Post by account_disabled on Dec 9, 2023 6:34:09 GMT
Reading online stories by emerging writers, novices, aspirants or whatever you want to call them, actually writing lovers who like me try to write, I often noticed grammatical errors. Apostrophes inserted where they shouldn't be, missing where they are required, abuse of exclamation points, commas scattered widely, wrong accents and so on. The writer reads, but often does not learn, or does not observe, or perhaps does not understand. There are also those who write and don't read anything or read only one genre, because they want to write about that genre.
Whoever wants to make writing his primary art must show a correct approach to grammar, an attitude that conditions and obsess him. The missing self-criticism Often the writer is unable to judge himself. He Phone Number Data writes, therefore he is a misunderstood genius. There is an unconscious block that prevents him from seeing his own errors, in language and style, and therefore in direct communication with the reader. A conscious self-criticism is therefore missing.
It is a shortcoming of those who feel above others just because they try to write stories. I say “attempt” because, if those stories contain grammatical errors, then they are only attempts. How to trigger self-criticism? I don't know how to answer this question, because I believe it is a quality inherent in man that is difficult to learn. We must be modest, first of all, to hate our own writings starting from the moment we finished writing them, not just the first time, but always, even when we published our hundredth novel.
Whoever wants to make writing his primary art must show a correct approach to grammar, an attitude that conditions and obsess him. The missing self-criticism Often the writer is unable to judge himself. He Phone Number Data writes, therefore he is a misunderstood genius. There is an unconscious block that prevents him from seeing his own errors, in language and style, and therefore in direct communication with the reader. A conscious self-criticism is therefore missing.
It is a shortcoming of those who feel above others just because they try to write stories. I say “attempt” because, if those stories contain grammatical errors, then they are only attempts. How to trigger self-criticism? I don't know how to answer this question, because I believe it is a quality inherent in man that is difficult to learn. We must be modest, first of all, to hate our own writings starting from the moment we finished writing them, not just the first time, but always, even when we published our hundredth novel.