as I didn’t enjoy reading Cliff Notes, this is what I’d do: I’d read two, five, twenty pages of a book; do the same for another; and then compare narrative strategies. I realized many years later that this was my initial rhetorical training. Anyway, I’d written this paper on Dickens’ use of “the Jew” to describe Fagan. I argued that this wasn’t the writer being anti-Semitic; it was the writer deploying anti-Semitism to reach his audience (c’mon! I was 16! That’s good!). His comment? “This verges on intellectual excellence.” I used that same comment, verbatim, when I taught undergrad comp ten years later.

Anyway, by year’s end — after writing all those papers, getting immediate feedback, then moving on to the next — I could write a clear, tight expository essay. This was one of the great gifts of my life and I am forever grateful to Mr. Ashman (RIP). But, at the time, I didn’t know it. I was just banging out my papers (although I did want to earn his respect, his A; it was meaningful).

I got to college and was bored. I wasn’t intellectually motivated at all. And while I could readily write a paper, I never thought of myself as a writer. It was not a conspicuous source of joy. And then, in the first class in a brand new quasi-department called “Cultural Studies,” I read Michel Foucault’s The History of Sexuality, vol 1.Holy moly! The combination of devastating critical insight that turned everything I knew on its head, humor, sweeping claims, and fluid prose melted me. I was in love.

I went on to read more Foucault; then took a class on Derrida (this was 1990 and was the emergent craze); then a grad seminar on Gadamer. But it was all about Foucault. I had a crush. So I decided to write an honors thesis in my individualized major (called History of Consciousness, within the history department) on Foucault.

Suddenly, all my writing was this now-embarrassing imitation of Foucault-cum-Derrida. I’d have cute parenthetical puns (i.e., “(Re)writing history, Foucault argues…). I’d make dramatic claims about the hegemony and despotism of “Western metaphysics.” My undergrad thesis was a ridiculous gushing crush homage to M. Michel Foucault and his way of writing.

At the time, I wasn’t conscious of imitating him. I was just writing in this way I had just learned was possible. Mr. Ashman, in high school, had taught me the basic structure of argument, how words met thought met essay. And then Foucault taught me this joy, this play, these reversals of expectation, all these moves. It was exhilarating.

Sure, it was silly. My writing as a 21 year old was pretentious and goofy (it still is!). But the fact is that by imitating Foucault and Derrida, I was training my writing muscles to perform in new ways. By not just observing but enacting these writerly strategies — these rhythms of prose and argument — I internalized them, made them my own, until eventually Foucault became just another lick in my arsenal. Soon thereafter, I added Deleuze, Nietzsche, Nicholson Baker, and more. (When I taught undergrad comp, I made students imitate certain writers, usually Allen Ginsberg and Nietzsche. It’s a fun assignment.)

But it wasn’t until I began to relax, to lean back a bit rather than forward, that I began really to enjoy writing. Up until recently, my prose leaned towards purple, precious, and pedantic. I’d literally lean into my keyboard, into the screen, lean on the pen and into the paper, in order to drive my points, wielding language like a weapon: Take that, reader! I look back and see it as my insecurity: aggressive, pedantic writing as pre-emptive strike, bludgeoning my readers before they could retaliate.

I no longer want to drive my points. I don’t care if I’m right. Rather than leaning into the keyboard, hitting the keys with punctuated certainty, I now lean back away from the keyboard and let language and ideas wash over me more sensually. Sure, I’ll always tend towards the purple, the overwrought. A man is as he goes, after all. But I don’t have to push points; I can let ideas take shape, take form, as they will without pedantry or didacticism.