Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Gwen Pauloski's avatar

Adrian, this brings back such fond memories of the IBM Selectric 2 my mom bought "used" (okay, I think it "fell off a truck" but that was the only way we could afford it). I borrowed my mom's old typing textbook from her high school days and taught myself. I typed my debate briefs on it; my first jobs in my school district were as a clerk typist. I became an expert at whiting out, cutting and taping. I worked on increasing my speed while sitting in the secretarial pool awaiting a task. When I first got to use a boyfriend's Mac (1984) in college, I would print out my drafts, mark them up, cut them up, tape them together. I still print out drafts to read them and mark them up.

The "Kids React" video was so lovely - their wonder and puzzlement. One caveat for me about using a typewriter to slow things down: I have found that I am a profoundly non-linear writer. I have to be able to write in scattered bits and then organize the chaos. (Next to my keyboard right now, you would see two notebooks, loose leaf paper, sticky notes, and index cards with my jottings.) Handwriting and computing both allow for that ... typing less so.

Thank you for your reflections, and your commitment to examining traditional practices and rebuilding something more meaningful. Reading this post and your linked post about teaching the writing process fired up my brain! Now I'm going to work on my novel -- at 58, I've learned that I am not only a teacher of writing. I AM A WRITER. And the more I practice that craft, the more I learn about the teaching of it.

Expand full comment
Melissa's avatar

The clickety-clack-clack of a typewriter-- both the sound and feel (pre-haptics) lured me to write and play at my mother's various typewriters across a period of 10+ years. The medium is indeed the message, the device itself a learning curve, a way to explore how one-dimensional the screen has rendered the writing process: automatic margins & borders; auto-correcting for initial caps, alerting the user to spelling errors, grammatical issues, etc.

We take so much for granted.

Expand full comment
15 more comments...

No posts