2nd Edition

Creating Texts An Introduction to the Study of Composition

By Walter Nash, David Stacey Copyright 1997
    252 Pages
    by Routledge

    252 Pages
    by Routledge

    Creating Texts emphasises a practical approach to composition and enables students to understand what is involved in the creation of a text and to learn from the practice of other writers. Extensively rewritten and updated from Walter Nash's earlier volume, Designs in Prose, attention is paid to the general theory of composition, in both traditional and original terms, so that students are made familiar with the basic resources of composition, in grammar and in the lexicon.

    The essence of every chapter is the discussion of examples of text, sometimes devised by the authors, but more often drawn from the work of authors writing in diverse styles of English. This practical approach is most evident in the final section of the book where detailed suggestions for projects and exercises reinforce the connection between theory and practice, and encourage students to develop their creative sense and to adapt their style of writing to fit the particular audience and context. In addition, this section is cross-referenced to the main text to allow students to consult easily the relevant chapter.

    Foreword
    Preface
    Acknowledgements

    1 - Beginning at Some Beginnings
    2 - How Reading Teaches Writing
    3 - About Paragraphs
    4 - Charley's Tale, or The Gaps between Sentences
    5 - Sentences: Penning and Parsing
    6 - Plausible Words in Possible Places
    7 - Writing to Participate: Literary Description
    8 - Discourse as Dialogue: the New Technologies

    Projects and Exercises
    A - Compositions, free and prescribed
    B - Analyses
    C - Rewritings and Interventions

    Bibliography
    Index

    Biography

    Walter Nash, David Stacey