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đ» Audience of One
It's like, âWhat genre do I want my internal monologue to be in?â and most of us are default-choosing âenraged op-ed.ââ
Jasmine Sun âą đ» Audience of One
âI wish I could observe life like Maggie Nelson,â I said to my manager.
âYou can,â he replied. âI think reading literature makes one much more attentive. I go from âwriting op-eds about who is good and who is badâ to âwriting vignettes about what's amusing, unusual, or thematically resonantâ in my head. It's like, âWhat genre do I want my internal ... See more
âYou can,â he replied. âI think reading literature makes one much more attentive. I go from âwriting op-eds about who is good and who is badâ to âwriting vignettes about what's amusing, unusual, or thematically resonantâ in my head. It's like, âWhat genre do I want my internal ... See more
Jasmine Sun âą đ» Audience of One
I write like the 12 dollar desk salad, the bar that packs 20 grams of protein and plastic into one 200-calorie brick. But good writing, like a good meal, needs fat. It should indulge readers, is meant to be chewed and enjoyed, affording a generous escape from the prosaic and mundane.
Jasmine Sun âą đ» Audience of One
But I have begun to come around on this: artâor at least good artâis defined by its non-instrumentality. Art is not useless, but it is use-agnostic, and thatâs what makes it so useful after all.
Jasmine Sun âą đ» Audience of One
My prose has tightened, the excess trimmed. Information efficiency is paramount. I write like the 12 dollar desk salad, the bar that packs 20 grams of protein and plastic into one 200-calorie brick. But good writing, like a good meal, needs fat. It should indulge readers, is meant to be chewed and enjoyed, affording a generous escape from the prosa... See more