@Bravuras
Parth Chandna
@Bravuras · 1:17

NYU PROFESSOR - "HOW TO CREATE EMOTIONAL IMPACT THROUGH YOUR WRITING?" #writingadvice #writer #writerslife

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And then you sort of describe some of these scenes if you lived in daily and then even the way that you start to be fond of certain prisoners and you learn about what they've done and you hate them and those kind of details, that's what makes a great book. So I think that probably would have to come first

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@BkQue
Cheryl Hill
@BkQue · 4:46
And so it was encouraging to hear Mr. Bornton champion that the authenticity of your own voice, of your own writing, having experience, whatever it is that you're writing about as credibility and interest. He gave the example of a prison guard. If your role or your job or your career is being a prison guard, just saying, Well, I worked at Xx prison, and I had the job of being a prison guard for X number of years
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@EricG
Eric Owens
@EricG · 3:33

@Bravuras

So if you're writing fiction and you're writing a scene where there's interaction between two people and you're trying to add emotion to it, you have to know how to word it. You have to know how to put it together, the syntax, the grammar, that sort of thing. So that all comes down to training and how to do that. Now, when you do add the emotional impact, it's best to draw from your own life experience
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@DBPardes
Deborah Pardes
@DBPardes · 2:04

@Bravuras @BkQue @EricG

I think we can all agree on the idea that detail is so critical to engagement and to information, especially in the non fiction realm, which I think that the professor was speaking about. You know, one's own life experience is critical to how we admit that most things are subjective. So what I've been through affects the way I see the world. If I was doing a journalistic piece and nonfiction piece
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@Bravuras
Parth Chandna
@Bravuras · 0:10

@DBPardes

Thank you for sharing such detailed and spot on insight related to the topic. I'm glad you found it helpful. Hope you have a nice day
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@Bravuras
Parth Chandna
@Bravuras · 0:17

@EricG

Hey, Eric. Thank you so much for such an amazing feedback. And being the fact that you're a self taught writer, it's amazing to just hear your perspective on it. So thank you for sharing it. I hope you have a great day. Bye
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@Bravuras
Parth Chandna
@Bravuras · 0:21
Hello, ma'am. Thank you so much for sharing your personal experience. That is exactly what the professor was talking about, and I am grateful that people like you are finding these snippets useful. I'll continue to upload more. Thank you for listening. Hope you have a nice day
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