Creative Ways to Use Your Writing to Effect Change
Your fiction and poems change the world. The impact of messages delivered through art, can’t be denied. I can think of two Presidents who were convinced what they saw in films and read in fiction were real. In the same way, many people assume facts they read in stories are true.
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Your words are like seeds that can blossom into change. (Image courtesy of http://orgprints.org/16880/)
You don’t have to beat your readers over the head with your message or include long passages of dialogue and exposition. We have a wide range of theme developing tools.
But you don’t have to settle for your professional writing. Dana Sitar offers 5 Creative Ways to Use Your Writing to Effect Change.
Book Reviews
check out Phillip T. Stephens books at Amazon.com
Published on March 13, 2017 13:16
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Wind Eggs
“Wind Eggs” or, literally, farts, were a metaphor from Plato for ideas that seemed to have substance but that fell apart upon closer examination. Sadly, this was his entire philosophy of art and poetr
“Wind Eggs” or, literally, farts, were a metaphor from Plato for ideas that seemed to have substance but that fell apart upon closer examination. Sadly, this was his entire philosophy of art and poetry which was that it was a mere simulacrum or copy which had nothing to offer us and was more likely to mislead.
As much as I admire Plato I think the wind eggs exploded in his face and that art and literature have more to tell us, because of their emotional content, than the dry desert winds of philosophy alone. ...more
As much as I admire Plato I think the wind eggs exploded in his face and that art and literature have more to tell us, because of their emotional content, than the dry desert winds of philosophy alone. ...more
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