ANS
2
1 is incorrect because the speaker says
classes will improve someone's writing, but you can't teach someone to write
extremely well. 3 is incorrect because the speaker says that close reading is
part of his writing classes. 4 is incorrect because there is no mention of
developing a love of language in writing classes. 2 is correct because the
speaker says: Obviously, you can't teach someone to have a talent for
storytelling, or a love of language: but there are important lessons to be
gotten across that will improve their writing and, at the very least, make it
publishable.
Scripts
What troubles me when I'm asked the
question, "Can creative writing be taught?" - usually asked in a
skeptical tone of voice - is not that I can 't find an
answer, but trying to figure out why I'm being asked. What do they want me to
say? "No, of course it can't. I just like taking people for a ride. I'm a
con artist." Obviously, you can't teach someone to have a talent for
storytelling, or a love of language, or how to write extremely well, but there
are important lessons to be gotten across that will improve their writing and,
at the very least, make it publishable.
For me, the best starting point is the
habit of close reading, really close, and responding to the language. Forget
about grand themes and ethical content, whatever, for the moment and ask if the
author writes badly or well. So, writing can be taught through reading, through
literature. Then I'd say, when it comes to your own writing, that you need to
learn how to edit: to know when to say, "You don't need that word or that sentence. And that whole paragraph can
go:· It's one of the most important lessons a writing class can teach.
As for producing a Tolstoy or a Dickens ... well, people like that tend to get
there by their own route.