The Magazine Article
How to Think it, Plan it, Write it
Peter Jacobi(Author)
Indiana University Press
Published on 1. April 1997
Book
Hardback
256 pages
978-0-253-33265-3 (ISBN)
Description
Creativity isn't always make-believe. It's often making the most of a subject, rethinking it and massaging it, taking a different point of view in order to make it original and inventive. Here you'll find hundreds of ideas to help you become more creative in your approach to thinking, planning, and writing magazine articles. You'll also find detailed information on everything from slanting your subject to gathering information to writing leads and ending to fine-tuning your articles.Peter Jacobi, a veteran professor in the School of Journalism at Indiana University, takes a hands-on classroom approach to teaching article writing - showing you through example rather than by preaching writing theory. He offers concrete principles for you to explore and use in your writing. You'll begin by exploring eight writing techniques and then you'll practice those techniques in your article writing.You'll learn by example, analyzing award-winning articles from top publications, including "The New Yorker", "Playboy", and "The Atlantic Monthly", just to name a few.
You'll also find new ways to turn everyday subjects into compelling article ideas, thirteen blueprints to use as your master plan for outlining an article, and helpful suggestions for using storytelling techniques to humanize your article. In addition, this book will teach you to take a closer look at the world around you, finding significance in people, objects, places, events - and especially ideas - that will help you make a subject the most it can be.
You'll also find new ways to turn everyday subjects into compelling article ideas, thirteen blueprints to use as your master plan for outlining an article, and helpful suggestions for using storytelling techniques to humanize your article. In addition, this book will teach you to take a closer look at the world around you, finding significance in people, objects, places, events - and especially ideas - that will help you make a subject the most it can be.
More details
Edition
New edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Bloomington, IN
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Edition type
New edition
Dimensions
Height: 248 mm
Width: 171 mm
Weight
500 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-253-33265-3 (9780253332653)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Content
A Prefatory Note 1. The MotivationNThe Obligation 2. Where Ideas Come From 3. Matter and Manner Count, But First Think Focus 4. Information Gathering 5. Structure, the Blueprint of an Article 6. The Writing Begins 7. Leads and Endings 8. Narration and DescriptionNHumanization and Visualization 9. Exposition, the Meat of Most Articles--Making It Tasty and Digestible 10. Additional TechniquesNCompression and Fictionalization 11. Behind Some Words, Essential Concepts ThrobNHow to Add Thrust and Depth to Your Work 12. A Couple of Case Studies 13. In ExpansionNThe Essay and Other Hybrids 14. Some Concluding RemarksNProviding Those Finishing Touches Permissions Index