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- From: dao4@ns1.cc.lehigh.edu (DONALD A. O'SHALL)
- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Subject: Re: Jobs that mess up your writing
- Message-ID: <1992Jul22.224212.107664@ns1.cc.lehigh.edu>
- Date: 22 Jul 92 22:42:12 GMT
- Organization: Lehigh University
- Lines: 27
-
- In article <84060@netnews.upenn.edu>, crawford@ben.dev.upenn.edu (Lauren L. Craw
- ford) writes:
- >The job that stunted my writing more than any other was chief copy
- >editor of a magazine. Every time I sat down to actually write
- >something, I froze up. Each sentence had to be grammatically
- >correct, punctuation perfect, spelling flawless. That's no way
- >to write, not at the first-draft stage. I just couldn't turn the
- >copy editor off at night when I wanted to write. I couldn't even
- >turn it off when I sat down to read a book, article, whatever.
- >It's a great job for losing friends, too: "Shouldn't that be
- >_more than_ six items, not _over_ six items?"
- >
- >--Lauren
- >
- I haven't noticed this to affect my writing ability, but I CAN say that it
- honestly can be quite offensive if you are not careful. I have
- caught the look on other people's faces when I started making corrections on
- the memos they had handed me, meeting notices, etc. I am not a copy editor,
- but acquired the habit of editing my own writing to avoid having
- someone else's marks on my manuscripts or articles. I find myself making
- corrections in reference books I have purchased, etc.
-
- --
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- I am not licensed to practice Law or Medicine in any State, so my opinions are
- just that! DAo4@NS1.CC.LEHIGH.EDU (Don)
-