Skillshare Essay Writing Course Notes
Skillshare Essay Writing Course Notes
#1
Start with your ‘Why’
Potential ‘Whys’
1. Increase awareness- Reader is more informed on a topic
2. Call to action- The reader goes forth and DOES something in the world
3. Transform Perceptions- The reader changes the way they think about a given topic
4. Inspire more stories- The reader shares their own story
Don’t be heavy handed. Offer ways that you have taken action or suggest ways that others
can take action.
Ethos: The ethical appeal. Making sure you’re honest and true in your work
Logos: Logical appeal. Does everything make sense? Are you being rational and even-
minded in your work?
Pathos: Emotional appeal. Making sure your reader cares
Be Specific!
Don’t go too broad. You don’t have to write universally and you shouldn’t write for
‘everyone.’ It’s too broad. Write about a very specific experience with a very specific ‘why’
in mind. This is enough to interest the reader even if their life is different to yours.
The stigma I have received since turning vegan and delving into WHY this is the case.
Awareness: I want the reader to be more aware of the stigma that exists around vegans and
how they can not add to this with their own behaviour.
Action: After reading my story I want people to feel inspired to take action and try veganism
for themselves.
Perception: I want the reader to really change the way they think about veganism and
question their opinion and why it is that way.
I want people to understand how ridiculous it is to bully someone because they eat different
food to you. I want people to question why they have such divisive attitudes when it comes
to eating animal products and why they are so cynical when someone challenges this.
I want the discriminatory behaviour to stop. I want people to realise that perhaps they are
the odd ones for condoning the suffering of animals.
If this story also encourages a few people to try veganism then that would be good too!
#2
Key Idea: Look inward and outward
Why are people going to care about what you have to say? You need to look outward.
Great writing balances the inward and outward. You don’t say too much about yourself or
too much about the outside world. It’s a balance.
Emotional Tone
What tone will you use?
Be deliberate in conveying and controlling emotional tone
Use humour to break down walls and get your point across successfully. When there’s no
room for humour, try and treat the subject matter as plainly and openly as possible.
Openess- This is who I am
Tension- Be measured
Anger- Sharing anger and why the reader should be angry
Joy- Write with joy and happiness
Use your instincts. The tone can often be found when you’re revising your work.
2020, UK. Living in a world of climate crisis, Trump, destruction of the planet, Stress about
corona virus, health consciousness, nutritional confusion. Rates of obesity are high and
people are dying of diseases such as heart diseases, diabetes, strokes etc. So much of this
can be controlled by what we eat.
#3
Key Idea: When Truth Matters
Take the truth and treat it as a story. Your story and your truth ARE ENOUGH.
Think about how to capture the essence of truth in your essay.
The creativity can come into the details of the writing. (Drapes)
Be intentional about sharing the lives of others- what are you going to share? Why?
How will this affect relationships with these people? Consider the implications of
your relationships
‘Never be a hero or a victim in your own work.’ -Dinty Moore
As long as you’re fair about what you say it works out
Ren and Sean coming to visit and me feeling inconvenienced to make vegan food
Me judging other vegans like Simone and Simon and Kara and Sally for thinking they
couldn’t eat delicious food AND be vegan
Xmas Dinner with the friends and the bullying I received
Courtney judging me for giving up milk but eating other dairy products
My parents joking around and acting like we’re crazy
3. Define your boundaries between what you will and won’t share
Look at the essay globally and locally. This is when you look at the piece as a
whole and when you look at the sentence or paragraph. Both are valuable.
Annotate the essay to analyse the craft-
HW: Thanksgiving in Mongolia by Ariel Levy (read it). Print it and highlight it and see where
she is looking inward and where she is looking outward.
HW: What fullness is by Roxane Gay- She broke it down into sections of looking inward and
looking outward.
Reading like a writer- Francine Pose (good book to read)
How to write an autobiographical novel-Alexander Chi (great essays)
Rebecca Solnit- writes about social issues
Kima Jones, Morgan Jerkins, Randa Jarrar
Gather notes and links in a reference document that you can refer to. Good for fact
checking.
Don’t overthink inward and outward. Just start! Don’t overthink just START.
Put words down on the page. You can always go back and revise.
What else do I need to do with this experience and what I’ve shared from my life?
It isn’t enough to just write about your experience. Offer moments of looking
outward.
Think about the beginning of the essay. How are you going to bring the reader into
the essay? Think about what you want to say and how you want to say it. It could be
a strong line or a scene, or start broadly with cultural context. Find an interesting
way to pull the reader into the piece.
What will you do to make the reader continue reading? Every paragraph needs to be
connected in some way and ideas should transition seamlessly.
Think about structure. Narrative frame: Start with a scene or moment and then
come back to that at the end.
Reach your reader with vivid scenes: Who was there? When did this happen? What
did the room look like? Think of fiction writing. Really describe the scene in detail so
they feel it.
Spend most of the time on the heart and body of the essay. Don’t overthink and
overwrite the beginning and end. Especially the end.
Don’t overwork your first draft. It doesn’t have to be perfect. There’s a difference
between sloppiness and imperfection.
Don’t share every single detail of your experience.
Take yourself seriously! Give yourself deadlines and wordcount goals. Treat it like a
job.
Narrative frame:
Start with Xmas dinner with friends
Join a writing group if you want feedback. There are virtual writing groups too.
Feedback is subjective.
Look at a writers bio and see where they’ve been published and contact those
publications.
The Writers Market- a list of every magazine in the country
Do a trope is a good resource too but has a fee
New pages. You shouldn’t pay to submit your work unless its for a contest
Every publication has a website and have submission guidelines
You have to write a cover letter with your submission. Short and simple
Never explain what your essay is about
HW: Find three publications that fit your style and submit your work!