![]() Treat other people with decency and respect. We prefer subjects be part of the wider writing industry or have done something more than publish a book. AMAs may not be posted without mod approval. Please limit yourself to one post per publishing cycle. Directing to a website to answer these questions is not allowed. ![]() Submission Calls Requirements/AMAsĬalls for submissions (including posts about general writing work) must include 1) payment information 2) submission deadlines 3) rights requested 4) any other relevant information. Posts focused on personal sharing may only be posted in the general discussion thread. “Low effort” posts (two lines of text, repetitive questions, etc.) will be removed. If your post invites answers that are specific to your work alone, it belongs in our brainstorming thread. We ask that users frame their posts so they are useful to multiple people. Posts should be thoughtful and useful to a broad community of writers We do not allow advertisements for your book, website, new subreddit, etc., or for you to do so on behalf of another company, outside of the self-promotion thread. Requests for school help should be posted in r/homeworkhelp, including posts about school essays or citations. Requests for writing partners may also only be posted in the critique thread. Samples of writing, whether for critique, self-promotion, or general sharing, may only be posted in the weekly self-promotion and critique thread. The moderators do reserve the right to remove posts/comments that are deemed harmful without warning and ban users depending on the severity of the infraction. Please keep these guidelines in mind for all of your posts and comments. Here's a general synopsis and explanation of /r/writing's community rules. ![]() Thank you! Before posting, check out: FAQ Our Wiki Related subreddits Want to do an AMA? Please message the mods to verify yourself before posting. Sunday: Writing Tools, Software, and Hardware Upcoming AMA PostsĬlarion West - 1/19/24 1:00PM Pacific Time We talk about important matters for writers, news affecting writers, and the finer aspects of the writing craft. The formulation is so perfect, I’ll bet that 100 other writers drafted it before Alan Barth.Welcome to the home for writers. Grouped together as they are in Graham’s famous sentence, these single-syllable words fall like hammer blows driving a nail. Although “first rough draft of history” isn’t a perfect example of synonymia, it reaches me both emotionally and intellectually. ![]() Rhetoricians call the stacking of several synonyms in a row “ synonymia,” and one claims that the trick “adds emotional force or intellectual clarity” to writing. First, rough, and draft all have separate and distinct meanings, yet they all point to a morning greenness, a raw beginning where truth originates. They’d rather work from primary sources-official documents, photographs, interviews, and the like-rather than from our clips.īut that’s only part of the phrase’s appeal. Historians tend to view journalism as unreliable and tend to be dismissive of our work. Journalists hope that one day a historian will uncover their dusty work and celebrate their genius. What makes “first rough draft of history” so tuneful, at least to the ears of journalists? Well, it flatters them. Noyes refers to “the first draft of history which newspapers profess to furnish.” And a May 4, 1949, editorial about Pulitzer Prize winners asserts, “The real function of newspapers is to provide the kind of first draft of history.” (In his research, Popik has trapped an even earlier publication of “first draft of history.”) 2, 1948, editorial about the death of the Washington Star’s Frank B. 16, 1944, editorial page, in which an unsigned “Editor’s Note” states, “Newspapers, after all, are the first drafts of history, or pretend they are.” A Dec. The lesser version of Graham’s phrase (sans the word rough) appears almost routinely on Post editorial pages in the 1940s, both before Graham became publisher in 1946 and after. It’s entirely likely that the Post “platform” was team-written by the editorial board, as many editorials are. Did Graham write the sentence? Or did one of the Post’s editorial writers? Their pictures, along with those of Graham and other Post executives and managers, ring the page.
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