September 2004
Remember the essays you had to write in high school?
Topic sentence, introductory paragraph, supporting paragraphs, conclusion.
The conclusion being, say, that Ahab in Moby Dick was a Christ-like figure.
Oy.
So I'm going to try to give the other side of the story: what an essay really is, and how you write one.
Or at least, how I write one.
Remember high-school essays? Topic sentence, supporting paragraphs, conclusion -- that Ahab was a Christ-like figure. Oy. Here's the other side: what an essay really is, and how I write one.
The essays you wrote in high school have almost nothing to do with real essays. I'll give the other side of the story: what an essay really is, and how you write one.
The most obvious difference between real essays and the things one has to write in school is that real essays are not exclusively about English literature.
Certainly schools should teach students how to write.
But due to a series of historical accidents the teaching of writing has gotten mixed together with the study of literature.
And so all over the country students are writing not about how a baseball team with a small budget might compete with the Yankees, or the role of color in fashion, or what constitutes a good dessert, but about symbolism in Dickens.
With the result that writing is made to seem boring and pointless.
Who cares about symbolism in Dickens?
Dickens himself would be more interested in an essay about color or baseball.
How did things get this way?
To answer that we have to go back almost a thousand years.
Around 1100, Europe at last began to catch its breath after centuries of chaos, and once they had the luxury of curiosity they rediscovered what we call "the classics."
The effect was rather as if we were visited by beings from another solar system.
These earlier civilizations were so much more sophisticated that for the next several centuries the main work of European scholars, in almost every field, was to assimilate what they knew.
During this period the study of ancient texts acquired great prestige.
It seemed the essence of what scholars did.
As European scholarship gained momentum it became less and less important; by 1350 someone who wanted to learn about science could find better teachers than Aristotle in his own era. [1] But schools change slower than scholarship.
In the 19th century the study of ancient texts was still the backbone of the curriculum.
The time was then ripe for the question: if the study of ancient texts is a valid field for scholarship, why not modern texts?
The answer, of course, is that the original raison d'etre of classical scholarship was a kind of intellectual archaeology that does not need to be done in the case of contemporary authors.
But for obvious reasons no one wanted to give that answer.
The archaeological work being mostly done, it implied that those studying the classics were, if not wasting their time, at least working on problems of minor importance.
And so began the study of modern literature.
There was a good deal of resistance at first. The first courses in English literature seem to have been offered by the newer colleges, particularly American ones.
Dartmouth, the University of Vermont, Amherst, and University College, London taught English literature in the 1820s.
But Harvard didn't have a professor of English literature until 1876, and Oxford not till 1885. (Oxford had a chair of Chinese before it had one of English.) [2]
What tipped the scales, at least in the US, seems to have been the idea that professors should do research as well as teach.
This idea (along with the PhD, the department, and indeed the whole concept of the modern university) was imported from Germany in the late 19th century.
Beginning at Johns Hopkins in 1876, the new model spread rapidly.
Writing was one of the casualties.
Colleges had long taught English composition.
But how do you do research on composition?
The professors who taught math could be required to do original math, the professors who taught history could be required to write scholarly articles about history, but what about the professors who taught rhetoric or composition?
What should they do research on?
The closest thing seemed to be English literature. [3]
And so in the late 19th century the teaching of writing was inherited by English professors.
This had two drawbacks: (a) an expert on literature need not himself be a good writer, any more than an art historian has to be a good painter, and (b) the subject of writing now tends to be literature, since that's what the professor is interested in.
High schools imitate universities.
The seeds of our miserable high school experiences were sown in 1892, when the National Education Association "formally recommended that literature and composition be unified in the high school course." [4] The 'riting component of the 3 Rs then morphed into English, with the bizarre consequence that high school students now had to write about English literature-- to write, without even realizing it, imitations of whatever English professors had been publishing in their journals a few decades before.
It's no wonder if this seems to the student a pointless exercise, because we're now three steps removed from real work: the students are imitating English professors, who are imitating classical scholars, who are merely the inheritors of a tradition growing out of what was, 700 years ago, fascinating and urgently needed work.
The most obvious difference: real essays aren't only about English literature. Through a series of historical accidents, teaching writing got mixed up with studying it. So students write about symbolism in Dickens instead of how a small-budget team might beat the Yankees -- which makes writing seem boring and pointless.
How did it happen? Around 1100 Europe rediscovered the classics, civilizations so sophisticated that for centuries scholars' main work was just to assimilate them. Ancient texts acquired great prestige. But as scholarship gained momentum that mattered less -- by 1350 you could find better teachers than Aristotle. Schools change slower, so in the 19th century ancient texts were still the backbone of the curriculum.
So the question ripened: if ancient texts are worth studying, why not modern ones? The honest answer is that classical scholarship was intellectual archaeology that contemporary authors don't need. But no one wanted to say that -- it implied the classicists worked on problems of minor importance. And so began the study of modern literature.
What tipped the scales in the US was an imported German idea: professors should research as well as teach. Writing was a casualty. How do you research composition? The closest thing was English literature, so writing was inherited by English professors. Two drawbacks: an expert on literature needn't write well, and the subject of writing drifts toward literature, since that's what the professor cares about.
High schools imitate universities. In 1892 the National Education Association recommended unifying literature and composition, so students write imitations of what English professors published decades before -- three steps removed from real work that 700 years ago was urgently needed.
Real essays aren't exclusively about literature. Through a series of historical accidents the teaching of writing got fused with the study of literature, which is why students write about symbolism in Dickens instead of anything they care about.
The other big difference between a real essay and the things they make you write in school is that a real essay doesn't take a position and then defend it.
That principle, like the idea that we ought to be writing about literature, turns out to be another intellectual hangover of long forgotten origins.
It's often mistakenly believed that medieval universities were mostly seminaries.
In fact they were more law schools.
And at least in our tradition lawyers are advocates, trained to take either side of an argument and make as good a case for it as they can.
Whether cause or effect, this spirit pervaded early universities.
The study of rhetoric, the art of arguing persuasively, was a third of the undergraduate curriculum. [5] And after the lecture the most common form of discussion was the disputation.
This is at least nominally preserved in our present-day thesis defense: most people treat the words thesis and dissertation as interchangeable, but originally, at least, a thesis was a position one took and the dissertation was the argument by which one defended it.
Defending a position may be a necessary evil in a legal dispute, but it's not the best way to get at the truth, as I think lawyers would be the first to admit.
It's not just that you miss subtleties this way.
The real problem is that you can't change the question.
And yet this principle is built into the very structure of the things they teach you to write in high school.
The topic sentence is your thesis, chosen in advance, the supporting paragraphs the blows you strike in the conflict, and the conclusion-- uh, what is the conclusion?
I was never sure about that in high school.
It seemed as if we were just supposed to restate what we said in the first paragraph, but in different enough words that no one could tell.
Why bother?
But when you understand the origins of this sort of "essay," you can see where the conclusion comes from.
It's the concluding remarks to the jury.
Good writing should be convincing, certainly, but it should be convincing because you got the right answers, not because you did a good job of arguing.
When I give a draft of an essay to friends, there are two things I want to know: which parts bore them, and which seem unconvincing.
The boring bits can usually be fixed by cutting.
But I don't try to fix the unconvincing bits by arguing more cleverly.
I need to talk the matter over.
At the very least I must have explained something badly.
In that case, in the course of the conversation I'll be forced to come up a with a clearer explanation, which I can just incorporate in the essay.
More often than not I have to change what I was saying as well.
But the aim is never to be convincing per se.
As the reader gets smarter, convincing and true become identical, so if I can convince smart readers I must be near the truth.
The sort of writing that attempts to persuade may be a valid (or at least inevitable) form, but it's historically inaccurate to call it an essay.
An essay is something else.
The other big difference: a real essay doesn't take a position and defend it. Medieval universities weren't seminaries -- they were more like law schools, and lawyers are advocates, trained to take either side. That spirit survives in the thesis defense, where a thesis was a position and the dissertation the argument defending it.
Defending a position is a necessary evil in court, not the best way to get at the truth. The real problem: you can't change the question. And that's built into the high-school essay -- topic sentence the thesis, supporting paragraphs the blows you strike, conclusion the remarks to the jury.
Good writing should be convincing because you got the right answers, not because you argued well. When I give a draft to friends I want two things: which parts bore them, which seem unconvincing. Boring bits I fix by cutting. But the unconvincing ones I don't fix by arguing more cleverly -- I talk the matter over.
That forces a clearer explanation, and often makes me change what I was saying. As the reader gets smarter, convincing and true become identical, so if I can convince smart readers I must be near the truth. Persuasion may be a valid form, but it isn't an essay.
A real essay doesn't take a position and then defend it. That habit is a hangover from when universities were essentially law schools, and defending a position isn't the best way to get at the truth -- the real problem is you can't change the question.
To understand what a real essay is, we have to reach back into history again, though this time not so far.
To Michel de Montaigne, who in 1580 published a book of what he called "essais." He was doing something quite different from what lawyers do, and the difference is embodied in the name. Essayer is the French verb meaning "to try" and an essai is an attempt.
An essay is something you write to try to figure something out.
Figure out what?
You don't know yet.
And so you can't begin with a thesis, because you don't have one, and may never have one.
An essay doesn't begin with a statement, but with a question.
In a real essay, you don't take a position and defend it.
You notice a door that's ajar, and you open it and walk in to see what's inside.
If all you want to do is figure things out, why do you need to write anything, though?
Why not just sit and think?
Well, there precisely is Montaigne's great discovery.
Expressing ideas helps to form them.
Indeed, helps is far too weak a word.
Most of what ends up in my essays I only thought of when I sat down to write them.
That's why I write them.
In the things you write in school you are, in theory, merely explaining yourself to the reader.
In a real essay you're writing for yourself.
You're thinking out loud.
But not quite.
Just as inviting people over forces you to clean up your apartment, writing something that other people will read forces you to think well.
So it does matter to have an audience.
The things I've written just for myself are no good.
They tend to peter out.
When I run into difficulties, I find I conclude with a few vague questions and then drift off to get a cup of tea.
Many published essays peter out in the same way.
Particularly the sort written by the staff writers of newsmagazines.
Outside writers tend to supply editorials of the defend-a-position variety, which make a beeline toward a rousing (and foreordained) conclusion.
But the staff writers feel obliged to write something "balanced."
Since they're writing for a popular magazine, they start with the most radioactively controversial questions, from which-- because they're writing for a popular magazine-- they then proceed to recoil in terror.
Abortion, for or against?
This group says one thing.
That group says another.
One thing is certain: the question is a complex one. (But don't get mad at us.
We didn't draw any conclusions.)
To understand a real essay, reach back to Montaigne, who in 1580 published a book of essais. Essayer means "to try"; an essay is something you write to figure something out. Figure out what? You don't know yet -- so you can't begin with a thesis. An essay begins with a question. You notice a door ajar and walk in to see what's inside.
Why not just sit and think? There's Montaigne's discovery: expressing ideas helps form them -- and helps is far too weak a word. Most of what ends up in my essays I only thought of when I sat down. In school you explain yourself to the reader; in a real essay you write for yourself.
But not quite. Writing for readers, like inviting people over, forces you to clean up -- so it matters to have an audience. The things I've written just for myself peter out.
Many published essays peter out too, especially newsmagazine staff writers obliged to be "balanced": they start with the most radioactively controversial question, then recoil in terror.
An essay is something you write to try to figure something out. It begins not with a thesis but with a question, and you write it because expressing ideas helps form them -- most of what ends up in my essays I only thought of when I sat down.
Questions aren't enough.
An essay has to come up with answers.
They don't always, of course.
Sometimes you start with a promising question and get nowhere.
But those you don't publish.
Those are like experiments that get inconclusive results.
An essay you publish ought to tell the reader something he didn't already know.
But what you tell him doesn't matter, so long as it's interesting.
I'm sometimes accused of meandering.
In defend-a-position writing that would be a flaw.
There you're not concerned with truth.
You already know where you're going, and you want to go straight there, blustering through obstacles, and hand-waving your way across swampy ground.
But that's not what you're trying to do in an essay.
An essay is supposed to be a search for truth.
It would be suspicious if it didn't meander.
The Meander (aka Menderes) is a river in Turkey.
As you might expect, it winds all over the place.
But it doesn't do this out of frivolity.
The path it has discovered is the most economical route to the sea. [6]
The river's algorithm is simple.
At each step, flow down.
For the essayist this translates to: flow interesting.
Of all the places to go next, choose the most interesting.
One can't have quite as little foresight as a river.
I always know generally what I want to write about.
But not the specific conclusions I want to reach; from paragraph to paragraph I let the ideas take their course.
This doesn't always work.
Sometimes, like a river, one runs up against a wall.
Then I do the same thing the river does: backtrack.
At one point in this essay I found that after following a certain thread I ran out of ideas.
I had to go back seven paragraphs and start over in another direction.
Fundamentally an essay is a train of thought-- but a cleaned-up train of thought, as dialogue is cleaned-up conversation.
Real thought, like real conversation, is full of false starts.
It would be exhausting to read.
You need to cut and fill to emphasize the central thread, like an illustrator inking over a pencil drawing.
But don't change so much that you lose the spontaneity of the original.
Err on the side of the river.
An essay is not a reference work.
It's not something you read looking for a specific answer, and feel cheated if you don't find it.
I'd much rather read an essay that went off in an unexpected but interesting direction than one that plodded dutifully along a prescribed course.
Questions aren't enough; an essay has to come up with answers. It should tell the reader something he didn't know -- but what doesn't matter, so long as it's interesting.
I'm sometimes accused of meandering. In defend-a-position writing that's a flaw: you already know where you're going. But an essay is a search for truth. It would be suspicious if it didn't meander.
The Meander is a river in Turkey that winds all over -- but the path it found is the most economical route to the sea. The river's algorithm: at each step, flow down. For the essayist: flow interesting.
One can't have quite as little foresight as a river. I know generally what I want to write about, but not the conclusions; I let the ideas take their course. When I hit a wall I backtrack, like the river.
Fundamentally an essay is a train of thought -- but cleaned up, as dialogue is cleaned-up conversation. You cut and fill to emphasize the central thread, like an illustrator inking over a pencil drawing, but not so much that you lose the spontaneity.
An essay has to come up with answers, but it should meander on the way. An essay is a search for truth, and like a river finding the sea, it gets there by flowing toward whatever is most interesting at each step.
So what's interesting?
For me, interesting means surprise.
Interfaces, as Geoffrey James has said, should follow the principle of least astonishment.
A button that looks like it will make a machine stop should make it stop, not speed up.
Essays should do the opposite.
Essays should aim for maximum surprise.
I was afraid of flying for a long time and could only travel vicariously.
When friends came back from faraway places, it wasn't just out of politeness that I asked what they saw.
I really wanted to know.
And I found the best way to get information out of them was to ask what surprised them.
How was the place different from what they expected?
This is an extremely useful question.
You can ask it of the most unobservant people, and it will extract information they didn't even know they were recording.
Surprises are things that you not only didn't know, but that contradict things you thought you knew.
And so they're the most valuable sort of fact you can get.
They're like a food that's not merely healthy, but counteracts the unhealthy effects of things you've already eaten.
How do you find surprises?
Well, therein lies half the work of essay writing. (The other half is expressing yourself well.)
The trick is to use yourself as a proxy for the reader.
You should only write about things you've thought about a lot.
And anything you come across that surprises you, who've thought about the topic a lot, will probably surprise most readers.
For example, in a recent essay [blocked] I pointed out that because you can only judge computer programmers by working with them, no one knows who the best programmers are overall.
I didn't realize this when I began that essay, and even now I find it kind of weird.
That's what you're looking for.
So if you want to write essays, you need two ingredients: a few topics you've thought about a lot, and some ability to ferret out the unexpected.
What should you think about?
My guess is that it doesn't matter-- that anything can be interesting if you get deeply enough into it.
One possible exception might be things that have deliberately had all the variation sucked out of them, like working in fast food.
In retrospect, was there anything interesting about working at Baskin-Robbins?
Well, it was interesting how important color was to the customers.
Kids a certain age would point into the case and say that they wanted yellow.
Did they want French Vanilla or Lemon?
They would just look at you blankly.
They wanted yellow.
And then there was the mystery of why the perennial favorite Pralines 'n' Cream was so appealing. (I think now it was the salt.)
And the difference in the way fathers and mothers bought ice cream for their kids: the fathers like benevolent kings bestowing largesse, the mothers harried, giving in to pressure.
So, yes, there does seem to be some material even in fast food.
I didn't notice those things at the time, though.
At sixteen I was about as observant as a lump of rock.
I can see more now in the fragments of memory I preserve of that age than I could see at the time from having it all happening live, right in front of me.
So what's interesting? For me, interesting means surprise. Interfaces should follow the principle of least astonishment; essays should do the opposite, and aim for maximum surprise.
The best way to get information out of friends back from faraway places was to ask what surprised them. Surprises contradict what you thought you knew, which makes them the most valuable sort of fact -- like a food that counteracts the unhealthy effects of what you've already eaten.
How do you find surprises? That's half the work; the other half is expressing yourself well. Use yourself as a proxy: write only about things you've thought about a lot, and what surprises you will probably surprise most readers. That's what you're looking for.
So you need two ingredients: a few topics you've thought about a lot, and the ability to ferret out the unexpected. What should you think about? It doesn't matter -- anything is interesting if you get deeply enough into it. One exception: things deliberately drained of variation, like fast food.
Was anything interesting about Baskin-Robbins? How important color was: kids would point and say they wanted yellow; ask French Vanilla or Lemon and they'd look at you blankly. So there's material even in fast food. At sixteen, though, I was about as observant as a lump of rock.
For me, interesting means surprise. Essays should aim for maximum surprise -- the facts that contradict what you thought you knew -- and you find them by writing about things you've thought about a lot and using yourself as a proxy for the reader.
So the ability to ferret out the unexpected must not merely be an inborn one.
It must be something you can learn.
How do you learn it?
To some extent it's like learning history.
When you first read history, it's just a whirl of names and dates.
Nothing seems to stick.
But the more you learn, the more hooks you have for new facts to stick onto-- which means you accumulate knowledge at an exponential rate.
Once you remember that Normans conquered England in 1066, it will catch your attention when you hear that other Normans conquered southern Italy at about the same time.
Which will make you wonder about Normandy, and take note when a third book mentions that Normans were not, like most of what is now called France, tribes that flowed in as the Roman empire collapsed, but Vikings (norman = north man) who arrived four centuries later in 911.
Which makes it easier to remember that Dublin was also established by Vikings in the 840s.
Etc, etc squared.
Collecting surprises is a similar process.
The more anomalies you've seen, the more easily you'll notice new ones.
Which means, oddly enough, that as you grow older, life should become more and more surprising.
When I was a kid, I used to think adults had it all figured out.
I had it backwards.
Kids are the ones who have it all figured out.
They're just mistaken.
When it comes to surprises, the rich get richer.
But (as with wealth) there may be habits of mind that will help the process along.
It's good to have a habit of asking questions, especially questions beginning with Why.
But not in the random way that three year olds ask why.
There are an infinite number of questions.
How do you find the fruitful ones?
I find it especially useful to ask why about things that seem wrong.
For example, why should there be a connection between humor and misfortune?
Why do we find it funny when a character, even one we like, slips on a banana peel?
There's a whole essay's worth of surprises there for sure.
If you want to notice things that seem wrong, you'll find a degree of skepticism helpful.
I take it as an axiom that we're only achieving 1% of what we could.
This helps counteract the rule that gets beaten into our heads as children: that things are the way they are because that is how things have to be.
For example, everyone I've talked to while writing this essay felt the same about English classes-- that the whole process seemed pointless.
But none of us had the balls at the time to hypothesize that it was, in fact, all a mistake.
We all thought there was just something we weren't getting.
I have a hunch you want to pay attention not just to things that seem wrong, but things that seem wrong in a humorous way.
I'm always pleased when I see someone laugh as they read a draft of an essay.
But why should I be?
I'm aiming for good ideas.
Why should good ideas be funny?
The connection may be surprise.
Surprises make us laugh, and surprises are what one wants to deliver.
I write down things that surprise me in notebooks.
I never actually get around to reading them and using what I've written, but I do tend to reproduce the same thoughts later.
So the main value of notebooks may be what writing things down leaves in your head.
People trying to be cool will find themselves at a disadvantage when collecting surprises.
To be surprised is to be mistaken.
And the essence of cool, as any fourteen year old could tell you, is nil admirari. When you're mistaken, don't dwell on it; just act like nothing's wrong and maybe no one will notice.
One of the keys to coolness is to avoid situations where inexperience may make you look foolish.
If you want to find surprises you should do the opposite.
Study lots of different things, because some of the most interesting surprises are unexpected connections between different fields.
For example, jam, bacon, pickles, and cheese, which are among the most pleasing of foods, were all originally intended as methods of preservation.
And so were books and paintings.
Whatever you study, include history-- but social and economic history, not political history.
History seems to me so important that it's misleading to treat it as a mere field of study.
Another way to describe it is all the data we have so far.
Among other things, studying history gives one confidence that there are good ideas waiting to be discovered right under our noses.
Swords evolved during the Bronze Age out of daggers, which (like their flint predecessors) had a hilt separate from the blade.
Because swords are longer the hilts kept breaking off.
But it took five hundred years before someone thought of casting hilt and blade as one piece.
Ferreting out the unexpected isn't merely inborn; you can learn it. It's like learning history: the more you know, the more hooks you have for new facts, so knowledge accumulates exponentially. Once you remember the Normans conquered England in 1066, you notice they conquered southern Italy at the same time.
Collecting surprises is similar: the more anomalies you've seen, the more easily you notice new ones. Which means, oddly, that as you grow older life should become more surprising. As a kid I thought adults had it all figured out. I had it backwards -- kids do. They're just mistaken.
It's good to ask Why -- but not the random way three-year-olds do. I find it especially useful to ask why about things that seem wrong: why is it funny when a character we like slips on a banana peel? There's a whole essay's worth of surprises there.
A degree of skepticism helps. I take it as an axiom that we're achieving only 1% of what we could, which counteracts the rule beaten into us as children: that things are the way they are because that's how they have to be.
Pay attention not just to things that seem wrong, but things wrong in a humorous way. Why should good ideas be funny? The connection may be surprise: surprises make us laugh, and surprises are what one wants to deliver.
If you want surprises, study lots of different fields, because some of the best are connections between them -- jam, bacon, pickles, and cheese were all originally methods of preservation, and so were books and paintings.
Whatever you study, include history -- social and economic, not political. Another name for it is all the data we have so far. It gives confidence that good ideas wait under our noses: swords evolved from daggers, yet it took five hundred years before someone cast hilt and blade as one piece.
Ferreting out the unexpected is something you can learn. The more anomalies you've seen, the more you'll notice; ask why about things that seem wrong, stay skeptical, study many fields, and include history -- all the data we have so far.
Above all, make a habit of paying attention to things you're not supposed to, either because they're "inappropriate [blocked]," or not important, or not what you're supposed to be working on.
If you're curious about something, trust your instincts.
Follow the threads that attract your attention.
If there's something you're really interested in, you'll find they have an uncanny way of leading back to it anyway, just as the conversation of people who are especially proud of something always tends to lead back to it.
For example, I've always been fascinated by comb-overs, especially the extreme sort that make a man look as if he's wearing a beret made of his own hair.
Surely this is a lowly sort of thing to be interested in-- the sort of superficial quizzing best left to teenage girls.
And yet there is something underneath.
The key question, I realized, is how does the comber-over not see how odd he looks?
And the answer is that he got to look that way incrementally. What began as combing his hair a little carefully over a thin patch has gradually, over 20 years, grown into a monstrosity.
Gradualness is very powerful.
And that power can be used for constructive purposes too: just as you can trick yourself into looking like a freak, you can trick yourself into creating something so grand that you would never have dared to plan such a thing.
Indeed, this is just how most good software gets created.
You start by writing a stripped-down kernel (how hard can it be?) and gradually it grows into a complete operating system.
Hence the next leap: could you do the same thing in painting, or in a novel?
See what you can extract from a frivolous question?
If there's one piece of advice I would give about writing essays, it would be: don't do as you're told.
Don't believe what you're supposed to.
Don't write the essay readers expect; one learns nothing from what one expects.
And don't write the way they taught you to in school.
The most important sort of disobedience is to write essays at all.
It used to be that only a tiny number of officially approved writers were allowed to write essays.
Magazines published few of them, and judged them less by what they said than who wrote them; a magazine might publish a story by an unknown writer if it was good enough, but if they published an essay on x it had to be by someone who was at least forty and whose job title had x in it.
Which is a problem, because there are a lot of things insiders can't say precisely because they're insiders.
The Internet is changing that.
Anyone can publish an essay on the Web, and it gets judged, as any writing should, by what it says, not who wrote it.
Who are you to write about x?
You are whatever you wrote.
Popular magazines made the period between the spread of literacy and the arrival of TV the golden age of the short story.
The Web may well make this the golden age of the essay.
And that's certainly not something I realized when I started writing this.
Above all, pay attention to things you're not supposed to -- "inappropriate [blocked]," unimportant, or not what you're working on. Follow the threads that attract you; they have an uncanny way of leading back. I've always been fascinated by comb-overs. How does the comber-over not see how odd he looks? He got there incrementally, over 20 years into a monstrosity.
Gradualness is powerful, and works constructively too: you can trick yourself into creating something so grand you'd never have dared to plan it. That's how most good software gets made -- a stripped-down kernel grows into a whole operating system. See what you can extract from a frivolous question?
If there's one piece of advice I'd give, it's: don't do as you're told. Don't write the essay readers expect -- one learns nothing from what one expects. The most important disobedience: write essays at all.
Magazines used to judge essays by who wrote them: an essay on x had to be by someone over forty whose job title had x in it. A problem, since there's a lot insiders can't say precisely because they're insiders. The Internet is changing that: anyone can publish, judged by what it says.
Who are you to write about x? You are whatever you wrote. Popular magazines made the years between literacy and TV the golden age of the short story. The Web may make this the golden age of the essay.
Pay attention to things you're not supposed to and follow the threads that attract you. If there's one piece of advice about writing essays, it's: don't do as you're told. And the most important disobedience is to write essays at all.
[1] I'm thinking of Oresme (c. 1323-82). But it's hard to pick a date, because there was a sudden drop-off in scholarship just as Europeans finished assimilating classical science. The cause may have been the plague of 1347; the trend in scientific progress matches the population curve.
[2] Parker, William R. "Where Do College English Departments Come From?" College English 28 (1966-67), pp. 339-351. Reprinted in Gray, Donald J. (ed). The Department of English at Indiana University Bloomington 1868-1970. Indiana University Publications.
Daniels, Robert V. The University of Vermont: The First Two Hundred Years. University of Vermont, 1991.
Mueller, Friedrich M. Letter to the Pall Mall Gazette. 1886/87.
Reprinted in Bacon, Alan (ed). The Nineteenth-Century History of English Studies. Ashgate, 1998.
[3] I'm compressing the story a bit. At first literature took a back seat to philology, which (a) seemed more serious and (b) was popular in Germany, where many of the leading scholars of that generation had been trained.
In some cases the writing teachers were transformed in situ into English professors.
Francis James Child, who had been Boylston Professor of Rhetoric at Harvard since 1851, became in 1876 the university's first professor of English.
[4] Parker, op. cit., p. 25.
[5] The undergraduate curriculum or trivium (whence "trivial") consisted of Latin grammar, rhetoric, and logic. Candidates for masters' degrees went on to study the quadrivium of arithmetic, geometry, music, and astronomy. Together these were the seven liberal arts.
The study of rhetoric was inherited directly from Rome, where it was considered the most important subject.
It would not be far from the truth to say that education in the classical world meant training landowners' sons to speak well enough to defend their interests in political and legal disputes.
[6] Trevor Blackwell points out that this isn't strictly true, because the outside edges of curves erode faster.
Thanks to Ken Anderson, Trevor Blackwell, Sarah Harlin, Jessica Livingston, Jackie McDonough, and Robert Morris for reading drafts of this.
The drop-off in scholarship came just as Europeans finished assimilating classical science; the cause may have been the plague of 1347, since the curve of scientific progress matches the population curve.
The undergraduate trivium -- whence "trivial" -- was Latin grammar, rhetoric, and logic. Rhetoric was inherited from Rome, where education essentially meant training landowners' sons to speak well enough to defend their interests in court.
And the meandering river isn't a perfect example: the outside edges of curves erode faster.
A few notes worth keeping: the drop-off in scholarship that may trace to the plague, what the medieval rhetoric curriculum actually was, and the small correction to the meandering river.