Preview

Writing Shapes the World

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
820 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Writing Shapes the World
Salena Robinson
1/25/08
Period 4
Writing Shapes the World

Part one.

When I become animated, I can’t talk. The words get sped up so fast my mouth has trouble keeping up. It’s a hyper speed flux of unparalleled stability- the words as they travel from cavity to cavity of brain, start out as ‘destruction’ but come out from the final pucker of lips and caresses of tongue as ‘noitcurtsed’. This is why I write, because making words and phrases flow from stem of brain to tips of fingers and onto a blank page is so much easier than making them come out of mouth.

There is so much creativity and prose that becomes locked away with speech, especially with speech. Through writing brains are transported into a different place, without pressures or programmed premonitions of faults that cause speech to vacillate. In this place brains are capable of catching words I barely remember thinking. There is a place where scenery takes form, mystery lands that build and diverge, put themselves on a map for the world to find (but only if it is wished).

Part two.

What is to be said, about writing? Less than can be written, for aren’t words what bring together the world? Light tendrils of black upon white span the ages with inexplicable word to be deciphered endlessly. Always, there is something. Something to make history.

With script and all it’s variations the world becomes, remains, the world.

How many books have been written to tell about the world? Without them, how would we, the people, the human being, exist? Knowing ourselves would be an entirely different thing with out script to describe us, engrave us into the fine slate called society. Where would we go without the words to lead the way? The roads are long and endless but the words will always be there to comfort, and always right where they are least expected. A show of relief in the form of letters in an orderly fashion.

“Speak to me and I’ll speak to you”. Integrated are the ways of communication,

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Jimmy Santiago Baca made books essential, let language free him from his physical restraints, and he wrote an essay resonated with me loudly. Writing is freedom and allowed Baca to find his voice. Although the content that you can read can be monitored, no one can stop the voice that is inside your head. That inner voice then flows to paper, and without interruption or interjection it becomes the purest form of…

    • 877 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The power of words have a big impact in this world. What would be appealing without words? Even actions are worth a thousand words. Books wouldn’t exist without words. Markus Zusak, the author of The Book Thief demonstrates throughout the book the power of words.…

    • 61 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Literature and art, which are expressions of one's ideas through writing and creativity, have survived throughout the various eras in history. Although technology could change how literature and art are delivered, it will not change man's desire to express himself. The desire to be recognized and remembered for one's literary work, as has been recognized to present, will transcend beyond this technological era.…

    • 294 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Thomas Lux's Voice

    • 630 Words
    • 3 Pages

    A story can exhibit a great deal of information and present the reader with a tale rich in plot and atmosphere. A story can have these and more, but who translates the words on the paper into what becomes the experience of the story abundant with emotion and life? To Thomas Lux the answer would be the voice inside each person’s head. Lux sets forth the argument in his 1997 poem The Voice You Hear When You Read Silently that the voice emanating from within the reader’s head whenever the reader is silently reading is the true writer of the literary work because the words on the paper are inert until the reader’s unique voice translates them into life in ways that reflects their experiences and their views on topics.…

    • 630 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    One of the largest language techniques used is the stream of consciousness. This idea was derived from mark haddon when he decided he would “have to get inside the mind of an autistic boy” not only does this allow the readers to experience what autistic boys are like, but how they think. “but it was not the end of the book, because 5 red cars drove past in a row which made it a…

    • 603 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Richard begins with a few horrific events such as Columbine high school massacre. He makes us start to think about the motives behind the events. By talking about the possibility that the technological advances could be isolate us into our fantasies. He suggests that reading, writing and, discussing could have changed what had happened at the high school. Then he disproves this thought by telling us how the boys that killed so many people did do these things, but only to support their own ideas. That’s about when he starts to mention a much bleaker outlook on how reading and writing are losing power. He states. “If you’re in the business of teaching others to read and write your labor is increasingly irrelevant.” He explains this well when he says. “Rather than accept the fact that technological advances have taken control of publishing out of the hands of the few and transformed everyone with access to the internet into a potential author and critic, one decry the movement of our cultures critical center from the university to the sound stage of the Oprah Winfrey Show.”…

    • 931 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Writing remains a strategic portal used to express intimate characteristics of a person's personality without the confines of society's ethical boundaries, allowing expression to be limitless. The raw communication methods we use today are both timeless as well as ever evolving. A person can express a wide range of their opinions, thoughts, emotions, lusts, and wants with a simple pen and paper. Great writers from the past have been able to harness the charismatic powers of the pen, transcending their powerful messages to paper that give the reader timeless literature masterpieces that challenge our minds to this day. A world-renowned American writer that had an international impact over two hundred years ago to present day was Edgar Allan Poe.…

    • 2109 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The power of writing is like riding in an invisible car. When you get in it and pick up a pen you can feel the softness of the leather seats. When you turn the key to ignite the engine that initial spark of imagination…

    • 395 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Richard Marius Analysis

    • 901 Words
    • 4 Pages

    During the course of students’ educational careers we come across many assignments that require us to write an essay on a specific topic in which we use different writing methods and steps to develop a completed paper. To help students with their writings, Richard Marius, a very educated and well known writer has written an article titled Writing Drafts in which he describes his own writing techniques that he uses to write an essay. In this essay I will compare and contrast the writing techniques of Richard Marius and the writing methods I use when I write an essay. Although Marius differs than I do in the way he prints out his drafts, we are similar…

    • 901 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The most vivid memory I have of writing is back in the tenth grade. I had the best teacher ever in regards to writing. I used to view writing as a senseless waste of time. Writing, in my opinion, at the time was always noted to be formal and boring; however, my tenth grade English teacher, Mrs. Perez, changed my whole perception of writing and how it affects humanity. One day after class she pulled me aside and recommended a book known as, “His Dark Materials,” which is about a young girl who, with her allies, fought for the discovery of a dark substance called the “Dust.” The book single handedly altered my mental picture of writing and creativity. Writing can be about anything in the universe, and the possibilities are endless. The main point, however, which ties everything together, is imagination. One’s imagination can truly be defined as infinite to the power of infinite, because it contains numerous amounts of details and features on life and the world itself. How does this tie to writing one may ask. Well an elaborate imagination helps to create an elaborate piece of writing. In the words of Benjamin Franklin, “either write something worth reading or do something worth writing.”…

    • 1128 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Words have always fascinated me, ever since my mother used to read fairytales to my brother and me for bedtime. Growing up I realized words were not only for listening but also for playing with. The only thing I needed was inspiration to draw them closer to me. But, as you see, having inspiration on your side is not a simple task. You have to fight ghost,…

    • 666 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    to the vagaries of time: the written text has survived, while the oral script has been…

    • 1781 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Once, called away to an unanticipated school conference, I began drafting my short noticed speech with a yellow wooden pencil. Unfortunately this graphite loaded, eraser-tipped writing spear has become an alienated object as I readily admit my dependence on a new technology of writing. I found that I had become so used to composing virtual prose that I could no longer draft anything coherent directly onto a piece of paper. It wasn’t so much that I couldn’t think of the words, but the deliberate physical effort of handwriting, crossing out, revising, cutting and pasting was much too tedious. The writing practices that I had been engaged in regularly since the age of four, now seemed to overwhelm and constrict me as I longed for the flexibility of digitized text.…

    • 684 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Meaning of a word

    • 1126 Words
    • 4 Pages

    "Language is the subject. It is the written form with which I've managed to keep the wolf from the door, and in diaries, my sanity. In spite of this, I consider the written word inferior to the spoken, and much of the frustration experienced by novelists is the awareness that whatever we manage to capture in even the most transcendent passages falls far short of the richness of life. Dialogue achieves its power in the dynamics of a fleeting moment of sight, sound, smell and touch."…

    • 1126 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Writing has always been a way to express things in a way that is more creative and exploratory than just talking out loud. With words you can paint a picture better that Picasso could ever dream of. With flowing sentences that swiftly swallow the mind in an array of shrouded mystery that boggles most but the unknowing souls that know not what they know but who they know. With a well constructed array of words and of phrases that coherently make sense you can do wonders.…

    • 781 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics