What I, Think I am by Edward Hoagland (BBS II)

 What I, Think I am by Edward Hoagland

The essay What I Think, What I Am is written by an American writer Edward Hoagland, who was born in 1932. He tries to demonstrate here is that the benefits of fusing thought and feeling as well as idea and form.

It demonstrates the correctness of his remark that the essay's fascination is the curiosity of the mind. In his description of the essay, Hoagland lists the key characteristics of the personal essay and provides a clear definition of it. The essay, in the author's opinion, is perpetually torn between this is what you think and this is what you are. The author claims that personal writings are the mind's uncontrolled flow captured on paper. Unlike articles, essays do not summarize their main points. The personal essay is unique from other types of writing since it focuses on the mind specifically and possesses the curiosity of the mind. It is generally not autobiographical but can occasionally convey the author's mental state.

Post a Comment

Previous Post Next Post