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"In a world of crises that today undermine the humanities, what can still motivate humanists to write? Could developing new styles of prose, forms of argument, or writing strategies enliven humanist thinking? What might those be, and how might they be learned or put into practice? Imaginative, inspiring, and unrepentantly nerdy, Sarah Mesle's Reasons and Feelings: Humanities Writing Now helps its readers navigate these questions. It is a writing guide that also makes an argument about why embattled academics should write in the first place. Alongside practical compositional advice - strategies…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"In a world of crises that today undermine the humanities, what can still motivate humanists to write? Could developing new styles of prose, forms of argument, or writing strategies enliven humanist thinking? What might those be, and how might they be learned or put into practice? Imaginative, inspiring, and unrepentantly nerdy, Sarah Mesle's Reasons and Feelings: Humanities Writing Now helps its readers navigate these questions. It is a writing guide that also makes an argument about why embattled academics should write in the first place. Alongside practical compositional advice - strategies for addressing different audiences, for pitching publications, for managing writing anxiety - readers will find an account of how such craft practices connect to both their intellectual commitments and their historical conditions. Mesle shows how university-trained writers at all levels benefit when they embrace a broader range of styles and affects. Doing so helps them harness their writing's community-building and collaborative potential. This, in turn, makes them better able to value their own expertise, whether they write for the classroom, in public venues, or for the specialized scholarly communities that share their niche, weird, or beloved objects of study. In a voice that is warm, sympathetic, and accessible, Mesle gives humanists a path toward bolder fantasies of the worlds their writing can make"--
Autorenporträt
Sarah Mesle is a professor of writing at the University of Southern California. The former senior humanities editor at the Los Angeles Review of Books, where she is also a regular contributor, Mesle is the founding coeditor of the LARB channel Avidly and the short-book series Avidly Reads. Mesle's writing has also appeared in venues ranging from Studies in American Fiction to InStyle to The New York Times Magazine.