Brain's Reaction To Fictional And Nonfictional Experiences
Consider these two excerpts about the brain, art and human experience. Write an essay in which you conduct a discussion organized around a definite thesis in 3-4 pages, citing from each of these works and any other of the works or articles we have read this semester.
As we have discussed, just begin. Have a strong idea around which you wish to write? Great. Carry on, but if your idea enlarges or changes in the process of discovery, jump the track. Don’t be a slave to a few graceful transitions when you get a better idea. You can always go back and work on transitions. Stay with it. You have no idea where to begin? Great. Just begin. You might want to do a freewrite for a few minutes , throw in one of the sentences written in bold below and then freewrite or talk back to it. See if you can riff off an idea into one of your own. And stay with it. Once you have something to say, your voice will have purpose and make meaning.
1. Your Brain on Fiction, Annie Murphy Paul, NY Times, March 17, 2012
2. Clune, Michael W, Writing Against Time, Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif, 2013
👀 Other Visitors are Viewing These APA Essay Samples:
-
Addictions Are A Product Of Social Dislocation & Family Stress
8 pages/≈2200 words | 3 Sources | MLA | Literature & Language | Essay |
-
Martin Luther King Jr’s "Letter from Birmingham Jail"
2 pages/≈550 words | 2 Sources | MLA | Literature & Language | Essay |
-
The Theme Of Gender Roles In “Their Eyes Were Watching God”
4 pages/≈1100 words | 3 Sources | MLA | Literature & Language | Essay |