--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, feste37  wrote:
>
> The rumor at the school where I did my PhD was that they weighed the
dissertations rather than read them. I took that rumor seriously enough
to make sure that mine was extra fat and typed on the heaviest paper I
could find.


That's like the old tech writer joke for those unfortunate enough to
have to do "guvmint work" according to MIL-SPECS.

How do you know when a battleship under construction is finished?

Every day you weigh the battleship, and the documentation. When they
weigh the same, the ship is finished.



> ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, turquoiseb@ wrote:
>
>  ...and the most ego. I found this chart interesting, in that the
longest Ph.D. dissertations seem to be in the fields most subject to
opinion -- history, antrhopology, political science, communication,
english, sociology, and education. It's almost as if the grad students
in those fields are already preparing for an academic life characterized
by the belief that the more they say about their opinions, the more they
can pretend they aren't opinion.
>
> The chart reminds me of an old college professor of mine who had a big
rubber stamp that he would wield mercilessly on papers he thought
deserved it. It was the letters "B.S." -- always stamped in red over
offending paragraphs or pages. When asked what the initials stood for,
he would smile and say, "Bloated Syntax."
>
> http://priceonomics.com/the-average-length-of-dissertations/
http://priceonomics.com/the-average-length-of-dissertations/
>
> This said, I disagree with whoever suggested that Stephen King "needs
editing." I find reading his latest work a refreshing throwback to the
days in which writers didn't pander to attention spans shortened by a
lifetime's exposure to "sound bites" and artificially shortened
exposition.
>
> The thing I like most about him as a writer is that he *takes his
time* creating characters, so that the reader gets to feel that he
*knows* them, before he does  something with them in the plot. In "The
Stand," King lovingly spent the first third of the book creating a
character who was the quintessential great guy. And then he killed him,
suddenly and unexpectedly, as the result of a mindless act of terrorism.
You FELT that. You FELT the loss, almost as if it had been a great guy
you knew personally. I am not convinced that this would have happened if
he had given the character buildup short shrift the way most writers do
these days.
>
> But that's just opinion, too. At least I didn't require 500 pages to
express it.  :-)
>


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