call to write, third edition chapter four, letters: establishing and maintaining relationships

13
Call to Write, Third edition Chapter Four, Letters: Establishing and Maintaining Relationships

Upload: eugene-copeland

Post on 13-Jan-2016

214 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Call to Write, Third edition Chapter Four, Letters: Establishing and Maintaining Relationships

Call to Write, Third edition

Chapter Four, Letters: Establishing and Maintaining Relationships

Page 2: Call to Write, Third edition Chapter Four, Letters: Establishing and Maintaining Relationships

Part Two: Writing Projects This chapter is the first one in part two of

the textbook, which covers common genres, or types of writing.

Genres include: letters, memoirs, public documents, profiles, reports, commentaries, proposals, and reviews.

Page 3: Call to Write, Third edition Chapter Four, Letters: Establishing and Maintaining Relationships

Overview of the chapter Examines the genre and discusses different

types of letters Looks at a variety of readings that consist

of letters or correspondence Presents the visual aspect or element of

looking at an advertisement

Page 4: Call to Write, Third edition Chapter Four, Letters: Establishing and Maintaining Relationships

Overview, cont. Considers several possible writing

assignments Goes through the steps of the writing

process for writing a letter

Page 5: Call to Write, Third edition Chapter Four, Letters: Establishing and Maintaining Relationships

Letters as a genre Letters take many forms

(handwritten, typed, e-mail).

All share a similar format, with date, salutation (Dear Mary…), a message, a closing (Yours), and a signature.

Page 6: Call to Write, Third edition Chapter Four, Letters: Establishing and Maintaining Relationships

Reflecting on the genre Letters help you to establish and maintain

relationships; they are like a conversation between the reader and the writer.

They also call for a response of some kind: pay this bill, call for an application, respond to this request, or show up for this meeting.

Letters record our thoughts in a more permanent way than conversation, and allow time for the reader to reflect before responding.

Page 7: Call to Write, Third edition Chapter Four, Letters: Establishing and Maintaining Relationships

Letters have many purposes Personal letters vary in purpose: We write

sympathy notes, love letters, complaints, and letters of advice to friends, among others.

Public or open letters also vary, and have a wider audience; they may appear in a newspaper or magazine, or be posted on a Web site.

Page 8: Call to Write, Third edition Chapter Four, Letters: Establishing and Maintaining Relationships

Chapter readings A group of letters on the U. S. policy on containment

of Saddam Hussein in Iraq A group of letters to the editor about the proposed

punishment to cane Michael Fay in Singapore Correspondence with Nike on sweatshops An open letter from James Baldwin to his nephew

Page 9: Call to Write, Third edition Chapter Four, Letters: Establishing and Maintaining Relationships

Visual design Find the Letter of Appeal from Doctors without

Borders on pages 129-130. Notice that the first page contains a standard

business letter, while the second page resembles a flyer, with pictures, headers, quotes, a map, and a bulleted list of activities in Afghanistan.

It is designed to draw your eyes to the people in the picture, and then down to the header, “Helping families recover from war famine-and fear.”

Page 10: Call to Write, Third edition Chapter Four, Letters: Establishing and Maintaining Relationships

Writing assignment Compose a letter; the text presents a list of

options, pages. The rest of the chapter walks you through the writing process, from invention to the final draft. Make note especially of the advice to read some sample letters and find some models (page 137).

Your instructor will let you know whether your class will be doing this particular assignment, and provide you with additional guidelines.

Page 11: Call to Write, Third edition Chapter Four, Letters: Establishing and Maintaining Relationships

Organizing ideas Most material will fit into three sections. First, the opening. Explain the reason for writing the

letter, and your relationship to the issue or your audience.

Second, the body. Explain your main point, supporting it with details.

Finally, the closing. Repeat the main idea, call for action, send regards, and thank the reader for his or her time.

Page 12: Call to Write, Third edition Chapter Four, Letters: Establishing and Maintaining Relationships

Michael Brady’s example Look at his letter, written in response to

Mark Patinkin’s column about the original incident: a young American committed a crime in a foreign country and now must be punished.

Look too at his commentary, which follows the letter; it explains his approach.

Page 13: Call to Write, Third edition Chapter Four, Letters: Establishing and Maintaining Relationships

Student Companion Website Go to the student side of the Web site for

exercises, chapter overviews, and links to writing resources for this chapter:http://www.ablongman.com/trimbur

Click on the textbook cover, and then select Student Resources.