在Joseph M. Williams教授的书之后又找到的一本好书,Clueless in Academe: How Schooling Obscures the Life of the Mind,是University of Illinois的教授Gerald Graff所著。
此书的跋实在值得一读:
EPILOGUE
How to Write an Argument
WHAT STUDENTS AND TEACHERS REALLY NEED TO KNOW
- Enter a conversation just as you do in real life. Begin your text by directly identifying the prior conversation or debate that you are entering. What you have to say won’t make sense unless your readers know the conversation in which you are saying it.
- Make a claim, the sooner the better, preferably flagged for the reader by a phrase like “My claim here is that …” You don’t actually have to use this exact phrase, but if you couldn’t do so you’re in trouble.
- Remind readers of your claim periodically, especially the more you complicate it. If you’re writing about a disputed topic—and if you aren’t, why write?—you’ll also have to stop and tell the reader what you are not saying, what you don’t want readers to take you as saying. Some of them will take you to be saying it anyway, but you don’t have to make it easy for them.
- Summarize the objections that you anticipate will be made (or that have in fact been made) against your claim. This is done by using such formulas as “Here you will probably object that …,” “To put the point another way …,” or “But why, you may ask, am I so emphatic on this point?” Remember that your critics, even when they get mean and nasty, are your friends: you need them to help you to clarify your claim and to indicate why what you’re saying is of interest to others besides yourself. Remember, too, that if naysayers didn’t exist, you’d have no excuse for saying what you are saying.
- Say explicitly why you think what you’re saying is important and what difference it would make to the world if you are right or wrong. Imagine a reader over your shoulder who asks, “So what?” Or “Who cares about any of this?” Again, you don’t actually have to write such questions in, but if you were to do so and couldn’t answer them you’re in trouble.
- Write a meta-text into your essay that stands apart from your main text and puts it in perspective. An effective argumentative essay really consists of two texts, one in which you make your argument and a second one in which you tell readers how and how not to read it. This second text is usually signaled by reflexive phrases like “Of course I don’t mean to suggest that …,” “What I’ve been trying to say here, then, is that …,” etc. When student writing is unclear or lame, the reason often has less to do with jargon, verbal obscurity, or bad grammar than with the absence of this layer of meta-commentary, which explains why the writer thought it was necessary to write the essay in the first place.
- Remember that readers can process only one claim at a time, so resist the temptation to try to squeeze in secondary claims that are better left for another essay or paragraph, or for another section of your essay that’s clearly marked off from your main claim. If you’re a professional academic, you are probably so anxious to prove that you’ve left no thought unconsidered that you find it hard to resist the temptation to try to say everything all at once. Remember that giving in to this temptation to say it all at once will result in saying nothing that will be understood while producing horribly overloaded paragraphs and sentences like this one, monster-sized discursive footnotes, and readers who fling your text down and reach for the TV Guide.
- Be bilingual. It is not necessary to avoid Academicspeak—you sometimes need the stuff to say what you want to say. But whenever you do have to say something in Academicspeak, try also to say it in conversational English as well. You’ll be surprised to discover that when you restate an academic point in your nonacademic voice, the point will either sound fresher or you’ll see how shallow it is and remove it.
- Don’t kid yourself. If you couldn’t explain it to your parents the chances are you don’t understand it yourself.




{ 7 comments… read them below or add one }
笑来,推荐一个ted视频, 是Coach John Wooden(ESPN评选史上最牛体育教练) 讲关于成功的,非常的精彩..我感觉好像你以前很多帖子的大集合, 比如他谈到了 名是虚的 (reputation is what you are perceived), 你没法控制别人怎么想你, 如果这事儿想多了,自己的发挥肯定会受影响…看了很有启发,视频时2001年录的,那时候他已经91岁了,现在都过99岁生日了…
链接在这里
http://www.ted.com/talks/john_wooden_on_the_difference_between_winning_and_success.html
Will money be taken from my taxes because I have a student loan?
笑来老师你好,我半个月前在你们公司的淘宝店里买了新编阅读手册,淘宝显示第二天就发货了,可是我现在还没有收到,并且快递公司的网站上也跟踪不到订单。我好几次给店主留言,没有人回复。还打过一次电话,没人接。我只好申请退款然后在这里给你留言了,我很想要那本书,希望您能在百忙之中帮我一下,谢谢。另外还有,为什么现在您写的文章在鲜果阅读器上都会被推送两次?不知道是这边的问题还是鲜果的问题。
请你给010-51627400打电话,找都老师。
我也是…大约半个月前买了一本《隐喻》,现在还没到…
跋的第七条说得真好。有时候我的一篇读后感能一下子写到5000多字,曾几何时,我还为此沾沾自喜呢!现在想想,这可能只是一种虚荣心的表现。当我觉得我的想法和视角能一口气说完的时候,我才会试着去一口气说完——典型的文化不高的体现。
至于最后两条,我觉得应该送给几乎所有的中国教授。我很疑惑,为什么国人写的经济学或者是数学方面的教材会让人越看越恶心?而老美写的同类教材却那样引人入胜?虽然教材不是argument,但是这不妨碍我得出一个结论:其实,他们(国人)也不怎么懂真正的经济学和数学…
笑来老师,你推荐TED里面的视频,上面不是都有脚本吗??就在右上角open interactive transcript吗?单击就可以了啊。