Strategies for Teaching with Online Tools
Bedford Workshops on Teaching Writing Online
Nick Carbone, New Media Consultant
Bedford/St. Martin's
ncarbone@bedfordstmartins.com
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Metaphor: Describing an Essay in Other Terms

Activity
We live by metaphors, use them constantly, sometimes deliberately, as when writing a poem or trying to describe something for which you can't find the words, and sometimes without noticing, as when talking about how someone "pushes the envelope." Metaphors allow us to talk about one thing in terms of another. They are a way of comparing qualities or attributes so that what might be obvious or overlooked, appears suddenly in a new light. To describe a paper in metaphoric terms, you can complete some of the following sentences, or think of your own:
How elaborate the metaphors become is up to you. Metaphors are also useful when talking with a writer about a particular passage, when explaining how a piece affects you, or when trying to explain or suggest a way to make a change in the piece.

The Benefits
Simply think of how powerful a good metaphor is, about how often we argue by analogy or use similes to explain how we think or feel about things. "My love is like a red, red rose that's newly born in June;" or "Love is a temporary insanity curable by marriage." both use metaphoric language to say something unique and striking about love. What is being said is being said powerfully, unmistakeably, and in ways that can't quite be said through everyday language. Metaphoric feedback becomes a useful way to describe writing to a writer; it's especially useful for those times when you don't feel comfortable talking about paragraphing or punctuation and so on directly.
Using this Activity to Revise
With metaphoric feedback you can see your writing in a new way and, if the metaphor works for you, think about ways to revise so that those elements of the metaphor you want to enhance (your prose's sinewy strength and grace, if a portion of your writing has been described as "sure and graceful as cat leaping from a window sill to chase a butterfly") or further use the qualities that you like. A good metaphor can be inspiring. Because revision means to "re-see," metaphoric feedback helps a great deal because it's premised on seeing something differently. It requires a perspective shift that can offer you good leads and ideas for revising or future writing.