Connection Between Writing and the Self

andrea_lunsford
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I’ve been thinking a lot recently about the longitudinal study I conducted at the turn of this century, one in which I followed a cohort of Stanford students from their incoming year through one year past their graduation. In particular, I’ve been thinking about what I learned about their connection to what they wrote. At the beginning of the study, students didn’t seem to feel any strong connection at all: they were writing to get a grade, to get a job, or for other practical reasons. In short, they didn’t see the writing they were doing as connected to their identities, to who they were as people. As the years went on, however, student participants began to feel more connected to their writing, began to take ownership of it and see writing as a way to make their marks on the world. In fact, they started to define writing as something that gets up off the page and makes something good happen in the world. And as a reflection of themselves, of their thoughts and character and purposes. 

I’m thinking about this shift in their relationship to writing because I am wondering what we would find now: especially with the rise of misinformation and deep fakes, along with the rise of AI generated text, I wonder how students’ perception of their relationship to writing is shifting and changing now. Do they feel that the writing they do at least has the potential to embody their hopes and dreams, to represent their authentic selves? Do they feel identified with their writing? And if so, to what degree, and why?

 

A student sits at a desk writing while various effects such as gears and lightbulbs float around him.jpeg

 

These seem like pressing questions to me, ones that can best be pursued in longitudinal studies like the one I began over two decades ago now. I know that Jessica Enoch and her colleagues at the University of Maryland are considering such a study, and I hope that they will do so—and that others will follow their lead. We are clearly living in a great watershed moment in terms of writing: how to define it, how to understand who and/or what can deploy it, whether it can in the future be “owned” in the traditional sense of copyright, and perhaps most important, how it can reflect and create our best selves rather than our worst. Can writing still be the means of “making something good happen in the world”? 

Food for thought, especially for those of us who are privileged to teach writing today.

 

Image created with Microsoft Designer

 

2 Comments
lopiccolo23
Migrated Account

. Self-Expression: Writing allows individuals to express their thoughts, emotions, and personal experiences.

2. Self-Discovery: Through writing, people explore their identities and understand themselves better.

3. Emotional Outlet: Writing serves as a therapeutic outlet for managing and processing emotions.

4. Reflection: It provides a space for introspection and reflection on personal growth and life events.

5. Clarity of Thought: Writing helps clarify and organize complex thoughts and ideas.

6. Communication: It enhances the ability to communicate through one's inner self to others effectively.

7. Creativity: Engaging in writing fosters creativity and imagination like sim, revealing aspects of one's personality.

8. Personal Growth: Writing regularly can contribute to personal development and self-improvement.

9. Identity Formation: It plays a role in shaping and solidifying one's sense of identity and beliefs.

10. Legacy: Writing preserves personal experiences and perspectives for future generations.

11. Empowerment: It empowers individuals by giving them a voice and a platform to share their stories.

12. Self-Awareness: Writing promotes self-awareness by encouraging individuals to examine and articulate their inner world.

aslwedbaloex
New Contributor
New Contributor

1. Self-Expression: Writing allows individuals to express their thoughts, emotions, and personal experiences.

2. Self-Discovery: Through writing, people explore their identities and understand themselves better.

3. Emotional Outlet: Writing serves as a therapeutic outlet for managing and processing emotions.

4. Reflection: It provides a space for introspection and reflection on personal growth and life events.

5. Clarity of Thought: Writing helps clarify and organize complex thoughts and ideas.

6. Communication: It enhances the ability to communicate through one's inner self to others effectively.

7. Creativity: Engaging in writing fosters creativity and imagination like menu, revealing aspects of one's personality.

8. Personal Growth: Writing regularly can contribute to personal development and self-improvement.

9. Identity Formation: It plays a role in shaping and solidifying one's sense of identity and beliefs.

10. Legacy: Writing preserves personal experiences and perspectives for future generations.

11. Empowerment: It empowers individuals by giving them a voice and a platform to share their stories.

12. Self-Awareness: Writing promotes self-awareness by encouraging individuals to examine and articulate their inner world.