Patricia Duncan
English Blog
First off I am Patricia Duncan, I am a senior here at UNL,
majoring in Criminal Justice with a concentration in Communication Studies. I
enjoy spending time at home in Chadron, Nebraska with my family and friends and
I always am a little disappointed when I have to return back to Lincoln for the
new semester. I share a cute little
apartment with my cat, Willie, and two guinea pigs, Bear and Butter. I hope to attend law school after obtaining my
degree in December 2015. In regards to
who I am as a writer I would say that I write because it’s required of me in
order to be successful and I write because it’s the thing to do in the college
setting. I write to express feelings and
ideas that I cannot say. I write to remember
and I write to forget. I write to
organize and alphabetize, and I write to thank and to console. I write to celebrate and I write to give
thanks. I am the kind of writer who will
spell check everything a million times because I am a terrible speller and I don’t
want anyone to know that. I am the kind
of writer who will doubt my work because I once had a professor who used me as
an example in the class as the worst piece of writing. I am the kind of writer who will spend hours
brainstorming before I’m able to put any words down on the page. I’m the kind of writer who will go the extra
mile and write the extra page in order to get the better grade. I’m the kind of writer where I never feel
like I’m quite on the same page as everyone else.
Harris’ idea of community really relates to having many
different communities and being a part of various communities and not just
one. He also believes that in order for
a writer really to have anything to write about there must be some sort of community
surrounding him in order for him to have issues to address. He believes a writer is never strictly alone
within himself and that there is always a community surrounding him. Based on
his readings and my own understanding of community I would say that community
is being connected to something outside of yourself, to A network of people and
ideas, norms and values. Being in a community means that you are connected to
others in order to share these ideas and to those who may share similar
thoughts and beliefs with yourself. Some
communities that I am part of would include the Immanuel Church community, the
community of writers within my class room, and finally living in a small
community of people back in Chadron. The Immanuel Church community came from people
coming together to worship and sharing similar beliefs and therefor coming
together as a group. The community of
writers in my class room came together because of the need to expand knowledge,
all yearning to expand their knowledge In the field of writing, and my
community in Chadron came from people wanting to get away from other places so
they all moved to one spot where we have come together as a small town to form
bonds and create a community. These are communities because of the bonds and
connectedness within its members that they create. Language and writing is an important part
within all of these communities such as through scripture, through ordinances
and laws within the town and all of the writing and communication that will
take place within our classroom community.
Patricia,
ReplyDeleteI completely understand being a "spell checking writer!" I am too! I can't spell to save my soul! I also am so sorry to hear about your experience with a teacher holding your work up as a "bad example." That would be incredibly traumatizing! I can't imagine. I hope this class can help build up some confidence again, rather than tear it down!
I'm really interested in the idea you raise about norms and values being key to community. I think that will be something we think about a lot. Are those two terms interchangeable? Do communities always share both of those things. I'm thinking, for example, about our class. We probably don't share all of our values in common, but we will probably create some norms... What happens when someone doesn't fit into those norms?