Buscar
Filtrado por:
Fecha de creacion
1899
Eliminar la restricciónFecha de creacion: 1899
Tema
Composition textbook: college
Eliminar la restricciónTema: Composition textbook: college
1 - 2 de 2
El número de resultados a mostrar por página
Resultados de la búsqueda
-
- Type:
- Document
- Descripción/Resumen:
- 1899 printing of the 1899 copyrighted work. Both authors are credited as Instructors in English at Vassar College. Buck has a Ph.D. from Michigan. Woodbridge has a Ph.D. from Yale. The preface emphasizes that students need a sense of a real audience for their writing as well as a subject they're interested in. The prefaces says the work includes few explicit directions on sentences and paragraphs. It offers Scott and Denney's Composition-Rhetoric as a guide for those. The work is organized in four chapters: the basis of exposition, the process of description, description in its relation to exposition, and definition in its relation to exposition. The text itself is quite discursive, providing lengthy discussions of the writing processes with analyzed examples. The lessons posit different subjects, writing situations, or audiences, while also usually asking students to observe and comment upon examples by distinguished authors that treat similar situations, subjects, audience, etc. The Schultz Archive's copy is the complete text.
- Creador/Autor:
- Buck, Gertrude, 1871-1922 and Morris, Elisabeth Woodbridge, 1870-1964
- Peticionario:
- Russel Durst
- Fecha modificada:
- 05/23/2016
- Fecha modificada:
- 06/05/2019
- Fecha de creacion:
- 1899
- Licencia:
- Public Domain Mark 1.0
-
- Type:
- Document
- Descripción/Resumen:
- 1899 printing of the 1899 copyrighted text. Herrick is credited as Assistant Professor of English in the University of Chicago. Damon is credited as Instructor in English in the University of Chicago. Preface argues students should first be encouraged to write freely and taught habits of thought and invention before subjecting them to criticism. Part one is meant for a first year course with this approach in mind. Parts two thru four are intended for a second year course to systematically drill the students in the principles of rhetoric. Part five may be included in the second year or later. The chapters in part one, preliminary work: composition--oral and written, what to write about, development of subjects, dividing subjects into paragraphs, building sentences, a review of punctuation, how to increase vocabulary, letters. Part two, usage: good use defined, standards of good use, barbarisms, improprieties, idiom and translation, grammar--good use in the sentence. Part three, diction: wordiness, right choice of words. Part four, rhetorical laws of the sentence and paragraph: clearness in sentences--unity, clearness in sentences--coherence, force in sentences, single paragraphs. Part five, whole composition: structure, summaries, original composition--literary laws, descriptive and narrative writing, expository and argumentative writing. The authors include a section of examples of "bad English" to teach correct usage, although they acknowledge this is controversial and suggest it may be omitted. The Schultz Archive's copy is roughly the complete text.
- Creador/Autor:
- Herrick, Robert, 1868-1938
- Peticionario:
- Russel Durst
- Fecha modificada:
- 05/19/2016
- Fecha modificada:
- 08/19/2019
- Fecha de creacion:
- 1899
- Licencia:
- Public Domain Mark 1.0
