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Books > Language & Literature > Literary & linguistic reference works > Writing & editing guides > General
A productive writer writes regularly, produces goal-directed
written work and enjoys the process. Productive writing addresses
the problem of why some people publish with ease and others
struggle, and seeks to take the non-productive writer and turn him
or her into a prolific one. Important themes in the book are
dealing with writer's block, procrastination and making time to
write. An array of explanations, research and activities is
presented to encourage exploring, thinking, speculating, testing,
documenting, questioning and developing authority. Crafting the
document itself is just one part of the writing spectrum. The
increasing focus on research and publishing at universities and
universities of technology makes this book an important
contribution to the available literature on research. Addressing
throughput for postgraduate students and output for academic staff,
the book is aimed at both these categories. Productive writing
complements two earlier research books by Cecile Badenhorst,
Research writing and Dissertation writing, and focuses on important
aspects of research that are not covered in those books.
Encouraging you to be an inventive thinker and writer, THE
COMPOSITION OF EVERYDAY LIFE, Brief, connects the act of writing to
your daily life. It helps you to uncover meaning, rethink the world
around you and invent ideas. With more than 50 reading selections
by both professional and student writers, this book is designed to
help you develop focused and distinctive academic essays. It gives
you great preparation for the reading and writing activities you'll
encounter throughout your college experience and beyond.
Featuring a balance of practical advice and sound instruction,
Speechwriting: A Rhetorical Guide provides readers with essential
knowledge to prepare and deliver well-constructed and
well-researched speeches appropriate for a variety of contexts. The
first part of the book discusses traditional rhetorical theory in a
way that is direct and easy for students to understand. The
chapters cover such topics as audience and the rhetorical canons of
invention, elocution or style, disposition or organization,
delivery, and memory. Chapters in the second part then apply the
rhetorical principles to four different types of speeches:
inaugural addresses, commencement addresses, a variety of
persuasive speeches, and a number of ceremonial ones. The text
includes excerpts from actual speeches, illustrative speechwriting
samples with commentary from a prospective speech writer, and a set
of exercises that encourage readers to think about how the sample
speech might be improved upon or modified if they were the one
writing it. Speechwriting connects rhetorical theory to modern
situations and settings to emphasize real-world application. The
text is an exemplary resource for courses in speech and writing as
found in departments of communication studies, English and
composition, political science, education, and any other discipline
in which people are frequently asked to speak or address an
audience.
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