|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewThis book of practical writing and publishing advice celebrates the creative, community-building pleasures of humanist expertise. Humanities experts today are embattled. In a world of crises undermining higher education at every turn, what can still motivate humanists to write? Galvanizing, imaginative, and unrepentantly nerdy, Sarah Mesle's Reasons and Feeling offers practical writing and publishing advice alongside a forcefully affirmative account of why humanities writing matters. Mesle proposes that writing can help envision sustainable community, but only when we recognize that humanist authority comes from both our reasons and our feelings. Alongside everyday compositional advice—including strategies for addressing different audiences, pitching publications, and managing writing anxiety—readers will find an account of how such craft practices connect to both their intellectual commitments and their historical conditions. Mesle shows how university-trained writers at all levels benefit from embracing a broader range of styles and affects. Doing so helps them harness their writing's community-building potential and makes them better able to value their own expertise, whether they write for the classroom, in public venues, or for the specialized scholarly communities that share their niche, weird, or beloved, objects of study. Reasons and Feelings draws on Mesle's expertise as a professor of writing and her work as an editor helping academics shift between writing for scholarly venues and journalistic ones. In a voice that's honest, warm, accessible, and bracingly funny, Reasons and Feelings gives humanists a path toward bolder fantasies of the worlds their writing can make. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Sarah MeslePublisher: The University of Chicago Press Imprint: University of Chicago Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.513kg ISBN: 9780226832036ISBN 10: 0226832031 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 20 October 2025 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Awaiting stock ![]() The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you. Table of ContentsPreface: Who Part One: Why 1. Reasons for Writing 2. Writing About Feelings 3. Some Feelings About Writing in Public; Some Reasons for a Counterpublic Humanities 4. “But Is It Any Good?”: Or, Some Feminist Questions About Academic Writing Part Two: How 5. You Have to Practice 6. Who Is Your Girl and Where Is She Going? 7. You Write with Your Body, Which Keeps the Score 8. Pitches and Abstracts: Or, Some Ways of Building Worlds with Words 9. Know Your Noun 10. Arguments and Other Stories 11. The Subject of the Sentence 12. Give the Pull Quote 13. Burden of Proof 14. Red Rage 15. A Short Note About When We Don’t Need Your Thoughtful Essay 16. Critical Distance 17. Elements of Teaching Style 18. Elements of Teaching Style, Redux: Against the Thesis Statement 19. Small Acts of Finishing 20. Writing in Time Coda: Hospitality Acknowledgments Notes Bibliography IndexReviews“The world seems to be collapsing, the humanities are in crisis, but in this uncertain-at-best moment, Sarah Mesle offers writers a path not just toward hope, but toward joy, as well. In this immensely readable, immensely useful book, Mesle reminds us why it remains worthwhile to sit down and put words to paper.” * Naomi Fry, staff writer, The New Yorker * “Fresh, nerdy, sober, quirky, and only sort of optimistic, Reasons and Feelings wrestles with the angle that could make writing better—or even simply possible—as the humanities totter around us.” * William Germano, author of ""On Revision"" * “With Reasons and Feelings, Mesle has given us a guide for the perplexed—for those who aren’t sure what intellectual life in the humanities will look like tomorrow, let alone several years from now; for those who aren’t certain how, why, or where to write about the books and ideas that matter to them; which is to say, for all of us. Writing as ally, therapist, expert, veteran, teacher, colleague, storyteller, and host, Mesle gives us a pioneer’s and survivor’s view of humanistic writing after the coming-apart of postwar structures, and tells us that we’re not alone, that we’re (still) in this together.” * Nicholas Dames, author of ""The Chapter"" * “The world seems to be collapsing, the humanities are in crisis, but in this uncertain-at-best moment, Sarah Mesle offers writers a path not just toward hope but toward joy, as well. In this immensely readable, immensely useful book, Mesle reminds us why it remains worthwhile to sit down and put words to paper.” * Naomi Fry, staff writer, The New Yorker * “Fresh, nerdy, sober, quirky, and only sort of optimistic, Reasons and Feelings wrestles with the angle that could make writing better—or even simply possible—as the humanities totter around us.” * William Germano, author of ""On Revision"" * “With Reasons and Feelings, Mesle has given us a guide for the perplexed—for those who aren’t sure what intellectual life in the humanities will look like tomorrow, let alone several years from now; for those who aren’t certain how, why, or where to write about the books and ideas that matter to them; which is to say, for all of us. Writing as ally, therapist, expert, veteran, teacher, colleague, storyteller, and host, Mesle gives us a pioneer’s and survivor’s view of humanistic writing after the coming-apart of postwar structures and tells us that we’re not alone, that we’re (still) in this together.” * Nicholas Dames, coeditor in chief of Public Books * Author InformationSarah Mesle is a professor of writing at the University of Southern California. The former senior humanities editor at the Los Angeles Review of Books, where she is also a regular contributor, Mesle is the founding coeditor of the LARB channel Avidly and the short-book series Avidly Reads. Mesle's writing has also appeared in venues ranging from Studies in American Fiction to InStyle to The New York Times Magazine. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |